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Sass coding guide

Sass is a superset of CSS, which brings a lot of developer candy to help scaling CSS in large projects and keeping it maintainable.

The main benefits of using Sass over plain CSS are variables, nesting and mixins, see the basics guide for more details.

Note that this project use the newer, CSS-compatible SCSS syntax over the old indented syntax.

Naming conventions

  • In the CSS world, everything should be named in kebab-case (lowercase words separated with a -).
  • File names should always be in kebab-case

Coding rules

  • Use single quotes ' for strings

  • Use this general nesting hierarchy when constructing your styles:

    // The base component class acts as the namespace, to avoid naming and style collisions
    .my-component {
      // Put here all component elements (flat)
      .my-element {
        // Use a third-level only for modifiers and state variations
        &.active { ... }
      }
    }

    Note that with Angular view encapsulation, the first "namespace" level of nesting is not necessary as Angular takes care of the scoping for avoid collisions.

    As a side note, we are aware of the BEM naming approach, but we found it impractical for large projects. The nesting approach has drawbacks such as increased specificity, but it helps keeping everything nicely organized, and more importantly, scoped.

Also keep in mind this general rules:

  • Always use class selectors, never use ID selectors and avoid element selectors whenever possible
  • No more than 3 levels of nesting
  • No more than 3 qualifiers

Best practices

  • Use object-oriented CSS (OOCSS):

    • Factorize common code in base class, and extend it, for example:
    // Base button class
    .btn { ... }
    
    // Color variation
    .btn-warning { ... }
    
    // Size variation
    .btn-small { ... }
    • Try to name class by semantic, not style nor function for better reusability: Use .btn-warning, not btn-orange nor btn-cancel
    • Avoid undoing style, refactor using common base classes and extensions
  • Keep your style scoped

    • Clearly separate global (think framework) and components style
    • Global style should only go in src/theme/, never in components
    • Avoid style interactions between components, if some style may need to be shared, refactor it as a framework component in put it in your global theme.
    • Avoid using wider selectors than needed: always use classes if you can!
  • Avoid rules multiplication

    • The less CSS the better, factorize rules whenever it's possible
    • CSS is code, and like any code frequent refactoring is healthy
  • When ugly hacks cannot be avoided, create an explicit src/hacks.scss file and put it in:

    • These ugly hacks should only be temporary
    • Each hack should be documented with the author name, the problem and hack reason
    • Limit this file to a reasonable length (~100 lines) and refactor hacks with proper solutions when the limit is reached.

Pitfalls

  • Never use the !important keyword. Ever.
  • Never use inline style in html, even just for debugging (because we KNOW it will end up in your commit)

Browser compatibility

You should never use browser-specific prefixes in your code, as autoprefixer takes care of that part for you during the build process. You just need to declare which browsers you target in the browserslist file.

Enforcement

Coding rules are enforced in this project with stylelint. This tool also checks the compatibility of the rules used against the browsers you are targeting (specified in the browserslist file), via doiuse.