Awesome
<h1 align="center">๐ OK.css</h1> <p align="center">Sensible styling defaults for your web page</p> <p align="center"><a href="https://okcss.netlify.app/">Project page</a> ยท <a href="https://okcss.netlify.app/demo/">Demo</a></p>OK.css is a classless CSS framework. Dropping it into your HTML will make your page look decent โ no need to reference documentation, think about responsiveness, or account for browser differences as long as your markup is semantically-correct.
To use it, you can download the CSS file directly or add the following line to your HTML <head>
:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/andrewh0/okcss@1/dist/ok.min.css" />
Note that normalize.css is included in OK.css.
OK.css is somewhere between a CSS normalizer and a full-fledged framework like Bootstrap</a> or Tailwind</a>. It's great for blogs or small single-page applications, but might not be so great for large, interactive apps that require JavaScript or custom elements.
Development
Install dependencies with yarn install
.
You can start a local server with yarn start
. By default, the page will be available at http://localhost:5000
.
Make updates to the CSS file in ./src/ok.css
and yarn build
to create a minified version available in ./dist/ok.min.css
.
This repo is set up with Netlify's continuous deployment. yarn deploy
copies files into a .gitignore
d directory called _site
and _site
is hosted on Netlify.
Releasing
Confirm changes with:
yarn release:dry
Release with:
yarn release
Contributing
Pull requests are welcome! If you find a bug or have a feature request, please submit a GitHub issue.
Alternative features
Not all UI features can be implemented with classless CSS while remaining accessible and supported cross-browser. For more complex features, you may need to supplement this framework with additional HTML, CSS, or JavaScript.
Here are some suggestions for altering the behavior of certain elements.
Feature
Make table
s scroll horizontally when they are wider than the main content width.
Desired behavior:
Note: In OK.css, table
s are set to display: table
for accessibility reasons.
Implementation
Wrap the table in a <div>
with overflow-x: scroll;
:
<div style="overflow-x: scroll">
<table>
...
</table>
</div>
One caveat is that this can prevent the table heading from sticking when scrolling vertically.