Awesome
@csstools/normalize.css <img src="https://csstools.github.io/normalize.css/logo.svg" alt="normalize" width="90" height="90" align="right">
@csstools/normalize.css is a CSS library that provides consistent, cross-browser default styling of HTML elements.
Usage
<link href="https://unpkg.com/@csstools/normalize.css" rel="stylesheet" />
Install
npm install @csstools/normalize.css --save
Webpack Usage
Import @csstools/normalize.css in CSS:
@import '~@csstools/normalize.css';
Alternatively, import @csstools/normalize.css in JS:
import '@csstools/normalize.css';
In webpack.config.js
, use the appropriate loaders:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [ 'style-loader', 'css-loader' ]
}
]
}
}
Download
See https://csstools.github.io/normalize.css/latest/normalize.css
What does it do?
- Normalizes styles for a wide range of elements.
- Corrects bugs and common browser inconsistencies.
- Explains what code does using detailed comments.
Browser support
- Chrome (last 3)
- Edge (last 3)
- Firefox (last 3)
- Firefox ESR
- Opera (last 3)
- Safari (last 2)
- iOS Safari (last 2)
Contributing
Please read the contribution guidelines in order to make the contribution process easy and effective for everyone involved.
Similar Projects
- modern-normalize.css - An alternative to normalize.css, adhering to a minimal set of normalizations and common developer expectations and preferences.
- opinionate.css - A supplement to normalize.css with opinionated rules.
- remedy.css - An alternative to normalize.css, adhering to different common developer expectations and preferences.
- sanitize.css - An alternative to normalize.css, adhering to common developer expectations and preferences.
Differences from necolas/normalize.css
Nicolas Gallagher and I started writing normalize.css together. I named and created the normalize.css repository with the help of Paul Irish and Ben Alman. I transferred the repository to Nicolas, who turned it into a “household” CSS library.
Later, I resumed authorship of normalize.css with Luciano Battagliero. Together, we tagged, deprecated, and removed “opinionated” styles — styles developers often prefer but which do not fix bugs or “normalize” browser differences.
Later, Nicolas resumed authorship and the issue of whether to include or omit the opinionated styles forced us to split.
I continue working on the normalize.css project, currently under the “csstools” tag. I hope one day our differences are resolved and the projects are one again.
Acknowledgements
normalize.css is a project by Jonathan Neal, co-created with Nicolas Gallagher.