←back to thread

304 points ulrischa | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
ricardobeat ◴[] No.44689124[source]

    <el-dialog-panel class="mx-auto block max-w-3xl transform overflow-hidden rounded-xl bg-white shadow-2xl ring-1 ring-black/5 transition-all group-data-closed/dialog:scale-95 group-data-closed/dialog:opacity-0 group-data-enter/dialog:duration-300 group-data-enter/dialog:ease-out group-data-leave/dialog:duration-200 group-data-leave/dialog:ease-in">
Lovely. Verbosity aside, now on top of knowing CSS you need to learn another hierarchical system within class names.
replies(14): >>44689142 #>>44689193 #>>44689633 #>>44690309 #>>44690466 #>>44690969 #>>44691000 #>>44691208 #>>44691531 #>>44692110 #>>44692147 #>>44692803 #>>44694185 #>>44700048 #
AstroBen ◴[] No.44691000[source]
I just can't fathom how someone can look at this and think "yeahhhh thats some good clean code". How did tailwind get so popular? Learn plain CSS. It's really good now
replies(11): >>44691157 #>>44691381 #>>44691597 #>>44692249 #>>44692347 #>>44692490 #>>44692896 #>>44693989 #>>44694828 #>>44695704 #>>44697630 #
jtickle ◴[] No.44693989[source]
I have seen this sentiment on HN a lot recently. Any good resources for that? I was quite the accomplished web developer 15-20 years ago and want to catch up without having to learn a new library or framework every six months.
replies(1): >>44694097 #
1. smac__ ◴[] No.44694097[source]
https://www.manning.com/books/css-in-depth is an excellent option. This book helped fill in the gaps for me when it comes to modern CSS.