Scales has been pulled directly into https://github.com/sparkdesignsystem/spark-design-system and is no longer being directly maintained.
Scales is a modular CSS framework for quickly building responsive web projects. It clocks in at only 3.8kb when minified and gzipped.
It is purposely "design-free" so that there is nothing you will have to change. Instead, you will build your design on top of the foundation that Scales provides.
This is a framework for serious developers and designers who aren't afraid to get their hands dirty with advanced and sometimes challenging CSS concepts. A framework shouldn't do your work for you or make all of the decisions. Scales tries it's best to stay out of your way.
Scales is a highly scalable CSS architecture, it contains design patterns (scales in nature form patterns), and it is responsive so it scales to the width of the viewport. So clever it hurts.
Scales is managed as a monorepo. All of the Scales source code lives in a single repo, but is released as separate packages using Lerna.
- ITCSS (Inverted Triangle CSS) architecture
- Object Oriented CSS Design Patterns
- Responsive Design
- Sass/scss
- BEM (Block, Element, Modifier)-style naming convention
Scales uses box-sizing: border-box;
, and display: table-cell;
, neither of which are supported in IE7 and under. There are a few media queries, but they are an enhancement. Thus, Scales is only for IE9+ and any modern browser, but IE8 is also mostly covered.
Make sure you have the dependencies installed on your system and then, from the root directory of your project, run:
npm install --save @scalescss/scalescss
Next you will want to create 3 files (name them whatever you want):
- A settings/variables file. ex.
_settings.scss
- A file to import all of the Scales packages. ex.
_scalescss.scss
- A main file to import the settings, Scales packages, and all of your project partials. ex.
styles.scss
Scales exposes a large number of variables that allow you to customize nearly everything.
Have a look at all of the available variables.
Each piece of Scales is its own package on npm. Once you have all of the packages in your project, you will need to import them into your project. I recommend creating a _scalescss.scss
file that imports everything.
The order of the imports is very important!
See an example of the correct import order.
Once you have these files sorted out, you will want to create a main Scss file that will import your settings, Scales, and the rest of your project partials. This is the file that will get compiled into CSS:
@import your-project/settings;
@import your-project/scalescss;
@import your-project/project-partial;
@import your-project/project-partial;
@import your-project/project-partial;
@import your-project/project-partial;
Once you have these things set up you simply need to tell Sass what to compile:
$ sass your-project/styles.scss your-project/css/styles.css
There are many other options for compiling that you can find in the Sass Documentation. You can also look into using a task runner like Gulp or a module bundler like Webpack.
The scalescss package includes an index.html
file that serves as a basic pattern library for Scales. It shows all of the available patterns in their default state. This can be used as a reference, for testing, or styled into a more complete pattern library with your project's patterns as well.
This couldn't have been done without the amazing work of Harry Roberts on inuitcss. A number of the design patterns and techniques in Scales were borrowed or adapted from inuitcss.
I also wanted to thank Nicole Sullivan for her work on OOCSS, without which I would not be the developer I am today.
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