This style guide recommends best practices for SCSS to make styles easy to read, easy to maintain, and performant for the end-user.
CSS classes should use the lowercase-hyphenated
format rather than snake_case
or camelCase
.
// Bad
.class_name {
color: #fff;
}
// Bad
.className {
color: #fff;
}
// Good
.class-name {
color: #fff;
}
You should always use a space before a brace, braces should be on the same line, each property should each get its own line, and there should be a space between the property and its value.
// Bad
.container-item {
width: 100px; height: 100px;
margin-top: 0;
}
// Bad
.container-item
{
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
margin-top: 0;
}
// Bad
.container-item{
width:100px;
height:100px;
margin-top:0;
}
// Good
.container-item {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
margin-top: 0;
}
Note that there is an exception for single-line rulesets, although these are not typically recommended.
p { margin: 0; padding: 0; }
HEX (hexadecimal) colors should use shorthand where possible, and should use lower case letters to differentiate between letters and numbers, e.g. #E3E3E3
vs. #e3e3e3
.
// Bad
p {
color: #ffffff;
}
// Bad
p {
color: #FFFFFF;
}
// Good
p {
color: #fff;
}
Indentation should always use two spaces for each indentation level.
// Bad, four spaces
p {
color: #f00;
}
// Good
p {
color: #f00;
}
Always include semicolons after every property. When the stylesheets are minified, the semicolons will be removed automatically.
// Bad
.container-item {
width: 100px;
height: 100px
}
// Good
.container-item {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
}
The shorthand form should be used for properties that support it.
// Bad
margin: 10px 15px 10px 15px;
padding: 10px 10px 10px 10px;
// Good
margin: 10px 15px;
padding: 10px;
Omit length units on zero values, they're unnecessary and not including them is slightly more performant.
// Bad
.item-with-padding {
padding: 0px;
}
// Good
.item-with-padding {
padding: 0;
}
js-
PrefixDo not use any selector prefixed with js-
for styling purposes. These selectors are intended for use only with JavaScript to allow for removal or renaming without breaking styling.
We use SCSS Lint to check for style guide conformity. It uses the ruleset in .scss-lint.yml
, which is located in the home directory of the project.
To check if any warnings will be produced by your changes, you can run rake scss_lint
in the GitLab directory. SCSS Lint will also run in GitLab CI to catch any warnings.
If the Rake task is throwing warnings you don't understand, SCSS Lint's documentation includes a full list of their linters.
If you want to automate changing a large portion of the codebase to conform to the SCSS style guide, you can use CSSComb. First install Node and NPM, then run npm install csscomb -g
to install CSSComb globally (system-wide). Run it in the GitLab directory with csscomb app/assets/stylesheets
to automatically fix issues with CSS/SCSS.
Note that this won't fix every problem, but it should fix a majority.
If you want a line or set of lines to be ignored by the linter, you can use // scss-lint:disable RuleName
(more info):
// This lint rule is disabled because the class name comes from a gem.
// scss-lint:disable SelectorFormat
.ui_charcoal {
background-color: #333;
}
// scss-lint:enable SelectorFormat
Make sure a comment is added on the line above the disable
rule, otherwise the linter will throw a warning. DisableLinterReason
is enabled to make sure the style guide isn't being ignored, and to communicate to others why the style guide is ignored in this instance.