Never apply styles to tags
or ids
– use classes
instead!
Why?
- HTML tags are responsible for the document structure, not the looks
- targeting HTML tags comes with performance issues
- ids are responsible for identifying a unique element, not for styling it
- ids have higher specificity than classes and therefore don't play well together
- classes can be combined and reused while ids are unique
For more background see the following articles on why not to style tags and why not to style ids.
In order to achieve a consistent look and feel we use a set of pre-defined design tokens
to style our components, for example colors
, sizes
and box-shadows
. These tokens are stored as SCSS variables
and reused throughout the app.
So, instead of typing pixel values or hex codes make sure you use design tokens such as height-header
or color-input-border
.
Our SCSS styles live within the corresponding component (see the Vue.js docs for single-file components for reference) and should therefore carry the same unique name.
Why?
- it clearly ties the styles to the one component
- having unique class names means styles will not be accidentally overwritten in other files
- we can avoid using
scoped CSS
which comes with performance caveats
Components will sometimes need to look different depending on the context in which they are used – a button might for example be green
when it represents a call to action and red
when it triggers a destructive action. Rather than making the rounded-button
component green
by default and then overriding the color
for, say, the delete-account
action – use variants! Pass the rounded-button
a prop, such as color: danger
, and then apply the respective variant class
.
Name variant classes with a dash prefix, such as -danger
, then target them like this:
.rounded-button {
/* other css styles */
&.-danger {
color: $color-danger;
}
}
In order to make components truly reusable it is important to limit their styles to, well, their actual styling. What color are they, how big is the text, what happens on hover
, do they have a rounded border – all that is part of it.
Margins, alignment and positioning on the other hand need to be defined in the parent because the same component might sometimes be aligned to the left, sometimes to the right and sometimes float above other content. For more details see the rscss guidelines.
To do that, use the child selector
, like this:
.login-form {
/* other css styles */
> .rounded-button {
margin: $margin-small;
justify-self: flex-end;
}
}
A special case are dimensions like width
and height
. If it is important that a component always has the same dimensions (the height of a button should be consistent, for example) define it within the component itself, if a component should have flexible dimensions (a card, for example, could stretch over the whole screen in one place and be limited to a certain width in another) define the dimensions in the parent.
For a deeper dive into the WHY and HOW have a look at the following resources which the above guidelines are based on: