Staying current with CSS advancements often means grappling with browser compatibility issues. Even with widespread feature releases, user browser versions may lag. We address this through feature detection (@supports
), progressive enhancement, and polyfills. Build tools offer additional assistance.
While many CSS developers utilize pre-processors (Sass, Less), their necessity has diminished with the evolution of native CSS features like nesting and custom properties. Pre-processors primarily offered organizational benefits and extended CSS functionality. Post-processing tools, like PostCSS, handle tasks such as auto-prefixing and minification.
Typical build pipelines often involve:
CSS processing usually falls under the first step, encompassing pre- and post-processing. Modern CSS reduces the reliance on pre-processors, potentially streamlining the process.
Vite, a highly popular build tool, excels at building JavaScript front-end frameworks (Angular, React, Svelte, Vue). Its speed and adaptability make it a valuable asset. While primarily known for JavaScript, Vite seamlessly handles CSS without requiring JavaScript code. It supports Sass (requiring separate installation) and natively compiles CSS with minimal configuration.
This tutorial uses Node and npm. Ensure you have them installed. Create a new project:
npm create vite@latest
Select "Vanilla" and "JavaScript" for a basic template. Open the project in your IDE. For this demonstration, delete assets/
, public/
, src/
, and .gitignore
. Only index.html
and package.json
should remain. Replace index.html
's content with:
<!DOCTYPE html> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>CSS Only Vite Project</title>
Install Vite's dependencies:
npm install
This creates node_modules/
and package-lock.json
. Create a styles/
folder and main.css
inside it. Add a <link>
tag to index.html
:
<!DOCTYPE html> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>CSS Only Vite Project</title> <link rel="stylesheet" href="styles/main.css">
Add some CSS to main.css
:
body { background: green; }
Run the Vite build command:
npm run build
The dist/
folder contains the built files. assets/index.css
(with a unique hash) shows the minified CSS.
For faster iteration, use Vite's development server:
npm run dev
This starts the server on port 5173. Changes in HTML or CSS are reflected instantly. Use <kbd>CTRL</kbd> <kbd>C</kbd>
to stop the server.
While applying cascade layers directly to <link>
tags isn't currently possible, Vite allows us to simulate this for organizational purposes. In main.css
, define layers:
npm create vite@latest
Create reset.css
and import a CSS reset (e.g., Mayank's):
<!DOCTYPE html> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>CSS Only Vite Project</title>
Create layouts.css
with a layouts
layer:
npm install
Add links to reset.css
and layouts.css
in index.html
, maintaining the desired order. This approach helps manage CSS precedence and grouping.
LightningCSS enhances cross-browser compatibility. Install it:
<!DOCTYPE html> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>CSS Only Vite Project</title> <link rel="stylesheet" href="styles/main.css">
Create vite.config.mjs
:
body { background: green; }
Test with an oklch
color in main.css
:
npm run build
LightningCSS provides fallbacks. For targeted browser support, install browserslist
:
npm run dev
Configure vite.config.mjs
:
/* styles/main.css */ @layer reset, layouts;
This allows for fine-grained control over LightningCSS features.
While not essential for all projects, these techniques—especially for larger projects or design systems—offer significant advantages in organization, cross-browser compatibility, and CSS optimization.
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