Opinionated reset stylesheet that provides a clean slate for styling your html.
- Ensures consistency across browsers as much as possible
- Prevents the necessity of reseting user agent styles
- Prevents style inspector bloat by only targeting what is necessary
- Removes margins & paddings
- Removes default font styles and ensures proper inheritance
- Contributes to the separation of presentation and semantics
- Sets sensible default styles (see rules)
- Well suited for utility class libraries and large codebases
- Made for modern browsers only, therefor small in size (~0.95kb)
$ npm install --save destyle.css- Download: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nicolas-cusan/destyle.css/master/destyle.css
- CDN: https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/package/destyle.css
Include destyle.css in the head of your HTML file before your main stylesheet.
Add your base font and color styles to the html or body element in your stylesheet, all other elements will inherit the style from the body.
/* app.css */
html {
color: #333;
font: 16px/1.4 "Helvetica Neue", sans-serif;
}It is discouraged to define styles for raw html tags apart from body and html, use classes (or any other selectors / system) for styling.
If you need to create styles for tags generated by a CMS or markdown wrap them in a class (e.g. .type).
.type h1 {
/* styles */
}
.type h2 {
/* styles */
}<div class="type">{{ generated_markup_goes_here }}</div>- The box model is set to
border-boxfor*,::beforeand::after. - The
border-styleis set tosolidfor*,::beforeand::afterand theborder-widthis set to 0 (to hide the borders). code,pre,kbd,sampmaintain a monospaced font-family.hris set to be a solid 1px line usingborder-topthat inherits its color from its parent'scolorproperty.- Inline elements that carry style (
b,i,strong, etc.) are not reset. canvasandiframemaintain their default width and height (varies depending on the browser).button,select,textareaandinputare reset usingappearance: none.textareamaintains its default height.meterandprogresselements are not reset.- Replaced content like
img,iframeandsvgusevertical-align: bottomto prevent alignment issues. - Focusable elements retain a focus outline, style depends on browser.
range&colorinputs are affected byappearance: nonebut are not completely destyled (varies depending on the browser).buttonelements that have a fixedheightwill center its content vertically (can not be reset).
An h1 might need to be bold & large in some context (e.g. at the top of a text page) but might be small and inconspicuous in others (e.g. on a settings page in an app).
Creating two different styles for h1 is made easy, only the properties for the respective desired visual results have to be applied, there is no need to overwrite default styles, all while maintaining semantics.
/* No reseting of the user agent styles necessary,
* just take care of making things look how you want to. */
/* Bold, large title */
.main-title {
font-size: 3em;
margin-bottom: 20px;
font-weight: bold;
}
/* Just some padding and gray color, otheriwse looks like normal text */
.secondary-title {
color: gray;
padding: 10px;
}<!-- article.html -->
<h1 class="main-title">Large title</h1>
<!-- profile.html -->
<h1 class="secondary-title">Small title</h1>
<!-- Looks the same as `h1.secondary-title` -->
<p class="secondary-title">Other small title</p>button tags have a lot of default styles that can make them cumbersome to use from a styling perspective, especially if they should look like plain links or need to wrap some other content, but button tags are the recommended elements to use as click targets for user interactions. Falling back to using <a href="#"> even with role="button" is not recomended from an accessibility standpoint as screen readers will recognize buttons as interactive elements by default and treat them accordingly. a should be used when there is the need to link to a page via href.
destyle.css resets buttons completely to make them usable as any other element * see note below.
/* Make anything look like a link, even a <button> */
.link {
color: lightblue;
text-decoration: underline;
}
/* Make anything look like a button
* font styles will be inheritet from the parent */
.btn {
padding: 0.2em 0.5em;
border-radius: 0.2em;
background-color: blue;
color: white;
text-align: center;
}
.block {
display: block;
width: 100%;
}<!-- Make it look like a link -->
<button class="link">Interactive link</button>
<!-- Make anchor look like a button -->
<a href="page.html" class="btn">Link that looks like a button</a>
<!-- Use as block level element -->
<button class="block">
<img src="..." alt="..." />
</button>- Add
min-width: 0to allow proper text wrappig in flex containers.
- Add
appearance: noneto checkboxes and radio buttons. - Fix issue in Firefox for
input[type="number"]
- Add
border-collapse: collapseto tables.
- Remove IE support 🎉
- Bring back
outlinefor focusable elements - Remove redundant
line-height: inheritrule from headings reset - Remove redundant
text-decorationrule fromabbr - Added
svgselector to replaced content rule - Added
text-transform: inheritrule to form elements - Replaced
[disabled]selector with:disabled - Removed
::-moz-focus-innerrules for old Firefox versions - Improved
:-moz-focusringstyle, no more dotted outline - Destyled
select:disabledin Chrome - Add outline to focused
[contenteditable]elements - Fixed border color inheritance for
tableborders in Chrome
- Add
border-style: solidandborder-width: 0to*, ::before, ::afterselector. This change might affect how borders are used and therefor is considered a breaking change. The benefit is that simply adding a border-width to an element will display a border without the need to set the border-style explicitly.
Eric Meyer's reset resets properties on elements that do not need it, are unused or even deprecated, this creates bloat in the browser's style inspector which makes developing and debugging less efficient. Normalize.css makes elements look consistent across browsers and it does it well, but it does not remove the user agent's assumptions about how things look. Destyle.css targets both reseting & normalization.
Compare the results here.
This project is heavily inspired by normalize.css and the original reset by Eric Meyer. The source of the test page is from html5-test-page with some additions.
Tested with: