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Start your free trialRyan Maneo
4,342 PointsIs it custom to just copy/paste or upload normalize.css?
Or do Front-End dens write it by hand every time they start a new project? He didn't really touch on that.
2 Answers
Jason Anders
Treehouse Moderator 145,860 PointsHey Ryan,
I don't do much front-end work, but that would be a whole lot of CSS to write out every time.
You could download the file and just include the stylesheet reference in your document, just like any other CSS stylesheet. Or, you could also use a CDN to include it in your doc. Either way is good.
Hope that helps to clear it up for you :)
Ryan S
27,276 PointsHi Ryan,
In a later CSS course, CSS Layout Basics, they go into more detail on this normalize.css file. They give you a link on where to download the latest version, as well as list some other popular CSS resets.
Ryan Maneo
4,342 PointsRyan Maneo
4,342 PointsI suppose it does. the question was basically, if I got a Job somewhere, would they expect me to write that out by hand, or is it just a public thing that people download from a repository if they desire?
Jason Anello
Courses Plus Student 94,610 PointsJason Anello
Courses Plus Student 94,610 PointsHi Ryan,
Yes, it's publicly available here: https://github.com/necolas/normalize.css/
You can get the latest version there but I recommend you finish off this course with the older 1.x version that comes with the project files so that you don't have any visual inconsistencies between Nick's files and your own.
With brand new projects you'll likely want to grab the latest version.
Here's some more information about it from one of its creators, Nicolas Gallagher.
http://nicolasgallagher.com/about-normalize-css/
From that page,
So it's definitely not something you'd be expected to remember or write out by hand each time.