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Start your free trialStan Ponkin
1,764 Pointsmore information on normalize.css
Is there any more research on the topic?
- What are the substituted to using normalize.css?
- What are best practices in real world to keep browser settings "normalized"?
- How to keep current with the updates?
Thank you, Stan
2 Answers
Anton Bredl
15,359 PointsBelow is a brief explanation on some of the benefits for using normalize.css & this is a quick article with even more information!
Normalize.css preserves useful defaults rather than "unstyling" everything. For example, elements like sup or sub "just work" after including normalize.css (and are actually made more robust) whereas they are visually indistinguishable from normal text after including reset.css. So, normalize.css does not impose a visual starting point (homogeny) upon you. This may not be to everyone's taste. The best thing to do is experiment with both and see which gels with your preferences.
Normalize.css corrects some common bugs that are out of scope for reset.css. It has a wider scope than reset.css, and also provides bug fixes for common problems like: display settings for HTML5 elements, the lack of font inheritance by form elements, correcting font-size rendering for pre, SVG overflow in IE9, and the button styling bug in iOS.
Normalize.css doesn't clutter your dev tools. A common irritation when using reset.css is the large inheritance chain that is displayed in browser CSS debugging tools. This is not such an issue with normalize.css because of the targeted stylings.
Normalize.css is more modular. The project is broken down into relatively independent sections, making it easy for you to potentially remove sections (like the form normalizations) if you know they will never be needed by your website.
Normalize.css has better documentation. The normalize.css code is documented inline as well as more comprehensively in the GitHub Wiki. This means you can find out what each line of code is doing, why it was included, what the differences are between browsers, and more easily run your own tests. The project aims to help educate people on how browsers render elements by default, and make it easier for them to be involved in submitting improvements.
Stan Ponkin
1,764 PointsThank you, Anton. I really appreciate your response.
@ atxdubya
2,307 Points@ atxdubya
2,307 PointsAnton Bredl, can normalize.css be used in any webpage without worry of copyright infringement? Or do you need permission to use it, outside of this course?