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Hello, I'm Ingrid 2.0!

The new Ingrid 2.0 is here. This time around Ingrid's main focus is on prototyping / wireframing page layouts.

Ingrid version 2.0 includes

  1. Media queries for responsive layout support
  2. A SCSS version with a couple of neat customization settings
  3. Better structured class naming conventions, and…
  4. a bunch more column width variations.

Check out Ingrid in use at http://codepen.io/robertpiira/pen/kofpu. Or the plain demo page at http://codepen.io/robertpiira/full/kofpu

The previous Ingrid 1.0 will live on in its ingrid_1.0 branch.

Introduction

So, The basic idea…

+-------------------[c]-------------------+
| +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ |
| |       | |       | |       | |       | |
| |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |
| |       | |       | |       | |       | |
| +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ |
+-----------------------------------------+

The container [c] needs two class-names:

  1. .grid
  2. .grid--divide-4 (or .grid--divide-3 if there are 3 units).

Each unit [u] within the container [c] needs the class-name:

  1. .grid_unit

To tweak the layout we can combine units like this.

+-------------------[c]-------------------+
| +-------+ +-------+ +-----------------+ |
| |       | |       | |                 | |
| |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |       [u]       | |
| |       | |       | |                 | |
| +-------+ +-------+ +-----------------+ |
+-----------------------------------------+

In this case the container [c] and units [u] have the same class-names as in the first example.

The difference is that we add the class name .grid_unit--span-2 on the last unit (making it span the width of two units).

The .grid_unit--span-x class-name can be used to combine units in any context (.grid--divide-2, .grid--divide-3, .grid--divide-4, etc.).


Units [f] that need to span the whole width of the container use the class .grid_field-unit

+-------------------[c]-------------------+
| +-------------------------------------+ |
| |                 [f]                 | |
| +-------------------------------------+ |
| +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ |
| |       | |       | |       | |       | |
| |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |  [u]  | |
| |       | |       | |       | |       | |
| +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ +-------+ |
+-----------------------------------------+

Ingrid includes classes that only respond to certain Media Query breakpoints. In this example container [c] is using the classes .m-grid and .m-grid--divide-2.

This is how the layout would look like on a narrow screen.

+-------------------[c]-------------------+
| +-------------------------------------+ |
| |                 [u]                 | |
| +-------------------------------------+ |
| +-------------------------------------+ |
| |                 [u]                 | |
| +-------------------------------------+ |
+-----------------------------------------+

…and once the breakpoint for .m-* prefixed class names kicks in for above narrow screens — the layout will reflow into two horizontally stacked columns.

+-------------------[c]-------------------+
| +-----------------+ +-----------------+ |
| |                 | |                 | |
| |       [u]       | |       [u]       | |
| |                 | |                 | |
| +-----------------+ +-----------------+ |
+-----------------------------------------+

.m-* prefixed classes are triggered for above small-sized viewports. "m-" is short for medium.

.l-* prefixed classes are triggered for above medium-sized viewports. "l-" is short for large.

Nesting grids

Ingrid supports nested grids. Just remember when using em's or % units for gutters — these units are relative to the width or eventual font-size of the parent container.

Gutters

The gutters are made by first giving the container [c] negative left and right margins.

Each unit [u] has a padding on each side that is equal to the containers [c] negative margins.

The gutters are set to a certain width in ingrid.css. But these measures can easily be overridden/tweaked to your own preference via your own classes that extend the container or directly in the ingrid CSS file.

The padding for the gutters work with em, % or pixel units (thanks to the CSS border-box box model).

Details

Ingrid uses display: inline-block and border-box box model for laying out the individual units.

Border-box makes it easy to set borders and padding (for gutters) directly on units. (More on border-box http://paulirish.com/2012/box-sizing-border-box-ftw/.)

inline-block is just nice to work with and easy to reflow for different layouts.

The one negative with inline-block is the additional white-space that gets added between units. To remove the white-space evenly across different browsers can seem bit hacky. So Ingrid tries her best to get rid of the white-space. But the results are not cross-browser pixel-perfect. But really… Ingrid just doesn't care about pixel-perfection in that sense anymore. (More on display: inline-block at http://robertnyman.com/2010/02/24/css-display-inline-block-why-it-rocks-and-why-it-sucks/.)

If you'd like to try bits of Ingrid in production code, you could skip the whole .grid--divide-4 / .grid_unit--span-2 class names that Ingrid provides and make your own semantic class names for width hooks instead.

Responsive?

Ingrid 2.0 includes two breakpoints* and the CSS is structured in a mobile first approach. The first breakpoint is for "above mobile" (medium-sized screens/viewports) and the second is for "above tablet" (large-sized screen/viewports).

The breakpoints that are included with Ingrid can (and probably should) be modified so that they match your content.

*= To be correct, there are three breakpoints in total, for "The absence of support for @media queries is in fact the first @media query." —Bryan Rieger

Browser support

Ingrid works with IE8 + and all modern browsers. IE6-7 are not supported.

License

All code licensed under CC0: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/