Griddle is a CSS grid system for modern browsers. It is generated from a set of
Sass functions and mixins. The grid uses inline-block
and box-sizing
to
provide features that float-based layouts cannot.
- Download: zip
- Bower:
bower install --save griddle
- Git:
git clone https://github.com/necolas/griddle.git
- Fluid layout.
- Intelligent cell wrapping.
- Horizontal centering of cells.
- Custom vertical alignment of cells (top, bottom, or middle).
- Cell width is controlled independently of grid gutter.
- Infinite nesting.
- Built-in redundancy coupled with automatic consolidation of rules in compiled CSS.
- Modify the grid at different breakpoints for responsive layouts.
- RTL support.
The grid system is suitable whether or not you choose to develop "mobile
first". Import griddle
to "initialize" the grid at a given breakpoint.
The griddle-build()
mixin handles the generation of styles for grids. It can
accept a space-separated list of integers, each of which results in the
creation of a grid with that many parts. For example:
@import "griddle";
// Create 2, 3, and 4 column grids
@include griddle-build(2 3 4);
The mixin also accepts a string as a second (optional) argument. This can be used to generate modified selectors to override the width of a cell at different breakpoints. For example:
@media (min-width: 40em) {
// Create 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 12 column grids (wider screens)
@include griddle-build(2 3 4 5 6 12, '--desktop');
}
Each grid cell is created in the same way, using HTML classes. You can have a cell that is 50% wide at narrow viewports, but 25% wide at wider viewports when the styles are applied to the modifier class:
<div class="grid__cell unit-1-2 unit-1-4--desktop">
...
</div>
Feel free to customize the default class name pattern to suit your personal preferences.
- Google Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- Opera
- Internet Explorer 8+
MIT License