Skip to content

Set text on the web to a baseline grid with Sass & rems using a responsive modular-scale.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jakegiltsoff/sassline

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Set text on the web to a baseline grid with Sass & rems using a responsive modular-scale.

Please note this code is p old now and is no longer actively maintained.

Hey, you can do this all in pure CSS now — fun how things evolve in 10 years. I’ll see if I can work up a new version, stay tuned.

Do one thing well

Sassline has one aim and one aim only – to spread better typography across the responsive environment of the web.

The idea is to have easy to use and maintain SCSS partials utilising the power of Sass to make the complex calculations to set type on a baseline grid on the web, with a production ready CSS output. Using rems for the font-sizing and the spacing measurements gives a simple way to use the proportions of the baseline grid throughout the design. Sass mixins do all the heavy lifting so your job is easy.

OpenType features are enabled with font-feature-settings to give the most appropriate formatting of text and some flourishes in the headings if available in the web font and supported in the browser.

Sassline includes some basic layouts, and includes mixins to create a main column with optimal measure and a sidebar that doesn’t get too narrow.

Root font-size = ½ line-height

Sassline works by setting the root font-size as half the line-height of the standard paragraph text. The height of the baseline grid is then effectively set at 2rem, with increments at each 1rem. This makes it nice and easy to work proportionally from the baseline with integer rem values to create harmony in your layout and typography. This is based off a technique for setting text in print documents.

Documentation

Sassline is fully commented with details in the SCSS. Set the font sizes with the fontsize mixin, set the spacing using the baseline mixin or set both at once with the sassline mixin. Use rems for everything else. Full documentation is in the works.

Running / compiling

You can also use your preferred methods for compiling Sass as long as you have Sass 3.3.7+. To just include the necessary partials in your existing sass project, you only need to import sassline-base.scss.

If you want to run Sassline as a standalone project use the gulp setup included (or modify it to your needs).

  1. Clone the repo or grab the zip file
  2. Open a terminal window and cd into this directory
  3. Run npm install -g gulp (this may need sudo in front)
  4. Run npm install

Once that is done you can start the server with gulp and stop it with ctrl + c.

The pages will run at http://localhost:1234/

Sass file structure

My preferred method is to work along the lines of the SMACSS & BEM method. In the sass folder there there are two folders — sassline-base and modules. The base folder has the Sassline base SCSS partials. The modules folder contains some demo SCSS partials with styles you can keep or remove. All new partials should be added to the modules folder and referenced in style.scss to be compiled into your CSS.

More on information on using Sassline

Please see this blog post.

Responsive Nav

Ariel Salminen’s responsive-nav.js plugin is included to provide a mobile-ready navigation to work from.

Browsers

Sassline will set text to the baseline in recent versions of Chrome and Firefox, IE 11+ and Safari 8+.

Roadmap

  • Full documentation

========

License

Sassline is licensed under the MIT license. (http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)