From 4f3ba9976a3978d830873cf3bac9639741cd3051 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Ctibor=20Bran=C4=8D=C3=ADk?= Date: Tue, 22 Mar 2016 20:13:56 +0100 Subject: Removed sites dirs from repo --- .../themes/mrp/css/README.txt | 154 --------------------- 1 file changed, 154 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 sites/brdo.brontosaurus.cz.mrp/themes/mrp/css/README.txt (limited to 'sites/brdo.brontosaurus.cz.mrp/themes/mrp/css/README.txt') diff --git a/sites/brdo.brontosaurus.cz.mrp/themes/mrp/css/README.txt b/sites/brdo.brontosaurus.cz.mrp/themes/mrp/css/README.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 43fc85a39..000000000 --- a/sites/brdo.brontosaurus.cz.mrp/themes/mrp/css/README.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,154 +0,0 @@ -ZEN'S STYLESHEETS ------------------ - -Don't panic! - -There are 11 CSS files in this sub-theme, but it's not as bad as it first seems: -- There are 5 CSS files whose names end in "-rtl.css". Those are CSS files - needed to style content written in Right-to-Left languages, such as Arabic and - Hebrew. If your website doesn't use such languages, you can safely delete all - of those CSS files. -- There are 2 example layout stylesheets inside the "layouts" folder, - "responsive.css" and "fixed.css", but only one of them is used at any time. -- One is just a print stylesheet! - -That leaves just 4 CSS files! -- styles.css -- normalize.css -- layouts/responsive.css -- components/misc.css - -Now go look in the styles.css file. That file simply includes (via @import) the -other files. It also shows how the files in your sub-theme can be categorized -with the SMACSS technique. http://smacss.com - - -Why not just one stylesheet? - -- For performance reasons you should always have all of your CSS in a single - file to minimize the number of HTTP requests the user's browser needs to do. - Fortunately, Drupal has a "Aggregate and compress CSS" feature that will - automatically combine all the CSS files from its modules and themes into one - file. You can turn on that feature under "Bandwidth Optimization" on the page: - Administration > Configuration > Development > Performance - So Drupal allows us (if we want) to use more than one stylesheet file, but - still serves all the styles in one file to our users. -- When developing a site using a single stylesheet, it can become unwieldy to - scroll and find the place you need to edit. As a deadline becomes imminent, - developers often start stuffing new styles at the bottom of the stylesheet, - completely destroying any stylesheet organization. -- Instead of one monolithic stylesheet, Zen sub-themes' CSS files are organized - into several smaller stylesheets. Once you learn the organization (described - below) it becomes easier to find the right place to add new styles. -- Stylesheets are added in the order specified in the styles.css file. The - default order of the stylesheets is designed to allow CSS authors to use the - lowest specificity possible to achieve the required styling, with more general - stylesheets being added first and more specific stylesheets added later. - - -ORDER AND PURPOSE OF DEFAULT STYLESHEETS ----------------------------------------- - -First off, if you find you don't like this organization of stylesheets, you are -free to change it; simply edit the @import declarations in your sub-theme's -styles.css file. This structure was crafted based on several years of experience -theming Drupal websites. - -- styles.css: - This is the only CSS file listed in your sub-theme's .info file. Its purpose - is to @include all the other stylesheets in your sub-theme. When CSS - aggregation is off, this file will be loaded by web browsers first before they - begin to load the @include'd stylesheets; this results in a delay to load all - the stylesheets, a serious front-end performance problem. However, it does - make it easy to debug your website during development. To remove this - performance problem, turn on Drupal's CSS aggregation after development is - completed. See the note above about "Bandwidth Optimization". - -- normalize.css: - This is the place where you should set the default styling for all HTML - elements and standardize the styling across browsers. If you prefer a specific - HTML reset method, feel free to use it instead of normalize; just make sure - you set all the styles for all HTML elements after you reset them. In SMACSS, - this file contains all the "base rules". http://smacss.com/book/type-base - -- layouts/responsive.css: - Zen's default layout is based on the Zen Grids layout method. Despite the - name, it is an independent project from the Zen theme. Zen Grids is an - intuitive, flexible grid system that leverages the natural source order of - your content to make it easier to create fluid responsive designs. You can - learn more about Zen Grids at http://zengrids.com - - The responsive.css file is used by default, but these files are - designed to be easily replaced. If you are more familiar with a different CSS - layout method, such as GridSetApp, 960.gs, etc., you can replace the default - layout with your choice of layout CSS file. - - In SMACSS, this file contains the "layout rules". - http://smacss.com/book/type-layout - -- layouts/fixed.css: - This layout is based on the Zen Grids layout method, but uses a fixed pixel - width. It is not included by default in your theme's .info file, but is - provided as an option. - - In SMACSS, this file contains the "layout rules". - http://smacss.com/book/type-layout - -- components/misc.css: - This file contains some common component styles needed for Drupal, such as: - - Tabs: contains actual styling for Drupal tabs, a common Drupal element that - is often neglected by site designers. Zen provides some basic styling which - you are free to use or to rip out and replace. - - Various page elements: page styling for the markup in page.tpl.php. - - Blocks: styling for the markup in block.tpl.php. - - Menus: styling for your site's menus. - - Comments: styling for the markup in comment-wrapper.tpl.php and - comments.tpl.php. - - forms: styling for the markup in various Drupal forms. - - fields: styling for the markup produced by theme_field(). - - In SMACSS, this file contains "module rules". You can add additional files - if you'd like to further refine your stylesheet organization. Just add them - to the styles.css file. http://smacss.com/book/type-layout - -- print.css: - The print styles for all markup. - - In SMACSS, this file contains a media query state that overrides modular - styles. This means it most closely related to "module rules". - http://smacss.com/book/type-module - -In these stylesheets, we have included just the classes and IDs needed to apply -a minimum amount of styling. To learn many more useful Drupal core selectors, -check Zen's online documentation: https://drupal.org/node/1707736 - - -STYLES FOR INTERNET EXPLORER ----------------------------- - -Zen allows IE-specific styles using a method first described by Paul Irish at: -http://paulirish.com/2008/conditional-stylesheets-vs-css-hacks-answer-neither/ - -If you look at Zen's templates/html.tpl.php file, you will see the HTML tag that -will be used by your site. Using Microsoft's conditional comment syntax, -different HTML tags will be used for different versions of Internet Explorer. - -For example, IE6 will see the HTML tag that has these classes: lt-ie7 lt-ie8 -lt-ie9. If you need to write an IE6-specific rule, you can simply prefix the -selector with ".lt-ie7 " (should be read as "less than IE 7"). To write a rule -that applies to both IE6 and IE7, use ".lt-ie8 ": - .someRule { /* Styles for all browsers */ } - .lt-ie8 .someRule { /* Styles for IE6 and IE7 only. */ } - -Many CSS authors prefer using IE "conditional stylesheets", which are -stylesheets added via conditional comments. If you would prefer that method, you -should check out the Conditional Stylesheets module: -https://drupal.org/project/conditional_styles - - -DRUPAL CORE'S STYLESHEETS -------------------------- - -Note: Many of Zen's styles are overriding Drupal's core stylesheets, so if you -remove a declaration from them, the styles may still not be what you want since -Drupal's core stylesheets are still styling the element. -- cgit v1.2.3