There are a whole host of Sass mixin libraries out there: Bourbon is a personal favourite, Compass is hugely popular. But sometimes, actually always, it’s better to pick and mix your mixins to suit yourself. It’s never good to rely too heavily on a tool, and if you think Sass mixins begin and end with the @include statement then you should probably try writing out a few of your own. Sass mixins are available for a huge range of tasks, here’s 15 that no developer should be without: box-sizing...
Most of us use some form of a CSS pre processor now, they give us the freedom and advantages that CSS still doesn’t have implemented, like variables. The problem with these pre processors is that they use a completely different syntax than CSS itself making us learn two syntaxes. What if we could have a pre processor that had all the advantages we are used to and still keep the CSS syntax ? Myth allows you write CSS syntax so that you don’t have to remember two syntaxes and so that when features like variables...