Simple boilerplate for quickly setting up a static site.
By default there are included:
- Normalize.css, a modern alternative to CSS resets,
- Bourbon, a simple and lightweight mixin library for Sass,
- Neat, a lightweight and semantic grid framework for Sass and Bourbon,
- Gulp, task runner with several awesome plugins,
- jQuery, javascript library,
- svg4everybody.js, script allowing to use external SVG sprites in browser that do not support this feature.
- Make sure you have
git,nodejs,npmandbowerinstalled, - Clone the repo (
git clone https://github.com/klapec/bourbonify.git) andcdinto it, - Run
npm install, - Run
gulp build, - Run
gulp.
There are few gulp tasks present in the gulpfile.
gulp build– downloads dependencies (Normalize.css, Bourbon and Neat) using Bower, moves them toassets/src/stylesheets/vendors/and renames Normalize so that it can be imported by Sass,gulp(default task) – builds all the assets (stylesheets, scripts, images and SVGs) and begins to watch all the files for changes. It will automatically re-run compilation of changed asset and reload the browser,gulp styles– handles stylesheets compilation. Uses sass (ruby-sass) to compile Sass into CSS, autoprefixes all the needed vendor prefixes in your CSS files, minifies them and outputs the compiledmain.min.csstoassets/dist/stylesheets/,gulp scripts– handles JavaScript scripts. It first uses jshint to lint your scripts and check if there are any errors in them, it then concatenates all your scripts into a single file (decreasing HTTP request for performance reasons) and minifies it usinguglify,gulp vendorScripts– does pretty much the same as the task above. It handles vendor scripts (fromassets/src/scripts/vendors/) but it doesn't run them through linting – we are assuming that those 3rd party scripts were written properly,gulp images– optimizes your images. Uses imagemin to shrink them in size while not losing too much of quality,gulp svg– does pretty much the same except for your SVG files. The difference is that it automatically compiles them into a singlesprite.svgfile (again, performance reasons). Each of your SVG files can be accessed then in your website easily by an ID of their original name, prefixed byicon-. Read more about this technique on CSS-Tricks.
├── assets
│ ├── dist
│ └── src
│ │ ├── images
│ │ ├── scripts
│ │ │ ├── main.js
│ │ │ └── vendors
│ │ │ │ └── svg4everybody.js
│ │ ├── stylesheets
│ │ │ ├── base
│ │ │ ├── components
│ │ │ ├── main.scss
│ │ │ ├── pages
│ │ │ ├── partials
│ │ │ ├── themes
│ │ │ ├── utils
│ │ │ └── vendors
│ │ └── svg
├── LICENSE
├── README.md
├── bower.json
├── favicon-192x192.png
├── favicon.ico
├── gulpfile.js
├── index.html
└── package.json