In my website I use twitter bootstrap. Is it necessary to include reset.css with my site? Is it included in bootstrap.css file?
3 Answers
normalize.css
is included at the beginning of the bootstrap.css
file, so you don't need to have another one.
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7(( The one included is actually based on Eric Meyer's CSS reset :-) See Twitter's blog post )) Apr 24, 2012 at 8:20
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As of 7-11-2014, Bootstrap uses Normalize.css. From getbootstrap.com/css: "For improved cross-browser rendering, we use Normalize.css, a project by Nicolas Gallagher and Jonathan Neal."– gabeJul 11, 2014 at 17:11
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Keep in mind that normalize.css is massively different from reset.css. For example, ul, ol, and li may still produce bullet points, margins, etc.– jchookJun 5, 2015 at 1:34
With Bootstrap 2, the old reset block has been dropped in favor of Normalize.css, that also powers the HTML5 Boilerplate. Normalize.css makes browsers render all elements more consistently and in line with modern standards and it precisely targets only the styles that need normalizing.
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1thanks god we are finally burrying the hierarchy ruiner reset concept into the history! always used a technique like normalize.css. Jun 3, 2014 at 7:13
Just a note to this. Twitter Bootstrap 2.0 runs Normalize.css, instead of reset. (but they have kept the name as reset.css for some odd reason :D )
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so are you saying that it would be good to have a reset css too. I am confused.– KieranDec 12, 2012 at 22:31
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