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Top 30 CSS Libraries Every Developer Should Know

If you're a web developer or designer, using CSS libraries can greatly speed up your workflow and enhance your UI design. Here's a list of the Top 30 most used CSS libraries along with their key features:

1. Bootstrap – Responsive layout, grid system, UI components.
2. Tailwind CSS – Utility-first classes for custom designs.
3. Foundation – Responsive framework with accessibility features.
4. Bulma – Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox.
5. Materialize – Based on Google’s Material Design.
6. Animate.css – Ready-to-use CSS animations.
7. Skeleton – Lightweight boilerplate for basic UI.
8. Pure.css – Small, responsive CSS modules.
9. UIkit – Modern UI components and grid system.
10. Metro 4 UI – Metro-style components and animations.
11. Tachyons – Functional CSS with atomic classes.
12. NES.css – Retro 8-bit game-inspired UI.
13. Cirrus – Clean and responsive CSS framework.
14. Material UI – Material Design for React apps.
15. W3.CSS – Simple, responsive CSS from W3Schools.
16. BEM Methodology – Naming convention for scalable CSS.
17. Clarity Design – Enterprise UI by VMware.
18. Fomantic-UI – Community fork of Semantic UI.
19. Shoelace – Web components for modern apps.
20. Picnic CSS – Lightweight and minimal.
21. Basscss – Low-level CSS toolkit.
22. Wing – Minimal CSS framework with defaults.
23. Blaze UI – Flexible and responsive UI components.
24. Bojler – Email-friendly CSS boilerplate.
25. Water.css – Style websites without writing CSS.
26. Min.css – Minimal, responsive CSS library.
27. CSShake – Shake animations in CSS.
28. Style Framework – Simple and modern CSS framework.
29. LayerCSS – UI layers like modals, alerts, tooltips.
30. Open Props – Custom CSS variables (props) for themes.
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💡 HTML Tip of the Day: The Power of <div> and <span>!

Did you know?

<div> is a block-level container, great for wrapping sections of your content.
<span> is inline, ideal for styling small parts of text or elements!
👉 Try this code:
<div style="background-color: lightgray;">
<p>This is inside a div.</p>
</div>
<span style="color: red;">This is inside a span.</span>

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CodePen Blog
Chris’ Corner: CSS Deep Cuts

Sometimes we gotta get into the unglamorous parts of CSS. I mean *I* think they are pretty glamorous: new syntax, new ideas, new code doing foundational and important things. I just mean things that don’t demo terribly well. Nothing is flying across the screen, anyway.

* The Future of CSS: Construct <custom-identand <dashed-identvalues with ident() by Bramus Van Damme — When you go anchor-name: --name; the --name part is a custom property, right? No. It is a “custom ident”. It doesn’t have a value, it’s just a name. Things get more interesting with ident() as a function, which can help us craft them from other attributes and custom properties, making for much less repetitive code in some situations.
* Beating !important user agent styles (sort of) by Noah Liebman — Using !important is a pretty hardcore way for a rule to apply, made even more hardcore when used by a low level stylesheet, of which user agent styles are the lowest. So is it even possible to beat a style set that way? Click to find out.
* Here’s Why Your Anchor Positioning Isn’t Working by James Stuckey Weber — There is a whole host of reasons why including DOM positioning and order. If you ask Una she’ll say it’s probably the inset property.
* Faux Containers in CSS Grids by Tyler Sticka — Elements that stick out of their “container” is a visually compelling look. A classic way to do it is with negative margins and absolute positioning and the like. But those things are a smidge “dangerous” in that they can cause overlaps and unexpected behavior due to being out of regular flow. I like Tyler’s idea here of keeping it all contained to a grid and just making it look like it’s breaking out.
* Introducing @bramus/style-observer, a MutationObserver for CSS by Bramus Van Damme — A regular MutationObserver watches the DOM for changes. But not style changes. Bramus has created a version of it that does, thanks to a very newfangled CSS property that helps it work efficiently. I’m not overflowing with use case ideas, but I have a feeling that when you need it, you need it.
* Using the upcoming CSS when/else rules by Christiana Uloma — There is a working draft spec for @when/@else so while these aren’t real right now, maybe they will be? The if() function seems more real and maybe that is enough here? The if() function would just be a value though not a whole block of stuff, so maybe we’ll get both.
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*How are web app projects interesting for you?
AI Breath Rate Tracker uses real-time input and smart algorithms to monitor and visualize your breathing pattern directly in the browser. Built with JavaScript and intuitive UI design, this project combines wellness with tech — ideal for mindfulness apps, health monitoring tools, or creative biofeedback demos.

Code
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