6.3 KiB
CSS
This page is for information about CSS used by DevTools. Wondering about the Dev Edition theme? See this page for more information about the Developer Edition theme.
Basics
The CSS code is in devtools/client/themes
.
Here are some basic tips that can optimize reviews if you are changing CSS:
- Avoid
!important
but if you have to use it, make sure it's obvious why you're using it (maybe with a comment). - Avoid magic numbers, prefer automatic sizing.
- Avoid platforms specific styles, put everything in the
shared
directory. - Avoid preprocessor variables, use CSS variables instead.
- Avoid setting styles in JavaScript. It's generally better to set a class and then specify the styles in CSS
classList
is generally better thanclassName
. There's less chance of over-writing an existing class.
Boilerplate
Make sure each file starts with the standard copyright header (see License Boilerplate).
Testing
CSS changes should generally be similar across platforms since they used a shared implementation, but there can still be differences worth checking out. Check major changes on Windows, OS X and Ubuntu.
Formatting
We use 2-spaces indentation for the CSS.
In general the formatting looks like this:
selector,
alternate-selector {
property: value;
other-property: other-value;
}
Also:
- Omit units on 0 values.
- Example: Use
margin: 0;
, notmargin: 0px;
. - Add a space after each comma, except within color functions.
- Example:
linear-gradient(to bottom, black 1px, rgba(255,255,255,0.2) 1px)
. - Always add a space before
!important
. - Assume
="true"
in attribute selectors. - Example: Use
option[checked]
, notoption[checked="true"]
. - Use longhand versions of properties so it's clear what you're changing.
- Example: Use
border-color: red
, notborder: red;
.
Naming standards for class names:
lower-case-with-dashes
is the most common.- But
camelCase
is also used sometimes. Try to follow the style of existing or related code.
Light and Dark theme support
DevTools supports 3 different themes: the dark theme, the light theme and the firebug theme. In order to support them, there are 3 class names available (theme-dark
, theme-light
and theme-firebug
).
- Use pre-defined CSS variables instead of hardcoding colors when possible.
- If you need to support themes and the pre-defined variables don't fit, define a variable with your custom colors at the beginning of the CSS file. This avoids selector duplication in the code.
Example:
.theme-light {
--some-variable-name: <color-for-light-theme>;
}
.theme-dark {
--some-variable-name: <color-for-dark-theme>;
}
.theme-firebug {
--some-variable-name: <color-for-dark-theme>;
}
#myElement {
background-color: var(--some-variable-name);
}
HDPI support
It's recommended to use SVG since it keeps the CSS clean when supporting multiple resolutions. However, if only 1x and 2x PNG assets are available, you can use this @media
query to target higher density displays (HDPI): @media (min-resolution: 1.1dppx)
.
Performance
- Read Writing Efficient CSS.
- Use an iframe where possible so your rules are scoped to the smallest possible set of nodes.
- If your CSS is used in
browser.xul
, you need to take special care with performance: - Descendent selectors should be avoided.
- If possible, find ways to use only id selectors, class selectors and selector groups.
Localization
Text Direction
- For margins, padding and borders, use
inline-start
/inline-end
rather thanleft
/right
. - Example: Use
margin-inline-start: 3px;
notmargin-left: 3px
. - For RTL-aware positioning (left/right), use
offset-inline-start/end
. - When there is no special RTL-aware property (eg.
float: left|right
) available, use the pseudo:-moz-locale-dir(ltr|rtl)
(for XUL files) or:dir(ltr|rtl)
(for HTML files). - Remember that while a tab content's scrollbar still shows on the right in RTL, an overflow scrollbar will show on the left.
- Write
padding: 0 3px 4px;
instead ofpadding: 0 3px 4px 3px;
. This makes it more obvious that the padding is symmetrical (so RTL won't be an issue).
RTL support for html modules
By default, new HTML modules support only left-to-right (LTR) and do not reuse the current direction of the browser.
To enable right-to-left (RTL) support in a module, set the [dir]
attribute on the document element of the module:
- Example:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" dir="">
.
The appropriate value for the dir
attribute will then be set when the toolbox loads this module.
Testing
The recommended workflow to test RTL on DevTools is to use the Force RTL extension. After changing the direction using Force RTL, you should restart DevTools to make sure all modules apply the new direction. A future version of Force RTL will be able to update dynamically all DevTools documents.
Going to about:config
and setting intl.uidirection.en
to rtl is not recommended, and will always require to re-open DevTools to have any impact.
Toggles
Sometimes you have a style that you want to turn on and off. For example a tree twisty (a expand-collapse arrow), a tab background, etc.
The Mozilla way is to perform the toggle using an attribute rather than a class:
.tree-node {
background-image: url(right-arrow.svg);
}
.tree-node[open] {
background-image: url(down-arrow.svg);
}
Tips
- Use
:empty
to match a node that doesn't have children. - Usually, if
margin
orpadding
has 4 values, something is wrong. If the left and right values are asymmetrical, you're supposed to use-start
and-end
. If the values are symmetrical, use only 3 values (see localization section).