e3ccf3b163
- primer-alerts@1.1.5 - primer-avatars@0.4.9 - primer-base@1.1.2 - primer-blankslate@0.3.8 - primer-box@2.1.5 - primer-breadcrumb@0.1.4 - primer-buttons@2.0.3 - primer-cards@0.1.5 - primer-core@4.0.2 - primer-css@7.0.0-rc.3 - primer-forms@1.0.10 - primer-labels@1.1.3 - primer-layout@1.0.2 - primer-markdown@3.3.10 - primer-marketing-support@0.5.3 - primer-marketing-type@0.2.3 - primer-marketing-utilities@0.1.7 - primer-marketing@4.0.2 - primer-navigation@1.0.3 - primer-page-headers@0.1.4 - primer-page-sections@0.1.4 - primer-product@4.0.2 - primer-support@4.0.4 - primer-table-object@1.0.6 - primer-tables@0.1.5 - primer-tooltips@0.5.7 - primer-truncate@0.3.5 - primer-utilities@4.3.2 |
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.. | ||
lib | ||
.gitignore | ||
.npmignore | ||
.postcss.json | ||
.stylelintrc.json | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
index.scss | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Primer CSS table object
Table object is a module for creating dynamically resizable elements that always sit on the same horizontal line (e.g., they never break to a new line). Using table styles in our CSS means it’s cross browser friendly back to at least IE9.
This repository is a module of the full primer-css repository.
Install
This repository is distributed with npm. After installing npm, you can install primer-table-object
with this command.
$ npm install --save primer-table-object
Usage
The source files included are written in Sass (scss
) You can simply point your sass include-path
at your node_modules
directory and import it like this.
@import "primer-table-object/index.scss";
You can also import specific portions of the module by importing those partials from the /lib/
folder. Make sure you import any requirements along with the modules.
Build
For a compiled css version of this module, a npm script is included that will output a css version to build/build.css
The built css file is also included in the npm package.
$ npm run build
Documentation
The table object is a module for creating dynamically resizable elements that always sit on the same horizontal line (e.g., they never break to a new line). Using table styles in our CSS means it's cross browser friendly back to at least IE9.
Additional margin
or padding
may be required to properly space content.
<div class="TableObject">
<div class="TableObject-item TableObject-item--primary">
<input class="input-block form-control" type="text" placeholder="Long elastic input form" aria-label="Long elastic input form">
</div>
<div class="TableObject-item">
<button class="btn ml-2" type="button">Button</button>
</div>
</div>