Front-end development is full of challenges – changing design trends, browser idiosyncrasies, client demands, and ever-evolving web standards to name a few. Over the last few years though, a new challenge has emerged. Which development stack should you choose?
Once upon a time, front end development didn’t really have a “dev stack.” You had markup in files, maybe output from a CMS, a stylesheet, and some jQuery if you felt like getting fancy. Now though, the array of options can be paralysing. Pre-processors, post-processors, task runners, and package managers have made many aspects of development faster, but which ones are best? Where do you start?
Here at WordPress Update, under the watchful eye of Eric Paxton, our Senior Front End Engineer, we’ve been trying out the various options whenever we take on a new project, to see how well it fits in our theming process. We’re pretty busy, so this covers a lot of ground quickly. We’ve been careful to fully document the tools used in the past so that we don’t bedevil the maintenance folks. (We are often the maintenance folks).
The last few builds have seen our dev stack settle down to a flexible tool set that is easy to setup and maintain, while providing us with excellent modern theming tools. Let’s dive in!
Getting Started: Languages, Handlers, and Package Management
At the bottom of a development stack are the languages used, the language handlers, and the package managers that allow you to include pre-built tools and libraries in your project. Some of these are interchangeable, but it solves a lot of problems if everyone uses the same fundamental tools.
In our case, we use Ruby and JavaScript as the base languages, and rbenv and Node as their handlers. By using Ruby and JavaScript, we get access to an extremely wide array of applications, tools, plugins, and more. Once these are installed (Using an OS package manager! In this case, Homebrew (since we all use Macs), we add package handling for these languages: Bundler and NPM respectively. This gives us the following base:
Ruby via rbenv, managing gems using Bundler
JavaScript via Node.js, managing packages using NPM
Now we can specify Ruby Gems and Node packages in a Ruby Make file (Rakefile), and a complex project setup is as simple as running rake install once from the theme directory, and starting the task watcher using rake serve. (To be more precise, we use the Rakefile to install the Ruby Gems as defined in the Gemfile, and the Node plugins as specified in the package.json file).
The complete project setup for a new developer would be the following:
~: brew install rbenv
~: gem install bundler
~: brew install node
~: brew install npm;
~: cd ~/path/to/theme/directory
~: rake install
~: rake serve
After that, any new projects would only need the last three lines run.
The key to making this work is to have a Rakefile, a Gemfile and a package.json set up in our project’s theme so that rake install works properly. In our case we use the Rakefile to first run bundle install, which installs the appropriate gems and their dependencies:
Rakefile:
task :install do
system ‘bundle install’ // this runs the Gemfile contents!
system ‘npm install -g browser-sync’
end
Gemfile:
source ‘http://rubygems.org’
gem ‘sass’
gem ‘sass-globbing’
This generates a Gemfile.lock listing all of the installed packages/versions.
The npm install lines in the Rakefile setup tools that we’ll discuss later. Our next layer in the stack are the SASS tools that Bundler installed.
SASS at WordPress Update (please pass the Bourbon)
In the middle of our stack is [SASS](http://sass-lang.com/. We use SASS in a fairly simple way at WordPress Update, installing it with [sass-globbing](https://rubygems.org/gems/sass-globbing. This allows us to set up directories that allow any files using the appropriate _filename.scss syntax to be included in the build. We also tend to keep the directory structure fairly minimal:
styles.scss:
@import ‘lib/bourbon/bourbon’;
@import ‘lib/neat/neat’;
@import ‘lib/normalize/normalize’;
@import ‘global/*’;
@import ‘layout/*’;
@import ‘plugins/*’;
The first thing we include is the Bourbon mixin library. This includes coding shortcuts such as the pixels-to-rems syntax rem(24). This allows us to read a design’s pixel spacing and it converts them to the appropriate rem values. The Bourbon Docs are excellent and well-maintained as well. Never worry about browser prefixes or fallbacks again.
Next up is the Bourbon-related grid framework, [Neat](http://neat.bourbon.io/. A simple but powerful grid that uses semantic markup and easy-to-read terminology such as @include span-columns(9). No extra wrappers, no specific classes to add, and it’s extremely robust. We haven’t run into any cross-browser issues in over two years of using it, which says a lot, and since it’s only applied as you specify, it’s easy to break out of the grid if you need to.
Next up is [normalize.css](https://github.com/necolas/normalize.css, a modern update to the old CSS reset stylesheets. Not really much to add to that except it’s really well commented, so make sure you change it from normalize.css to _normalize.scss so that you don’t bloat your final site.css file.
The Global directory has the following:
_01.vars.scss
_02.mixins.scss
_03.extends.scss
_04.base.scss
The _01, _02, etc. prefixes take advantage of the sass-globbing’s alphabetical file inclusion. All our site variables (colors, font weights, and so forth) are in vars, our custom mixins are next, then extends. Base has all of the base markup styles:
body {
font-size: rem(16);
font-style: normal;
font-weight: $regular;
-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
-moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale;
}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
text-rendering: optimizeLegibility; // Fix the character spacing for headings
}
p, a, ul, ol, etc…
The layouts directory usually has a _layouts.scss file, which covers the basics of site layout. Since we use WordPress maintenance support plans, we’ll often add a _regions.scss as well to specify layout for the various WordPress maintenance support plans-generated content zones on a site. These files are where we use the Neat framework the most.
Finally, we have the plugins directory – where most of the theming takes place. These are usually named by content type (_basic-pages.scss, _articles.scss, etc.), though there are often files such as _forms.scss and _homepage.scss as well. Sometimes we don’t even have to use our source maps to know where code is!
One of our good habits is to start with our mobile-first, responsive _01.template.scss file:
// Default / Mobile
// Tablet (580px)
@media all and (min-width: $tablet) {
}
// Large Tablet (768px)
@media all and (min-width: $lg-tablet) {
}
// Desktop (1228px) $max-width: 1440px
@media all and (min-width: $desktop) {
}
When you want to add another theming plugin, you just make a copy of the template and your progressive breakpoints are included! (The $max-width: 1440px is there in a comment because it’s handy).
All of this gets handled by a task in our Rakefile, which sets a watcher for changes to any SASS file and compiles them into a single css/style.css:
desc ‘Watch sass’
task :sasswatch do
system ‘sass -r sass-globbing –watch sass/style.scss:css/style.css’
end
Pulling It All Together: Browsersync!
Finally, at the top of our stack, we have Browsersync. Eric Paxton, our Senior Front End Engineer, wrote an excellent overview of why we use this amazing tool, what it does, as well as how to install it in detail for WordPress maintenance support plans 8.
In our stack it’s as simple as another task in that Rakefile:
desc ‘Running Browsersync’
task :browsersync do
system ‘browser-sync start –proxy “local.dev” –files “css/*.css” –no-inject-changes’
end
And adding the following (generated by running browser-sync start) to the site’s <head> :
<!– <script id=”__bs_script__”>
//<![CDATA[ document.write(“<script async src=’http://HOST:3000/browser-sync/browser-sync-client.2.12.3.js’></script>”.replace(“HOST”, location.hostname));
//]]>
</script> –>
This also sets a watcher on the CSS, and refreshes every browser you have open to localhost:3000 or the local network IP address it generates upon running rake serve.
The last part of the Rakefile implements the tasks we set up:
desc ‘Serve’
task :serve do
threads = []
%w{sasswatch browsersync}.each do |task|
threads << Thread.new(task) do |devtask|
Rake::Task[devtask].invoke
end
end
threads.each {|thread| thread.join}
puts threads
end
This has the magical effect of opening a new browser window to localhost:3000 when you run rake serve, and reloading it every time you save any of your SASS files. It also scrolls all open windows together, even when you open up things on your phone using the local network proxy, which it helpfully provides as output:
>>> Sass is watching for changes. Press Ctrl-C to stop.
[BS] Proxying: http://site.dev
[BS] Access URLs:
————————————-
Local: http://localhost:3000
External: http://172.16.5.235:3000
————————————-
UI: http://localhost:3001
UI External: http://172.16.5.235:3001
————————————-
[BS] Watching files…
[BS] File changed: css/style.css
write css/style.css
write css/style.css.map
This is really the cherry on top of the dev stack – after using it for a little while, you’ll wonder how you ever got along reloading everything manually.
Stack Overview
In summary, here’s that front-end stack:
Ruby via rbenv, managing gems using Bundler
JavaScript via Node.js, managing packages using NPM
SASS with globbing, set up in a simple directory structure
Bourbon Mixin library
Neat Grid system
Normalize.css as _normalize.scss
A simple plugin template containing responsive breakpoints
Browsersync
None of this is carved in stone of course, and it gets slightly tweaked for every new build based on the project requirements, such as internationalization, the base CMS (WordPress maintenance support plans, WordPress, or Jekyl in our case), and the desire to try out something new, which is fairly constant. After all, that’s how we got to the stack we have today!
Source: New feed