| name | modern-css |
| description | Helps with authoring and reviewing modern CSS for robust, responsive, and accessible UIs — cascade layers, @scope, :has(), nesting, container queries, fluid typography with clamp(), oklch() colors, light-dark() and color-scheme, logical properties, subgrid, and prefers-reduced-motion. Use this skill when the user asks things like "style this component", "make this responsive", "add dark mode", "scope these styles", "fluid type scale", or any CSS authoring, refactoring, or review task — even when they don't explicitly say "CSS". |
| metadata | {"tags":"css, modern-css, baseline, progressive-enhancement, accessibility, responsive-design, container-queries, cascade-layers, oklch, logical-properties, subgrid"} |
Modern CSS
Modern CSS rules for creating robust, responsive and accessible UIs.
The rules work best when you apply a progressive enhancement approach. The CSS features are within Baseline Newly Available. Thanks to Interop, most are within Widely Available.
When editing existing files, match the surrounding code's style. For new code, follow the rules below. Where two rules could both apply, apply both consistently rather than picking one.
Rules
Architecture
Organizing styles (@layer)
- Rule: Use
@layer to organize groups of styles.
- Constraint: Avoid global styles outside of layers.
- Rationale: Prevents style conflicts through managing specificity.
- References:
@layer on MDN.
- Example:
a {
text-decoration-skip-ink: auto;
}
@layer elements, components;
@layer elements {
a {
text-decoration-skip-ink: auto;
}
}
Encapsulating styles (@scope)
- Rule: Use
@scope to encapsulate styles.
- Constraint: Avoid custom element and components styles that are outside of a scope.
- Rationale: Prevents styles from bleeding into other components because selectors are scoped to the component.
- References:
@scope on MDN.
- Example:
@scope (.card) {
h2 {
font-size: var(--large);
}
}
Limiting scope (@scope ... to)
- Rule: Use a scope limit (
@scope (outer) to (inner)) when a scoped component hosts content it doesn't own — embedded components, slot content, or user content.
- Constraint: Avoid base
@scope over a component that holds slot content, embedded components, or user-generated HTML.
- Rationale: Stops the outer scope's styles bleeding into nested components or projected content; descendants past the limit keep their own scope's styles. Sometimes called donut scoping.
- References:
@scope on MDN.
- Example:
@scope (.card) {
a {
color: var(--blue);
}
}
@scope (.card) to (.content) {
a {
color: var(--blue);
}
}
Nesting rules and at-rules (&)
- Rule: Use
& for nesting rules and at-rules.
- Constraint: Avoid unnested selectors (e.g.
a {} a:hover {}).
- Rationale: Clarifies the relationship between the nested selector and the parent selector.
- References:
& nesting selector on MDN.
- Example:
a {
color: var(--blue);
&:hover {
text-decoration: underline;
}
@container (width > 20em ) {
place-self: center;
}
}
Relational styles (:has())
- Rule: Use
:has() for relational styles.
- Constraint: Avoid
.has--like class names (e.g. .has-img {}).
- Rationale: The relationship lives in CSS, with no JS or build-time class toggling needed when the DOM changes.
- References:
:has() on MDN.
- Example:
.card {
&:has(img) {
grid-template-rows: auto 1fr;
}
}
Additive properties (:not() and 20em < width <= 40em)
- Rule: Use
:not() and ranged queries (e.g. @media (20em < width <= 40em)) to create additive styles.
- Constraint: Avoid overriding styles (e.g.
div { margin: 1rem; &:first-child { margin-block-start: 0; } })
- Rationale: Simplifies the mental model because you don't have to keep track of which styles are being overridden.
- References:
:not() on MDN, media query range syntax on MDN.
- Example:
.card {
color: red;
&:not(:first-child) {
margin-block-start: var(--medium);
}
@container example (width <= 20em) {
background-color: var(--primary);
}
@container example (20em < width <= 40em ) {
background-color: var(--secondary);
}
@container example (width > 40em ) {
background-color: var(--tertiary);
}
}
Typography
Fluid type sizes (clamp())
- Rule: Use
clamp() for font sizes to create harmonious rhythmic scales that are appropriate to the screen size, e.g. Major Second (1.125) on narrow viewports and Major Third (1.25) wide ones.
- Constraint: Avoid fixed font sizes (e.g.,
px, rem) and central values without a rem addition (e.g. clamp(1.75rem, 5cqi, 2.25rem)).
- Rationale: Ensures text is appropriately sized across different viewport sizes and can be zoomed for accessibility.
- References:
clamp() on MDN, Responsive design: seams & edges. and Designing with fluid type scales
.
- Example:
:root {
--medium: clamp(1.3125rem, 1.1821rem + 0.6522cqi, 1.6875rem);
--large: clamp(1.75rem, 1.5761rem + 0.8696cqi, 2.25rem);
}
Widow and orphan words (text-wrap)
- Rule: Use
text-wrap with pretty or balance to avoid widow and orphan words.
- Constraint: Avoid default wrapping outside of inputs and text areas.
- Rationale: Improves the readability and aesthetics of text blocks.
- References:
text-wrap on MDN.
- Example:
h1,
h2,
h3 {
text-wrap: balance;
}
p {
text-wrap: pretty;
}
Colors
Perceptual uniform lightness (oklch())
- Rule: Use
oklch() for all colors.
- Constraint: Avoid
hex, rgb(), hsl() and other color formats.
- Rationale: Easier to maintain perceptual uniform lightness to ensure text is accessible regardless of background color.
- References:
oklch() on MDN.
- Example:
:root {
--success: #2d7a3e;
--danger: hsl(0deg 70% 40%);
}
:root {
--success: oklch(40% 0.15 150deg);
--danger: oklch(40% 0.2 25deg);
}
Respecting color preferences (color-scheme)
- Rule: Use
color-scheme and light-dark() to support color schemes.
- Constraint: Avoid hardcoding colors that don't adapt to light and dark modes.
- Rationale: Improves accessibility by respecting a person's preference for light or dark mode.
- References:
color-scheme on MDN, light-dark() on MDN.
- Example:
body {
color-scheme: light dark;
background-color: light-dark(oklch(98% 0.03 250deg), oklch(14% 0 0deg));
}
Relative color functions (oklch(from /* .. */) & color-mix() )
- Rule: Use relative color syntax (e.g.
oklch(from var(--primary) l + 10%)) and functions (e.g. color-mix()) to create color relationships.
- Constraint: Avoid hardcoding colors that relate to other colors.
- Rationale: Creates a cohesive color palette that is easier to maintain and adjust.
- References: relative colors on MDN,
color-mix() on MDN.
- Example:
button {
background-color: var(--primary);
&:hover {
background-color: oklch(from var(--primary) l c calc(h - 10deg));
}
}
Layout
Flow-relative layout (*-inline-*, *-block-*, cqi/vi, start/end)
- Rule: Use flow-relative properties (e.g.
padding-block-start, inset-inline, inline-size), units (e.g. cqi, cqb, vi), and keywords (e.g. text-align: start) for layout.
- Constraint: Avoid physical equivalents (e.g.
padding-top, width, cqw, vw, text-align: left).
- Rationale: Flexbox and grid already use inline/block axes; flow-relative layout keeps the rest of the box model consistent with them, and adapts automatically when writing mode or text direction changes.
- References: Logical properties and values on MDN.
- Example:
.card {
padding-top: 1rem;
font-size: 20vw;
text-align: left;
}
.card {
padding-block-start: 1rem;
font-size: 20vi;
text-align: start;
}
Container queries and units (@container, cqi etc.)
.card {
container: card / inline-size;
padding: 2cqi;
p {
@container card (width > 30cqi) {
place-self: center;
}
}
}
Intrinsic sizing (*-content)
- Rule: Use intrinsic sizing (e.g.
max-inline-size: fit-content, block-size: max-content).
- Constraint: Avoid fixed sizes (e.g.
width: 300px, height: 200px) for content elements.
- Rationale: Improves flexibility and prevents overflow issues as content determines its own size.
- References:
fit-content on MDN, max-content on MDN.
- Example:
nav {
max-inline-size: fit-content;
}
Aligning nested grids (subgrid)
- Rule: Use
subgrid on grid-template-rows or grid-template-columns to align nested grid items with an ancestor grid.
- Constraint: Avoid fixed heights, JS measurement, or flattening the DOM to make sibling grids align.
- Rationale: Sibling components keep their internal markup while still aligning at parent grid boundaries; without
subgrid, alignment falls back to fixed heights, JS measurement, or flattened DOM.
- References:
subgrid on MDN.
- Example:
.card {
display: grid;
grid-template-rows: auto auto auto 1fr;
> .content {
display: grid;
grid-row: span 4;
grid-template-rows: subgrid;
}
}
Motion
Respecting motion preferences (prefers-reduced-motion)
- Rule: Use
prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference when applying large animations and transitions.
- Constraint: Avoid
prefers-reduced-motion: reduce.
- Rationale: Treats motion as opt-in: the absence of animation is the default, so no fallback is needed for users who haven't expressed a preference. Inverting this (
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)) requires every animation to also ship a reduce-motion override, and it's easy to miss one.
- References:
prefers-reduced-motion on MDN.
- Example:
.hero {
animation: bounce-in 0.5s ease;
}
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: reduce) {
.hero {
animation: none;
}
}
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference) {
.hero {
animation: bounce-in 0.5s ease;
}
}
Applying these rules
When asked to author, refactor, or review CSS:
- Identify which rules apply to the task.
- Read surrounding files to see which rules are already in use; match their patterns.
- Apply the rules consistently across the change set, not just at the touch points.
Gotchas
Non-obvious traps that the rules above don't surface on their own:
clamp() central values need a rem term: clamp(1.75rem, 1.5761rem + 0.8696cqi, 2.25rem), not clamp(1.75rem, 5cqi, 2.25rem).
- Ranged queries must not overlap:
width <= 20em / 20em < width <= 40em / width > 40em, not width < 20em / width >= 20em.
prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference opts motion in, reduce opts motion out. Reach for no-preference.
oklch() not hsl() for theme colors. HSL's lightness channel isn't perceptually uniform.
:has() makes .has-img-style classes obsolete. Don't add a class to track a relationship the DOM already expresses.
grid-template-rows: subgrid only inherits tracks the child claims. Pair it with grid-row: span N so the child occupies the parent rows; without span, the subgrid child gets one row and aligns with nothing.
Examples
This site follows the rules:
When the skill is active, prefer matching patterns from the user's own files over fetching these examples.