3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Wang
4151d4614e
Fix font-size scaling for text-related CSS properties by using rem instead of fixed px values; deprecate $root-font-size (#1169)
This PR replaces all uses of `px` in relation to font size (opposed to borders, spacing, etc.) with the equivalent `rem` value when the body font size is `16px`. The intention is to better scale the website when the user changes the font size for `<body>` (often done for accessibility reasons).

This PR is technically a **breaking change**, though it's a minor one (see subheading below). I'm putting this up so that we can discuss it as a community.

(technically closes #1088 and fixes #1073, but let's see if we end up merging this)

## mechanics

To do this, I systematically went through every `px` value for all `.scss` files. Then, I deleted the `rem` function, the `_functions.scss` file (that was the only function there), and removed the import from `support.scss`. A nice side effect of this is that we no longer perform any SASS division.

The only remaining uses of `px` are for either:

- border-related properties
- shadow-related properties
- sizing for "non-text" elements (ex `hr`, `blockquote` decorative spacing)
- `$root-font-size` (see below)

The only pixel value change in this PR is the `padding-left` for `blockquote`, which I've changed from `15px` to `1rem` (which is `16px` in the "stock" theme).

## deprecating `$root-font-size`

There's a SCSS variable called `$root-font-size`. It is used in two places:

1. the `rem()` function
2. the `.site-title` when printing (i.e. a `@print` style)

The changes I listed above let us ignore the first case. The second case seems like it has the intention of matching the body font size, so I replaced it with `1rem`.

We can choose to leave the variable in (in case others use it in custom code - which I'm sure that some do) and leave a deprecation notice, or just remove it now. I'm leaning towards the former, which is less disruptive.

## how users would upgrade

This is a breaking change of *some* sorts, but the change is very straightforward for users:

1. If they do not change `$root-font-size`, they need to do nothing; this PR is a no-op.
2. if they do change `$root-font-size`
    - they should instead set the `font-size` of `body` with the appropriate `px` value
    - optionally, they can replace all custom code that uses `$root-font-size` with `1rem` (find-and-replace works here)
2023-06-15 19:11:14 -07:00
Matt Wang
c2ec3d89c2
Update Stylelint to v14, extend SCSS plugins, remove primer-* configs, resolve issues (#821)
This is a catch-all PR that modernizes and updates our Stylelint config, and resolves all open issues. This is a pretty big change - so I want to update all of our related dependencies in lockstep.

In particular, this PR

- [x] updates stylelint to `v14`
- [x] adds in the standard stylelint config for SCSS (`stylelint-config-standard-scss`)
- [x] swaps out `stylelint-config-prettier` for `stylelint-config-prettier-scss`
- [x] ~~properly update `@primer`-related plugins:~~ completely remove `primer` from our configuration
- [x] autofix, manually resolve, or disable all newly-introduced lint errors; **I've avoided manually resolving errors that would be a behavioural change**
- [x] re-runs `npm run format`

See the "next steps" section on some extra thoughts on disabling errors.

(implicitly, I'm also using node 16/the new package-lock format).

### disabling rules and next steps

I've introduced several new disabled rules. Let me quickly explain what's going on; there are two categories of rules I've disabled:

1. rules that were temporary disables; they were frequent enough that I couldn't manually resolve them, but should be simple. **I plan on opening issues to re-enable each of these rules**, just after this PR
    - `declaration-block-no-redundant-longhand-properties`: this is just tedious and error-prone
    - `no-descending-specificity`: this one is tricky since it could have impacts on the cascade (though that seems unlikely)
    - `scss/no-global-function-names`: I think we need to [import map and then use `map.get`](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/64210390/sass-map-get-doesnt-work-map-get-does-what-gives), but I'll leave this as out of scope for now
2. rules that are long-term disables; due to the SASS-based nature of our theme, I think we'll keep these in limbo
    - `alpha-value-notation` causes problems with SASS using the `modern` syntax - literals like `50%` are not properly interpolated, and they cause formatting issues on the site
    - `color-function-notation` also causes problems with SASS, but in this case the `modern` syntax breaks SASS compilation; we're not alone (see this [SO post](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71805735/error-function-rgb-is-missing-argument-green-in-sass)). 

In addition, we have many inline `stylelint-disable` comments. I'd open a separate issue to audit them, especially since I think some disables are unnecessary.

### on Primer 

**note: there hasn't been much other discussion, so I'm going to remove primer's stylelint config.**

If I do add `@primer/stylelint-config`, I get *a ton* of errors about now using `@primer`'s in-built SCSS variables. I imagine that we probably won't want to use these presets (though I could be wrong). In that case, I think we could either:

1. disable all of those rules
4. not use `@primer/stylelint-config`, since we're not actually using primer, and shift back to the standard SCSS config provided by Stylelint

~~Any thoughts here? I also don't have the original context as to why we do use the primer rules, perhaps @pmarsceill can chime in?~~
2022-07-25 09:18:13 -07:00
Patrick Marsceill
8715224655
Add IDs to target print styles 2020-06-26 15:33:03 -04:00