At 2:17 PM +0100 8/31/06, Alex Robinson wrote:

>At 10:30 +0100 31/8/06, Simon Levy wrote:

>>I have a few questions about how to layout and organise your CSS files
>
>A good question but not actually what this list exists for. Please
>take a look at this page on the css-d wiki.
>
>     http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=MaintainableCss

    This is one of those infrequent cases where I'm going to override 
a moderator administrative action.  Partly, anyway.
    I definitely agree that the above-referenced page is a great 
starting point for the topics Simon raised.  However, the part I'm 
going to contradict is in having further discussion on the wiki, 
instead of the list.  Organizing files and styles do have practical 
consequences, and I think there's a lot of utility in having that 
conversation here-- and then summarizing the results on the wiki.
    The one thing I DON'T want to see is people arguing fruitlessly 
(or flaming each other) over different approaches.  Just because 
someone else's way of working is alien to you, that doesn't make it 
wrong.  Pointing out strengths and weaknesses in various approaches, 
that's fine.
    Alex and Zoe and Bob do a great job keeping things on-topic here, 
and the list wouldn't be as useful without their tireless efforts. 
Still, every set of boundaries does need to be adjusted from time to 
time, and we're all learning every day.  So if people want to revive 
the thread, that would be great.

-- 
Eric A. Meyer (http://meyerweb.com/eric/), List Chaperone
"CSS is much too interesting and elegant to be not taken seriously."
   -- Martina Kosloff (http://mako4css.com/)
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