The drawback is that you end up with an incomprehensible soup of classes on too many html elements, often redefining and redefining rules.
If you work in a highly componentized scenario that’s probably convenient. You don’t have to name things as you would if you were to keep a separate css ruleset and then tie it to the html elements via naming.
Very noisy compared to a disciplined, structured css though. But who has time for that.
If you work in a highly componentized scenario that’s probably convenient. You don’t have to name things as you would if you were to keep a separate css ruleset and then tie it to the html elements via naming.
Very noisy compared to a disciplined, structured css though. But who has time for that.