info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
Our CSS is a mixture of current and legacy approaches. That means sometimes it may be difficult to follow this guide to the letter; it means you are likely to run into exceptions, where following the guide is difficult to impossible without major effort. In those cases, you may work with your reviewers and maintainers to identify an approach that does not fit these rules. Try to limit these cases.
In order to reduce the generation of more CSS as our site grows, prefer the use of utility classes over adding new CSS. In complex cases, CSS can be addressed by adding component classes.
Classes in [`utilities.scss`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/assets/stylesheets/utilities.scss) and [`common.scss`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/assets/stylesheets/framework/common.scss) are being deprecated.
Classes in [`common.scss`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/assets/stylesheets/framework/common.scss) that use non-design-system values should be avoided. Use classes with conforming values instead.
If a class you need has not been added to GitLab UI, you get to add it! Follow the naming patterns documented in the [utility files](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ui/-/tree/main/src/scss/utility-mixins) and refer to the [GitLab UI CSS documentation](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ui/-/blob/main/doc/contributing/adding_css.md#adding-utility-mixins) for more details, especially about adding responsive and stateful rules.
If it is not possible to wait for a GitLab UI update (generally one day), add the class to [`utilities.scss`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/assets/stylesheets/utilities.scss) following the same naming conventions documented in GitLab UI. A follow-up issue to backport the class to GitLab UI and delete it from GitLab should be opened.
This encourages an organic growth of component classes and prevents the creation of one-off non-reusable classes. Also, the kind of classes that emerge from "utility-first" tend to be design-centered (for example, `.button`, `.alert`, `.card`) rather than domain-centered (for example, `.security-report-widget`, `.commit-header-icon`).
Usage of the `extend` at-rule is prohibited due to [memory leaks](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/323021) and [the rule doesn't work as it should to](https://sass-lang.com/documentation/breaking-changes/extend-compound). Use mixins instead:
We use [stylelint](https://stylelint.io) to check for style guide conformity. It uses the
ruleset in `.stylelintrc` and rules from [our SCSS configuration](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/frontend/gitlab-stylelint-config). `.stylelintrc` is located in the home directory of the project.