I have nothing against CSS-in-JS, but I have no plans to use it unless it truly becomes the new mainstream. I've gotten used to, and enjoy, using the CSS cascade and global nature to layer workable styles onto a webpage. It's reliable but still has enough power and creativity to do some amazing things. CSS-in-JS to me solves problems that aren't really problems. Even with CSS modules, they help but are still more work than they were really work it.
I've had the most success with Atomic CSS, bringing the modularity and controlled cascade while still leaving room for the usual CSS powers. It's unlikely CSS-in-JS will convince me anytime soon. But I'm not going to actively fight against it from making progress either.
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I have nothing against CSS-in-JS, but I have no plans to use it unless it truly becomes the new mainstream. I've gotten used to, and enjoy, using the CSS cascade and global nature to layer workable styles onto a webpage. It's reliable but still has enough power and creativity to do some amazing things. CSS-in-JS to me solves problems that aren't really problems. Even with CSS modules, they help but are still more work than they were really work it.
I've had the most success with Atomic CSS, bringing the modularity and controlled cascade while still leaving room for the usual CSS powers. It's unlikely CSS-in-JS will convince me anytime soon. But I'm not going to actively fight against it from making progress either.