We had a similar cost savings for our JavaScript. So that was like a 2/3 kind of drop in file size which is amazing. We cut our CSS from 160 kilobytes minified to 50 kilobytes. We were really aggressively cutting file size. We did kind of a fundamental rethinking of how the framework was structured. It was probably our biggest release to date. ![]() Foundation, version six was released in November of last year. We maintain Foundation which these days is actually three different open source projects, and a lot of these just arose out of needs that we kind of identified within our company. Do any guys out there like use Foundation in your projects? Okay, I know what framework you guys all use. We also maintain open source projects on the side so we've been very heavily invested in open source for like five or six years mainly with the Foundation framework. We work with companies both large and small on many kinds of design problems. ZURB is a little agency in Campbell, California, near San Jose. I am a designer and a front-end developer at ZURB. Together the two form a delicious-build system. And we do that through the Gulp task runner and also a custom templating thing that we wrote called Panini. It's basically a way for users of Foundation to use the same tools that ZURB uses to deliver front-end code to clients. Today for my talk I'm going to talk about the ZURB template which is a kind of new thing that we rolled out along with Foundation 6. We're gonna have a lot of fun today talking about Node and static sites, those kinds of things, let's get into it. First off, thank you so much guys for having us. So my name's Geoff from ZURB once again, those are my first two slides, I already blew that part. And Geoff right here from ZURB Foundation is here to tell us more about it. This is our fourth meetup, Static Web Tech Meetup and we are really excited today as Foundation 6 has chosen to work with the static site generator intimately as part of the setup. ZURB migrated from the grunt based assemble, to Panini, when launching Foundation 6.įull transcript of the presentation below: ![]() Panini is a custom built, light-weight static site generator that works as a plugin to gulp. Geoff Kimball from ZURB, a main architect behind Foundation 6, a popular CSS framework, presents and explains how Foundation 6 uses their new static site generator Panini as a central build tool.
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