From d83a2c6ec5f5dc15530e6be09ed3b464dde0a433 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Oliver Davies Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2020 13:03:45 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update text --- source/_posts/using-the-pcss-extension-with-webpack-encore.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/source/_posts/using-the-pcss-extension-with-webpack-encore.md b/source/_posts/using-the-pcss-extension-with-webpack-encore.md index 8af8b36e..7cf49a59 100644 --- a/source/_posts/using-the-pcss-extension-with-webpack-encore.md +++ b/source/_posts/using-the-pcss-extension-with-webpack-encore.md @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ date: 2020-04-01 tags: [webpack, encore, postcss, symfony] --- -I’ve been watching Christopher Pitt ([assertchris][assertchris-twitter])’s [streams on Twitch][assertchris-twitch] over the last few months, in one of which he was doing some Tailwind CSS work and using a `.pcss` file extension for his PostCSS files. +I’ve been watching Christopher Pitt ([assertchris][assertchris-twitter])’s [streams on Twitch][assertchris-twitch] over the last few months, in one of which he was doing some work with Tailwind CSS and using a `.pcss` file extension for his PostCSS files. I couldn’t remember seeing this extension before, but this made a lot of sense to me compared to the standard `.css` extension - both to make it clear that it’s a PostCSS file and features like nesting can be used, and also for better integration and highlighting with IDEs and text editors such as PhpStorm.