MUI is a lightweight CSS framework that follows Google’s Material Design guidelines.
MUI is designed from the ground up to be fast, small and developer friendly. By design it only includes the basic components you need to build a site. The MUI package includes all the necessary code to use MUI components on the web and over email.
This is free and open source software.
Key Features
- Small footprint: mui.min.css – 6.6K, mui.min.js – 5.4K (gzipped).
- A responsive grid to make mobile-friendly sites.
- No external dependencies.
- CSS library that can be customized with your own colors.
- JS library can be loaded asynchronously.
- HTML Email – includes an email CSS library that can be used with an inliner.
- Customizable – easily customized by using the supplied SASS files.
- Cross-platform – set of components that work across platforms from web to mobile to email to iOS to Android.
Website: www.muicss.com
Support: GitHub Code Repository
Developer: Andres Morey
License: MIT License
MUI is written in JavaScript and CSS. Learn JavaScript with our recommended free books and free tutorials. Learn CSS with our recommended free books and free tutorials.
Related Software
| Lightweight CSS Frameworks & Boilerplates | |
|---|---|
| HTML5 Boilerplate | HTML5/CSS/JS front-end template |
| Pure | Small, responsive CSS modules |
| Pico | Minimal CSS framework for semantic HTML |
| sakura | Minimal, classless CSS framework / theme |
| MUI | CSS framework that follows Google's Material Design guidelines |
| Base | Super simple responsive framework |
| Tacit | Primitive CSS framework for dummies |
| chota | Micro (3kb) CSS framework |
| Skeleton | Dead simple, responsive boilerplate |
| Picnic | Lightweight CSS library |
| KNACSS | Simple and lightweight CSS framework |
Read our verdict in the software roundup.
Explore our comprehensive directory of recommended free and open source software. Our carefully curated collection spans every major software category.This directory is part of our ongoing series of informative articles for Linux enthusiasts. It features hundreds of detailed reviews, along with open source alternatives to proprietary solutions from major corporations such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, IBM, Cisco, Oracle, and Autodesk. You’ll also find interesting projects to try, hardware coverage, free programming books and tutorials, and much more. Know a useful open source Linux program that we haven’t covered yet? Let us know by completing this form. |

