You characterize shortcuts for common tasks as "killing" CSS, which I think is a bit misguided. Your use (or lack of use) of any tool is context dependent. And my two cents are that knowing the vanilla language enables you to discriminately and appropriately apply frameworks (which you see right now with Javascript).
A better headline for this article might be "Given more libraries and frameworks, some developers (probably beginners) are spending less time learning the intricacies of Vanilla CSS."
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You characterize shortcuts for common tasks as "killing" CSS, which I think is a bit misguided. Your use (or lack of use) of any tool is context dependent. And my two cents are that knowing the vanilla language enables you to discriminately and appropriately apply frameworks (which you see right now with Javascript).
A better headline for this article might be "Given more libraries and frameworks, some developers (probably beginners) are spending less time learning the intricacies of Vanilla CSS."