About this deal
The first two are examples of PascalCasing. The third appears to follow Microsoft's Capitalization Conventions for a two-letter acronym (although pi is not an acryonym). And the fourth one seems to suggest that the rule for a two-letter acryonym extends to a single letter acronym or identifier such as E (which represents the mathematical constant e). div style={styles.Container}>
TODO
This is slightly more advanced Python, but still very easy to use and handy. (The module has some more features, including constants being read-only, see its README.) constant-style.co.uk will offer different discount plans. Customers can choose according to their own qualifications, which can help customers save money while enjoying activities. Guide doesn’t discuss it. Optimize for the reader, not the writer Our codebase (and most individual components submitted to it) is auto d{42}; // d is an int, not a std::initializer_liststyled-components use ES6’s tagged template literals to style components. With it, the mapping between components and styles is removed. This means that when you’re defining your styles, you’re actually creating a normal React component that has your styles attached to it.
Conclusion
styled-components come with a large computing overhead when converting declarations to plain CSS. This can affect the performance of your application. Styled-components also require time to get familiar with the syntax and procedures. This is the same for all the other solutions you'll find on here - even the clever ones that make a class and redefine the set attribute method - there will always be a way around them. That's just how Python is. style_images = {k: load_image(v, (style_image_size, style_image_size)) for k, v in style_urls.items()} The enum type enables you to define named constants for integral built-in types (for example int, uint, long, and so on). For more information, see enum. style within the file for consistency is acceptable. someFunction(obviousParam, true /* shouldRender */, 'hello' /* name */);