I like ez-css a lot also. It that is very flexible, super fast to learn and use (no manual required really) and it works great for creating "flowable" sites as well.
As a result of this discussion I am going to give the blueprint typography.css a shot. the Blueprint license seems very interesting: "Copyright (c) 2007-2009 blueprintcss.org The Blueprint CSS Framework is available for use in all personal or commercial projects, under both the (modified) MIT and the GPL license. You may choose the one that fits your project." Cheers, Chris On Jun 8, 4:03 pm, Salvor Hardin <salvor.pub...@gmail.com> wrote: > I'm looking for a great CSS framework to use with web2py. > > Someone in this group mentioned using Blueprint for typography and ez- > css for layout. > > I'd like to hear recommendations from web2py users. Which is your > favorite? > > If you are unfamiliar with CSS frameworks, check out: > *http://www.w3avenue.com/2009/04/29/definitive-list-of-css-frameworks-... > *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSS_framework > > Some of them, like Blueprint, have a lot of > features:http://www.blueprintcss.org/ > * A CSS reset that eliminates the discrepancies across browsers. > * A solid grid that can support the most complex of layouts. > * Typography based on expert principles that predate the web. > * Form styles for great looking user interfaces. > * Print styles for making any webpage ready for paper. > * Plugins for buttons, tabs and sprites. > * Tools, editors, and templates for every step in your workflow. > > While others, like ez-css, are very lightweight by comparison. Again, > I'd love to hear from web2py users about their favorite css > framework(s).