How bad is it, doc?

It almost entirely depends on what we're planning to do with the project we've been working on; as we just said, while we're working our way through tutorials, demos, or sample projects, it's not bad at all, for at least a couple of good reasons:

  • We will greatly benefit from keeping our focus on .NET and Angular, leaving the rest for later; applying styles is something that we can easily do whenever we feel like it, even if we don't have a decent grip on style sheet language already
  • It's generally a good idea to restrain ourselves from doing any relevant style implementation until we can fully understand where and how to do that conveniently; to put it in other words, we shouldn't do styles until we find a suitable approach for doing that within the given scenario and/or environment

That's why we chose to take this path in the first place; we're definitely in the learning phase, after all. On top of that, we gladly sat upon the minimalistic, yet rather functional layout shipped with the .NET MVC with Angular Visual Studio template that we chose to adopt.

However, since we planned to build a production-ready native web application, we can't restrain ourselves from applying some custom styling any longer; there's no way that our imaginary product owner will be satisfied otherwise. It's time to dress our (mostly) naked doll and make it as pretty as we can.

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