<p>Use a standard button in locations where there's sufficient room and you must make it clear that the element is an interactive button element. Buttons can be displayed with only an icon, only text, or with icon and text combined.</p>
<p>Use an icon whenever possible to aid the user's recognition and recall. If both and icon and text are to be used, the text must be within a <code>span</code> with class <code>.title-label</code>.</p>
<p>Major buttons allow emphasis to be placed on a button. Use this on a single button when the user has a small number of choices, and one choice is a normal default. Just add <code>.major</code> to any element that uses <code>.s-button</code>.</p>
<p>Use button sets to connect buttons that have related purpose or functionality. Buttons in a set round the outer corners of only the first and last buttons, any other buttons in the middle simply get division spacers.</p>
<p>To use, simply wrap two or more <code>.s-button</code> elements within <code>.l-btn-set</code>.</p>
<p>Checkboxes use a combination of minimal additional markup with CSS to present a custom and common look-and-feel across platforms.</p>
<p>The basic structure is a <code>label</code> with a checkbox-type input and an <code>em</code> element inside. The <code>em</code> is needed as the holder of the custom element; the input itself is hidden. Putting everything inside the <code>label</code> allows the label itself to act as a clickable element.</p>
<p>Similar to checkboxes and radio buttons, selects use a combination of minimal additional markup with CSS to present a custom and common look-and-feel across platforms. The <code>select</code> element is wrapped by another element, such as a <code>div</code>, which acts as the main display element for the styling. The <code>select</code> provides the click and select functionality, while having all of its native look-and-feel suppressed.</p>