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Nalezeno "front-end developer": 54

Is There Too Much CSS Now?


As front-end developers, we’ve wished for a lot of things over the years — ways to center things in CSS, encapsulate styles, set an element’s aspect ratio, get finer-grained control over our colors, select an element based on its children’s … Is There Too Much CSS Now? originally...

Collective #708


JavascriptDB * The Future of CSS: CSS Toggles * Loaders * The Front-End Developer's Guide to the Terminal The post Collective #708 appeared first on Codrops

Comparing Node JavaScript to JavaScript in the Browser


Being able to understand Node continues to be an important skill if you’re a front-end developer. Deno has arrived as another way to run JavaScript outside the browser, but the huge ecosystem of tools and software built with Node mean … Comparing Node JavaScript to JavaScript in the Browser...

The Relevance of TypeScript in 2022


It’s 2022. And the current relevance of TypeScript is undisputed. TypeScript has dominated the front-end developer experience by many, many accounts. By now you likely already know that TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript, building on JavaScript by adding … The Relevance of TypeScript...

Why Don’t Developers Take Accessibility Seriously?


You know that joke, “Two front-end developers walk into a bar and find they have nothing in common”? It’s funny, yet frustrating, because it’s true. This article will present three different perspectives on accessibility in web design and development. Three … Why Don’t Developers Take...

Ship a Full-Stack App in Days with AWS Amplify Studio


(This is a sponsored post.) Amazon has a vision with AWS Amplify. First, a premise: As browsers have become faster and more powerful over the last decade, front-end developers are building web apps that are more feature-rich and …

The Gap (Design Engineering)


Egor Kloos describes a situation where a (purely visual) designer asks for some changes to a component. There is a misunderstanding where the (code monkey) developer implements the change exactly as requested—but really what was required was both a bug … The post The Gap (Design Engineering)...

enterkeyhint


I only just recently learned the enterkeyhint attribute on form inputs was a thing! It seems like kind of a big deal to me, as crafting HTML form markup is a decent slice of a front-end developer’s life, and this … The post enterkeyhint appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support...

Developer Decisions For Building Flexible Components


Blog posts that get into the whole “how to think like a front-end developer” vibe are my favorite. Michelle Barker nails that in this post, and does it without sharing a line of code! We simply can no longer … The post Developer Decisions For Building Flexible Components...

The Self Provisioning Runtime


Big thoughts on where the industry is headed from Shawn Wang: Advancements in two fields — programming languages and cloud infrastructure — will converge in a single paradigm: where all resources required by a program will be automatically provisioned, and … The post The Self...

Resources aren’t requested by CSS, but by the DOM


This is a good tweet from Harry: Simple yet significant thing all developers should keep in mind: CSS resources (fonts, background images) are not requested by your CSS, but by the DOM node that needs them [Note: slight oversimplification, but … The post Resources aren’t requested...

Can we have custom media queries, please?


Stefan Judis notes that there is a spec for custom media queries, but seemingly no momentum on it at the moment. That lack of movement is unfortunate, as it’s almost guaranteed front-end developers all over would start using it as … The post Can we have custom media queries, please?...

AWS Lambdas: Easy, Easier, Easiest


I’d say cloud functions are one of the most transformative technologies in the last bunch of years. They are (usually) cheap, scale well, secure in their inherit isolation, and often written in JavaScript—comfortable territory for front-end developers. Nearly every cloud … The post...

Designing for the Unexpected


When I think about what front-end development really is and feels like, this is at the heart of it: designing around a huge set of unknowns, and really embracing that notion as a strength of the web rather … The post Designing for the Unexpected appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support...

Kubernetes Explained Simply: Containers, Pods and Images


If you zone out every time someone mentions “Kubernetes,” “containers,” or “pods,” this article is for you. No complex diagrams involved! As a front-end developer, you don’t have to know how to configure an infrastructure from scratch. However, if you … The post Kubernetes Explained Simply:...

Serverless Functions: The Secret to Ultra-Productive Front-End Teams


Modern apps place high demands on front-end developers. Web apps require complex functionality, and the lion’s share of that work is falling to front-end devs: building modern, accessible user interfaces creating interactive elements and complex animations managing complex application...

Firebase Crash Course


This article is going to help you, dear front-end developer, understand all that is Firebase. We’re going to cover lots of details about what Firebase is, why it can be useful to you, and show examples of how. But … The post Firebase Crash Course appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support...

Simulating Drop Shadows with the CSS Paint API


Ask a hundred front-end developers, and most, if not all, of them will have used the box-shadow property in their careers. Shadows are enduringly popular, and can add an elegant, subtle effect if used properly. But shadows occupy a strange … The post Simulating Drop Shadows with the...

DRY-ing up styled-components


I like working with styled-components. They allow you write CSS in your JavaScript, keeping your CSS in very close proximity to your JavaScript for a single component. As a front-end developer who loves to dissect a web page and break it down into reusable components, the idea of styled-components...

CSS in 3D: Learning to Think in Cubes Instead of Boxes


My path to learning CSS was a little unorthodox. I didn’t start as a front-end developer. I was a Java developer. In fact, my earliest recollections of CSS were picking colors for things in Visual Studio. It wasn’t until later that I got to tackle and find my love for the front end....

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