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Nalezeno "op ed articles": 866

Case Study: Travel Next Level


An exploration of how design innovation, technical creativity, and user-focused functionality came together to create a unique platform that embodies the spirit of travel and discovery

A CSS Wishlist for 2025


2024 has been one of the greatest years for CSS: cross-document view transitions, scroll-driven animations, anchor positioning, animate to height: auto, and many others. It seems out of touch to ask, but what else do we … A CSS Wishlist for 2025 originally published on CSS-Tricks, which...

The Little Triangle in the Tooltip


Today, I want to focus on what I'll call the little triangle in the tooltip. It receives minimal attention but it amazes you by how many ways there are to make them. Let's start with the simplest and make our way up to the not-so-simple. The Little Triangle in the Tooltip originally published...

How to Create Multi-Step Forms With Vanilla JavaScript and CSS


When was the last time you developed a multi-step form? There’s so much to think about and so many moving pieces that need to be managed. But doing it by hand can be a good exercise and a great way to polish the basics. Fatuma Abdullaho walks you through her first multi-step form using vanilla...

What ELSE is on your CSS wishlist?


What else do we want or need CSS to do? Chris kept a CSS wishlist, going back as far as 2013 and following back up on it in 2019. We all have things we'd like to see CSS do and we always will no matter how many sparkly new features we get. We'll round things up and put a list together — so let...

Fluid Superscripts and Subscripts


How much attention do you pay to the alignments of your subscripts and superscripts? Lorenz Wöehr has you covered with a recipe for fluid scaling. Fluid Superscripts and Subscripts originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter

CSSWG Minutes Telecon (2024-12-04): Just Use Grid vs. Display: Masonry


The CSSWG met to try and finally squash a debate that has been going on for five years: whether Masonry should be a part of Grid or a separate system. We've got coverage of both presentations for ya. CSSWG Minutes Telecon (2024-12-04): Just Use Grid vs. Display: Masonry originally published...

Yet Another Anchor Positioning Quirk


As awesome as I think it is, CSS Anchor Positioning has a lot of quirks, some of which are the product of its novelty and others due to its unique way of working. Today, I want to bring you yet another Anchor Positioning quirk that has bugged me since I first saw it. Yet Another Anchor Positioning...

Designer Spotlight: Andrea Binski


Meet Andrea Binski, co-founder and art director of UNIKO™, an award-winning design studio specializing in innovative branding and web design

The Law of Diminishing Returns


Striking the right balance can be tough. We don’t want cool mama bear's porridge or hot papa's bear porridge, but something right in the middle, like baby bear’s porridge. The Law of Diminishing Returns originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should...

One of Those “Onboarding” UIs, With Anchor Positioning


We can anchor one element to another. We can also attach one element to multiple anchors. In this experiment, Ryan riffs on those ideas and comes up with a new way to transition between two anchors and the result is a practical use case that would normally require JavaScript. One of Those...

WordPress Multi-Multisite: A Case Study


What's it look like to create a dashboard within the WordPress admin for analyzing Google Analytics data across 900 blogs across 25 multisite instances? It involves designing a user-friendly interface, leveraging the WordPress REST API, implementing a plugin for data retrieval, and addressing...

Case Study: Nod Coding Bootcamp


Follow Waaark behind the scenes of Nod Coding Bootcamp’s new website transformation and discover how we turned a lacklustre site into a memorable experience

Solved by CSS: Donuts Scopes


Donut scoping addresses the challenge of preventing parent styles from leaking to nested content. Originating from a 2011 concept by Nicole Sullivan, the issue has evolved, culminating in 2024's @scope at-rule. This allows for more precise CSS styling, safeguarding content from unwanted inheritance...

Invoker Commands: Additional Ways to Work With Dialog, Popover… and More?


Web browsers are experimenting with two HTML attributes — technically, they’re called “invoker commands” — that are designed to invoke popovers, dialogs, and further down the line, all kinds of actions without writing JavaScript. Although, if you do reach for JavaScript, the new attributes come...

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