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Nalezeno "Tricks": 3051

Quick Gulp Cache Busting


You should for sure be setting far-out cache headers on your assets like CSS and JavaScript (and images and fonts and whatever else). That tells the browser "hang on to this file basically forever." That way, when navigating from page to page on a site — or revisiting it, or refreshing...

Let’s Give Grunt Tasks the Marie Kondo Organization Treatment


We live in an era of webpack and npm scripts. Good or bad, they took the lead for bundling and task running, along with bits of Rollup, JSPM and Gulp. But let's face it. Some of your older projects are still using good ol' Grunt. While it no longer glimmers as brightly, it does the job well...

SSCCE


You know what a "reduced test case" is, right? We've talked about it here. I imagine the concept is useful in many walks of life, but in the world of front-end development, you can think of it like: A reduced test case is a demo/example page you create which reproduces the problem you are having...

Using Your Domain with a Netlify-Hosted Site


Netlify has their own docs for Custom Domains, so if you're looking for horse's mouth technical docs on this stuff, that should be treated as the source of truth. But I'd like to take a crack at it from a slightly different angle, where we look at where you are and what you wanna do, and the point...

Let Mavo Shine in Building Interactive Web Applications


As you could guess from the title, this tutorial is dedicated to Mavo: a new, approachable way to create complex, reactive, persistent web applications just by writing HTML and CSS, without a single line of JavaScript and no server backend. 🐇 Follow the white rabbit! Mavo is developed...

Can you nest @media and @support queries?


Yes, you can, and it doesn't really matter in what order. A CSS preprocessor is not required. It works in regular CSS. This works: @supports(--a: b) { @media (min-width: 1px) { body { background: red; } } } And so does this, the reverse nesting of the above: @media (min-width:...

The Real Dark Web


Here’s a wonderful reminder from Charlie Owen that everyone in the web design industry isn’t using the latest and greatest technology. And that’s okay! Charlie writes: Most web developers are working on very "boring" teams. They're producing workhorse products that serve the organisation needs....

Branching Out from the Great Divide


I like the term Front-End Developer. It's encapsulates the nature of your job if your concerns are: Building UIs for web browsers The spectrum of devices and platforms those web browsers run on The people who use those web browsers and related assistive technology The breadth of knowledge...

Using Netlify Forms and Netlify Functions to Build an Email Sign-Up Widget


Building and maintaining your own website is a great idea. Not only do you own your platform, but you get to experiment with web technologies along the way. Recently, I dug into a concept called serverless functions, starting with my own website. I’d like to share the results and what I learned...

Making a Realistic Glass Effect with SVG


I’m in love with SVG. Sure, the code can look dense and difficult at first, but you’ll see the beauty in the results when you get to know it. The bonus is that those results are in code, so it can be hooked up to a CMS. Your designers can rest easy knowing they don't have to reproduce an effect...

Register Now for An Event Apart 2019 in Chicago


(This is a sponsored post.) An Event Apart juuuuust wrapped up its Washington D.C. event yesterday. We hope we got to see you at the event but if not, perhaps we'll see you at the next one happening Aug. 28-28 in Chicago. Why would you go, you might ask? It's three days of experts imparting their...

Fetching Data in React using React Async


You’re probably used to fetching data in React using axios or fetch. The usual method of handling data fetching is to: Make the API call. Update state using the response if all goes as planned. Or, in cases where errors are encountered, an error message is displayed to the user. There will always...

Bringing CSS Grid to WordPress Layouts


December 6th, 2018 was a special date for WordPress: it marked the release of version 5.0 of the software that, to this day, powers more than one-third of the web. In the past, people working on the platform pointed out that there has never been any special meaning to version numbers used...

A More Accessible Portals Demo


The point of the <portal> element (behind a flag in Chrome Canary) is that you can preload another whole page (like <iframe>), but then have APIs to animate it to the current page. So "Single Page App"-like functionality (SPA), but natively. I think that's pretty cool. I'm a fan...

How much specificity do @rules have, like @keyframes and @media?


I got this question the other day. My first thought is: weird question! Specificity is about selectors, and at-rules are not selectors, so... irrelevant? To prove that, we can use the same selector inside and outside of an at-rule and see if it seems to affect specificity. body { background:...

Intrinsically Responsive CSS Grid with minmax() and min()


The most famous line of code to have come out of CSS grid so far is: grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(10rem, 1fr)); Without any media queries, that will set up a grid container that has a flexible number of columns. The columns will stretch a little, until there is enough room...

Creating Dynamic Routes in a Nuxt Application


In this post, we’ll be using an ecommerce store demo I built and deployed to Netlify to show how we can make dynamic routes for incoming data. It’s a fairly common use-case: you get data from an API, and you either don’t know exactly what that data might be, there’s a lot of it, or it might change....

The Simplest Way to Load CSS Asynchronously


Scott Jehl: One of the most impactful things we can do to improve page performance and resilience is to load CSS in a way that does not delay page rendering. That’s because by default, browsers will load external CSS synchronously—halting all page rendering while the CSS is downloaded...

Run useEffect Only Once


React has a built-in hook called useEffect. Hooks are used in function components. The Class component comparison to useEffect are the methods componentDidMount, componentDidUpdate, and componentWillUnmount. useEffect will run when the component renders, which might be more times than you think....

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