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How to Recreate the Ripple Effect of Material Design Buttons


When I first discovered Material Design, I was particularly inspired by its button component. It uses a ripple effect to give users feedback in a simple, elegant way. How does this effect work? Material Design’s buttons don’t just sport a neat ripple animation, but the animation also...

Using JavaScript to Adjust Saturation and Brightness of RGB Colors


Lately I’ve been taking a look into designing with color (or “colour” as we spell it where I’m from in New Zealand). Looking at Adam Wathan and Steve Schroger’s advice on the subject, we find that we’re going to need more than just five nice looking hex codes from a color palette...

How to Detect When a Sticky Element Gets Pinned


The need for position: sticky was around for years before it was implemented natively, and I can boast that I implemented it with JavaScript and scroll events for ages. Eventually we got position: sticky, and it works well from a visual perspective, but I wondered how can we determine when...

The Paper Prototype Rule


I’ve been lucky to have worked with some of the best designers in the industry, including Zhenya Rynzhuk, Louis Paquet, Maria de la Paz Vargas, and of course, dozens of the amazing designers at MediaMonks. Many of the projects we’ve worked on require custom animation and guidelines that enable...

The Flavors of Object-Oriented Programming (in JavaScript)


In my research, I've found there are four approaches to Object-Oriented Programming in JavaScript. Which methods should I use? Which one is "the best" way? Here I'll present my findings along with information that may help you decide which is right for you. The post The Flavors of Object-Oriented...

Web Technologies and Syntax


JavaScript has a (newish) feature called optional chaining. Say I have code like: const name = Data.person.name; If person happens to not exist on Data, I’m going to get a hard, show-stopping error. With optional chaining, I can write: const name = Data.person?.name; Now if person...

How to Create an Async Function


One thing I love about JavaScript is that there are many ways to accomplish the same task, one such example being creating functions. There are several patterns for functions; one of the last you see used is the new Function method: /* new Function(arg1, arg2 (...), body) */ const myFunction =...

IMA.js – Detailní pohled na komponenty, eventy a extensions


V předchozím díle jsme si na naší aplikaci s předpovědí počasí ukázali, jak vykreslit data pomocí Views a rozdělili jsme si HomeView do podrobnějších komponent. V tomto díle uděláme naši aplikaci pro uživatele zajímavější a přidáme možnost jak zadávat lokalitu

Thinking About Power Usage and Websites


Gerry McGovern asked if I had any insight into energy consumption and websites. He has a book, after all, about the digital costs on the planet. He was wondering about the specifics of web tech, like… If you do this in HTML it will consume 3× energy but if you do it in JavaScript it will...

Enforcing performance budgets with webpack


As you probably know, a single monolithic JavaScript bundle — once a best practice — is no longer the way to go for modern web applications. Research has shown that larger bundles increase memory usage and CPU costs, especially on mid-range and low-end mobile devices. webpack has a lot of features...

Weaved Webs


There is a bit of an irony with Jamstack. The concept is simple: you put pre-rendered, static files on web hosting (a CDN) designed to do that well. That’s it. If you need to do more, anything you do from there is done with client-side JavaScript, which is likely talking to serverless...

Interaction Media Features and Their Potential (for Incorrect Assumptions)


The Media Queries Level 4 Interaction Media Features — pointer, hover, any-pointer and any-hover — are meant to allow sites to implement different styles and functionality (either CSS-specific interactivity like :hover, or JavaScript behaviors, when queried using window.matchMedia), depending...

5 Awesome JavaScript Promise Tricks


The Promise API changed the game in JavaScript. We went from abusing setTimeouts and settling for synchronous operations to doing everything possible to leverage this new async API. Let’s check out a handful of awesome Promise API tricks! Cancel a fetch Request One problem we instantly...

Logical Assignment Operators


I love JavaScript, it’s my favorite programming language, but I love dipping into other languages because they offer a new perspective on coding paradigms. There’ve been syntax additions to JavaScript that I’ve seen I found interesting (think ?? in optional chaining) and now...

Modifying Specific Letters with CSS and JavaScript


Changing specific characters can be a challenge in CSS. Often, we’re forced to implement our desired changes one-by-one in HTML, perhaps using the span element. But, in a few specific cases, a CSS-focused solution may still be possible. In this article, we’ll start by looking at some CSS-first...

Import Non-ESM libraries in ES Modules, with Client-Side Vanilla JS


We’re living through a weird era where there are tons of JavaScript libraries that were meant to be used as <script> tags that expose available globals. AND there are tons of JavaScript libraries that are meant to be used through module loaders. AND there are tons of JavaScript...

Working with JavaScript Media Queries


What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you think of media queries? Maybe something in a CSS file that looks like this: body {   background-color: plum; } 
 @media (min-width: 768px) {   body {     background-color: tomato;   } } CSS media queries are a core ingredient in any responsive...

Supercharging Number Inputs


Speaking of number scrubbing (i.e. adding mouse UX to number inputs), you can also add better keyboard commands to number inputs. Kilian Valkhof explains how he added up and down arrows to a number input, as well as modifier keys to change how much the keys increment the value, like Emmet does....

Doom Damage Flash on Scroll


The video game Doom famously would flash the screen red when you were hit. Chris Johnson not only took that idea, but incorporated a bunch of the UI from Doom into this tounge-in-cheek JavaScript library called Doom Scroller. Get it? Like, doom scrolling, but like, Doom scrolling. It’s funny...

Comparing Data in Google and Netlify Analytics


Jim Nielsen: the datasets weren’t even close for me. Google Analytics works by putting a client-side bit of JavaScript on your site. Netlify Analytics works by parsing server logs server-side. They are not exactly apples to apples, feature-wise. Google Analytics is, I think it’s fair...

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