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Nalezeno "Op Ed Article": 3094

One-Offs


There is this sentiment that you don't design the homepage of a site first. For most sites, it's an anomaly. It's unlike any other page and not something to base the patterns you use for the rest of the site or help inform other pages. You might call it a one-off.1 One-offs are OK! A world without...

CSS Grid in IE: Debunking Common IE Grid Misconceptions


This is the first in a three-part series all about how to use CSS grid in a way that will work not only in modern browsers but also in Internet Explorer (IE). Imagine writing CSS grid code without having to write a fallback layout! Many of us think that this is some far off future that is many...

Fitting Text to a Container


There are a number of ways to go about putting some text in a container and having it size itself to fill that container. There are different technologies we can use and different considerations to think about. Let us count the ways. Magic Number it with viewport units If you set type with...

Empower Through Web Development


As a person with a disability, I appreciate the web and modern-day computing for their many affordances. The web is a great place to work and share and connect. You can make a living, build your dream, and speak your mind. It’s not easy, though. Beginners struggling with the box model often take...

Vue + TypeScript: A Match Made in Your Code Editor


Vue is so hot right now and I’ve been thinking of doing a serious project with it since quite a while, so when the opportunity popped up, I hopped in. But there was a little problem — one of the requirements of the project was to write it in TypeScript. At first, I was super stressed about...

Handling Errors with Error Boundary


Thinking and building in React involves approaching application design in chunks, or components. Each part of your application that performs an action can and should be treated as a component. In fact, React is component-based and, as Tomas Eglinkas recently wrote, we should leverage that concept...

​Add real-time comments to a Gatsby blog


(This is a sponsored post.) This tutorial will show you how to add realtime comments to a Gatsby blog. You will use Node and Express to create a simple backend, allowing users to add and view comments instantly. Direct Link to Article — Permalink… The post ​Add real-time comments to...

Drawing Images with CSS Gradients


What I mean by "CSS images" is images that are created using only HTML elements and CSS. They look as if they were SVGs drawn in Adobe Illustrator but they were made right in the browser. Some techniques I’ve seen used are tinkering with border radii, box shadows, and sometimes clip-path. You...

Animate Calligraphy with SVG


From time to time at Stackoverflow, the question pops up whether there is an equivalent to the stroke-dashoffset technique for animating the SVG stroke that works for the fill attribute. But upon closer inspection, what the questions are really trying to ask is something like this: I have something...

Balancing Time


I first wrote this post four years ago. I put it on a blog that no longer exists. Funnily enough, I still refer to it myself, so I figured it might be best served in a place where other people can see it. I've made only a few minor tweaks to the original content. A lot about how I work has changed...

Advanced Document Conversions with Filestack


You might know Filestack from being an incredible service to add file uploading, storage, and management to your own web apps. There is another thing Filestack can do for you: convert documents into different formats. For one thing, it can manipulate documents. Take images. Perhaps you would...

Using Custom Fonts With SVG in an Image Tag


When we produce a PNG image, we use an <img> tag or a CSS background, and that's about it. It is dead simple and guaranteed to work. PNG is way simpler to use in HTML than SVG Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for SVG, despite its many advantages. Although you're spoiled for choices...

What is SVG good for?


Y'all probably wouldn't be surprised if I told you it's pretty awesome for icons, and icon systems. SVG icon systems can, and perhaps should be quite easy. I'm a fan of just inlining those suckers, particularly when they are pretty simple. But what else? Logos is a classic example! A lot...

Vymáhání copyrightu dostalo zelenou. EU bude hlasovat o „cenzuře internetu“


Právní výbor Evropského parlamentu schválil ve středu směrnici, která by mohla zcela změnit vymáhání autorského práva na internetu. V červenci o ní bude hlasovat Evropský parlament. Kontroverzní je zejména Článek 13, proti kterému protestují i zakladatelé internetu. Hrozí podle nich „internetová...

UTC is Enough for Everyone, Right?


A good candidate for the Blog Post of the Year from Zach Holman. I think Eric Portis' "w descriptors and sizes: Under the hood" is up there too, but perhaps even nerdier. Ooooh, also Frank Chimero's "The Good Room" is up there. But I digress. Zach's article is as educational as it is funny. But...

Centering: The Newest Coolest Way vs. The Oldest Coolest Way


This isn't a comprehensive guide to centering things. We have that! This is just a little observation about old and new. One of the trickier things related to centering in CSS is when you need to center both vertically and horizontally and you don't know the width or height of what you...

Don’t just copy the @font-face out of Google Fonts URLs


I don't think this is an epidemic or anything, but I've seen it done a few times and even advocated for. This is what I mean... You go to Google Fonts and pick a font like Open Sans, and it gives you either a <link> or an @import with a URL there in which to ready this font for usage...

The Four Big Ways Jetpack Helps with Image Performance


We've been working with Jetpack around here as a sponsor. It's a great match because as someone with a bunch of self-hosted WordPress sites, Jetpack is one of those no-brainer plugins for me. Jetpack can do a ton of good things for any site in a variety of very different ways. Here's one way...

Building a RSS Viewer With Vue: Part 2


Welcome to Part 2 of this mini-series on building a RSS viewer with Vue. In the last post, I walked through how I built my demo using Vue.js and Vuetify on the front end and Webtask on the back end. When I built that initial version, I knew it was exactly thatmdash;an "initial" version. I took some...

Here’s the thing about “unused CSS” tools


There are a lot of tools that aim to help you remove "unused CSS" from your project. Never a week goes by that I don't see a tool for this being shared or promoted. It must strike some kind of perfect chord for some developers. I care about performance, and I know that reducing file sizes is good...

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