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Styling Layout Wrappers In CSS


Two things that strike me often about the web are how many ways there are to go about the same thing and how many considerations go into even the most seemingly simple things. Working with wrapper elements is definitely on both those lists. Wrappers (or containers or whatever) are so common...

The Return of the 90s Web


One of my forever-lessons here on CSS-Tricks is that having your own website and blogging on it is a good idea. It’s probably one of the best decisions I’ve ever made, as it’s been a direct source of fun, career development and, eventually, income. I always chuckle at little...

Grid for layout, flexbox for components


When should we reach for CSS grid and when should we use flexbox? Rachel Andrew wrote about this very conundrum way back in 2016: Flexbox is essentially for laying out items in a single dimension – in a row OR a column. Grid is for layout of items in two dimensions – rows AND columns. Ahmad...

The Mad Magazine Fold-In Effect in CSS


This was always my favorite thing in Mad magazine. One page (the inside of the back cover, I think) was covered in a zany illustration. You folded that page in thirds, covering up the middle-third of that image, and a new image would form because the illustration was designed to perfectly line...

Hide Scrollbars During an Animation


CSS still can’t animate to auto dimensions. .dropdown { transition: 0.2s; height: 0; } .dropdown.open { /* the height will change, but it won't animate. */ height: auto; } There is JavaScript trickery you can try. Brandon Smith outlined several techniques here a little while back....

Patternico


I remember searching for tutorials for making seamless patterns in Photoshop¹ all the time back in the day. It’s fun to see this little website for building repeating patterns as its one job. It does everything you’d expect: pick a background, drag some decorations onto it and position...

Stay DRY Using axios for API Requests


HTTP requests are a crucial part of any web application that’s communicating with a back-end server. The front end needs some data, so it asks for it via a network HTTP request (or Ajax, as it tends to be called), and the server returns an answer. Almost every website these days does this in some...

This Week in Crypto: A Data Perspective (June 15-19)


Powered by As coronavirus cases began to spike back in China and certain states in the United States, markets haveContinue Reading The post This Week in Crypto: A Data Perspective (June 15-19) appeared first on CoinMarketCap Blog

Web Engine Diversity and Ecosystem Health


As front-end developers, our job is working with browsers. Knowing how many we have and the health of them is always of great interest. As far as numbers go, we have fewer recently than we have in the past. It’s only this month that Edge is starting to auto-update browsers to the Chromium...

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