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Nalezeno "element()": 316

Everything You Need to Know About the Gap After the List Marker


I was reading “Creative List Styling” on Google’s web.dev blog and noticed something odd in one of the code examples in the ::marker section of the article. The built-in list markers are bullets, ordinal numbers, and letters. The ::marker pseudo-element … Everything You Need to Know About...

AR, VR, and a Model for 3D in HTML


Tucked down somewhere in the Safari Technology Preview 161 release notes is a seemingly innocous line about support for a new HTML element and attribute: Added support for <model src> and honor <source type> attributes (257518@main) Anytime I … AR,...

Customizing HTML Form Validation


Form validation has always been my least favorite part of web development. You need to duplicate validation on both client and server sides, handle loads of events, and worry about form element styling. To aid form validation, the HTML spec added some new form attributes like required and pattern...

Fancy Image Decorations: Outlines and Complex Animations


We’ve spent the last two articles in this three-part series playing with gradients to make really neat image decorations using nothing but the <img> element. In this third and final piece, we are going to explore more techniques using the … Fancy Image Decorations: Outlines...

Creating Animated, Clickable Cards With the :has() Relational Pseudo Class


The CSS :has() pseudo class is rolling out in many browsers with Chrome and Safari already fully supporting it. It’s often referred to it as “the parent selector” — as in, we can select style a parent element from a … Creating Animated, Clickable Cards With the :has() Relational Pseudo Class...

Is There Too Much CSS Now?


As front-end developers, we’ve wished for a lot of things over the years — ways to center things in CSS, encapsulate styles, set an element’s aspect ratio, get finer-grained control over our colors, select an element based on its children’s … Is There Too Much CSS Now? originally...

Fancy Image Decorations: Masks and Advanced Hover Effects


Welcome to Part 2 of this three-part series! We are still decorating images without any extra elements and pseudo-elements. I hope you already took the time to digest Part 1 because we will continue working with a lot of gradients … Fancy Image Decorations: Masks and Advanced Hover Effects...

Fancy Image Decorations: Single Element Magic


As the title says, we are going to decorate images! There’s a bunch of other articles out there that talk about this, but what we’re covering here is quite a bit different because it’s more of a challenge. The challenge? … Fancy Image Decorations: Single Element Magic originally published...

A Pure CSS Gallery Focus Effect with :not


Oftentimes in the past, I needed to figure out how to add styles to all elements inside the container but not the hovered one. Demo of the expected “fade-out” effect on siblings to let users “focus” on a particular element.… A Pure CSS Gallery Focus Effect with :not...

Named Element IDs Can Be Referenced as JavaScript Globals


Did you know that DOM elements with IDs are accessible in JavaScript as global variables? It’s one of those things that’s been around, like, forever but I’m really digging into it for the first time. If this is the first … Named Element IDs Can Be Referenced as JavaScript Globals originally...

More Details on `details`


A lot of chatter around the ol’ <details> and <summary> elements lately! I saw Lea Verou recently tweet an observation about the element’s display behavior and that sorta splintered into more observations and usage notes from folks, including a revived … More...

When is it OK to Disable Text Selection?


Using CSS, it’s possible to prevent users from selecting text within an element using user-select: none. Now, it’s understandable why doing so might be considered “controversial”. I mean, should we be disabling standard user behaviors? Generally speaking, no, we … When is it OK to Disable...

Interpolating Numeric CSS Variables


We can make variables in CSS pretty easily: :root { --scale: 1; } And we can declare them on any element: .thing { transform: scale(--scale); } Even better for an example like this is applying the variable on a user … Interpolating Numeric CSS Variables originally published...

Exploring CSS Grid’s Implicit Grid and Auto-Placement Powers


When working with CSS Grid, the first thing to do is to set display: grid on the element that we want to be become a grid container. Then we explicitly define the grid using a combination of grid-template-columns, grid-template-rows… Exploring CSS Grid’s Implicit Grid and Auto-Placement...

Single Element Loaders: Going 3D!


For this fourth and final article of our little series on single-element loaders, we are going to explore 3D patterns. When creating a 3D element, it’s hard to imagine that just one HTML element is enough to simulate something like...

Single Element Loaders: The Bars


We’ve looked at spinners. We’ve looked at dots. Now we’re going to tackle another common pattern for loaders: bars. And we’re going to do the same thing in this third article of the series as we have the others … Single Element Loaders: The Bars originally published on CSS-Tricks. You should...

Single Element Loaders: The Dots


We’re looking at loaders in this series. More than that, we’re breaking down some common loader patterns and how to re-create them with nothing more than a single div. So far, we’ve picked apart the classic spinning loader. Now, … Single Element Loaders: The Dots originally published...

Single Element Loaders: The Spinner


Making CSS-only loaders is one of my favorite tasks. It’s always satisfying to look at those infinite animations. And, of course, there are lots of techniques and approaches to make them — no need to look further than CodePen to … Single Element Loaders: The Spinner originally published...

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