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How to use CSS Scroll Snap


Nada Rifki demonstrates the scroll-snap-type and scroll-snap-alignCSS properties. I like that the demo shows that the items in the scrolling container can be different sizes. It is the edges of those children that matter, not some fixed snapping distance. I like Max Kohler's coverage...

Negative Margins


PPK digs into the subject, which he found woefully undercovered in web tech documentation. Our entry doesn't mention them at all, which I'll aim to fix. Agree on this situation: This is by far the most common use case for negative margins. You give a container a padding so that its contents have...

Toward Responsive Elements


Hot news from Brian Kardell, regarding what we've been referring to as "container queries", the most hotly requested feature in CSS: There does seem to be some general agreement on at least one part of what I am going to call instead "Responsive Design for Components" and that is that flipping...

Full-Width Elements By Using Edge-to-Edge Grid


If you have a limited-width container, say a centered column of text, "breaking out" of that to make a full-width element involves trickery. Perhaps the best trick is the one with left relative positioning and a negative left viewport-based margin. While it has it's caveats (e.g. requiring hidden...

How Auto Margins Work in Flexbox


Robin has covered this before, but I've heard some confusion about it in the past few weeks and saw another person take a stab at explaining it, and I wanted to join the party. Say you have a flex container with some flex items inside that don't fill the whole area. See the Pen ZEYLVEX...

New Year, New Job? Let’s Make a Grid-Powered Resume!


Many popular resume designs are making the most of the available page space by laying sections out in a grid shape. Let’s use CSS Grid to create a layout that looks great when printed and at different screen sizes. That way, we can use the resume online and offline, which might come in handy during...

The Origin Story of Container Queries


Container queries don’t exist today but a lot of web developers have been arguing in their favor lately. At first, the idea sounds relatively simple: whereas media queries allow us to make style changes based on the width of the browser, container queries would allow us to make style updates when...

Simplified Fluid Typography


Fluid typography is the idea that font-size (and perhaps other attributes of type, like line-height) change depending on the screen size (or perhaps container queries if we had them). The core trickery comes from viewport units. You can literally set type in viewport units (e.g. font-size: 4vw)...

Two-Value Display Syntax (and Sometimes Three)


You know the single-value syntax: .thing { display: block; }. The value "block" being a single value. There are lots of single values for display. For example, inline-flex, which is like flex in that it becomse a flex container, but behaves like an inline-level element rather than a block-level...

Let’s Not Forget About Container Queries


Container queries are always on the top of the list of requested improvements to CSS. The general sentiment is that if we had container queries, we wouldn't write as many global media queries based on page size. That's because we're actually trying to control a more scoped container, and the only...

Overflow And Data Loss In CSS


"Data Loss" is a funny term. My brain thinks of like packet loss on the way from the server to your browser, resulting in missing content in files. Perhaps it is that on some level, but in CSS parlance, it has to do with the overflow property. Too much content for sized container + hidden overflow...

Northern Bitcoin to Set Foot in the Market with Its Latest Mining Container


Northern Bitcoin AG has come up with the latest mining container which opens the doors to additional expansion possibilities. According to the official press release dated September 9, 2019, the company has successfully finished testing the upcoming mining container that comes with the air-cooling...

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...

A Little Reminder That Pseudo Elements are Children, Kinda.


Here's a container with some child elements: <div class="container"> <div>item</div> <div>item</div> <div>item</div> </div> If I do: .container::before { content: "x" } I'm essentially doing: <div class="container"> ...

Making width and flexible items play nice together


The short answer: flex-shrink and flex-basis are probably what you’re lookin’ for. The long answer Let’s say you want to align an image and some text next to each other with like this: Now let's say you reach for flexbox to make it happen. Setting the parent element to display: flex; is a good...

Placing, Spanning and Density in CSS Grid


The most common things you learn in CSS Grid is usually related to the grid container and less about the grid items. A generic grid definition applied to the grid container is enough for a basic la

What if we got aspect-ratio sized images by doing almost nothing?


Say you have an image you're using in an <img> that is 800x600 pixels. Will it actually display as 800px wide on your site? It's very likely that it will not. We tend to put images into flexible container elements, and the image inside is set to width: 100%;. So perhaps that image ends...

The “Inside” Problem


So, you're working on a design. You need a full-width container element because the design has a background-color that goes from edge-to-edge horizontally. But the content inside doesn’t necessarily need to be edge-to-edge. You want to: Limit the width (for large screens) Pad the edges Center...

Using a Mixin to Take the Math out of Responsive Font Sizes


Responsive Font Size (RFS) is an engine that automatically calculates and updates the font-size property on elements based on the dimensions of the browser viewport. If you’re thinking that sounds familiar, that’s because there is a slew of tools out there that offer various approaches for fluid...

Putting the Flexbox Albatross to Real Use


If you hadn't seen it, Heydon posted a rather clever flexbox layout pattern that, in a sense, mimics what you could do with a container query by forcing an element to stack at a certain container width. I was particularly interested, as I was fighting a little layout situation at the time I...

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