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Design Systems and Portfolios


In my experience working with design systems, I’ve found that I have to sacrifice my portfolio to do it well. Unlike a lot of other design work where it’s relatively easy to present Dribbble-worthy interfaces and designs, I fear that systems are quite a bit trickier than that. You could make things...

Designing An Aspect Ratio Unit For CSS


Rachel Andrew says that the CSS Working Group designed an aspect ration unit at a recent meeting. The idea is to find an elegant solution to those times when we want the height of an element to be calculated in response to the width of the element, or vice versa. Say, for example, we have a grid...

Get Started with Node: An Introduction to APIs, HTTP and ES6+ JavaScript


Jamie Corkhill has written this wonderful post about Node and I think it’s perhaps one of the best technical articles I’ve ever read. Not only is it jam-packed with information for folks like me who aren't writing JavaScript everyday, it is also incredibly deliberate as Jamie slowly walks through...

HubHub Na Příkopě téměř zdvojnásobil svou plochu, testuje nový typ členství


Mezinárodní coworking HubHub reaguje na zájem startupů a inovativních firem a od února rozšířil své prostory. Na Příkopě 14 v Praze připojil k dosavadním 2 000 metrům čtverečním v pátém patře dalších 1 500 o podlaží níže. Nové prostory slouží hlavně větším týmům...

WorldWideWeb


For the 30th anniversary of the web, CERN brought nine web nerds together to recreate the very first web browser — Or a working replication of it anyway, as you use it from your web browser, inception style. Well done, Mark Boulton, John Allsopp, Kimberly Blessing, Jeremy Keith, Remy Sharp...

Using CSS Grid the right way


Violet Peña has shared her recommendations for using CSS Grid. They basically boil down to these high-level points: Use names instead of numbers for setting up our grid columns. fr should be our flexible unit of choice. We don’t really need a grid system anymore. Although this is all great advice...

Working with TypeScript in Visual Studio Code


TypeScript and Visual Studio Code are two amazing products created by Microsoft, and - surprise surprise- they work amazing together! Let's take a look at how Visual Studio Code makes it a breeze t

Getting to Grips with the Airtable API


The Airtable web app is pretty neat. You can use it like a spreadsheet but it’s useful for all sorts of other things too. The neatest thing about it for me is that it has an API so that you can treat it like a database. I’ve been thinking about making weekly notes for the different teams I work...

The Smart Ways to Correct Mistakes in Git


The world of software development offers an infinite amount of ways to mess up: deleting the wrong things, coding into dead ends, littering commit messages with typos, are a mere few of the plentitude. ​​ ​​Fortunately, however, we have a wonderful safety net under our feet in the form of Git when...

Come to An Event Apart in 2019


The 2019 season for An Event Apart (the premiere web and interaction design conference) is about to kick off! Seattle - March 4–6, 2019 Boston - May 6–8, 2019 Washington DC - July 29–31, 2019 Chicago - August 26–28, 2019 Denver - October 28–30, 2019 San Francisco - December 9–11...

Gradians and Turns: the quiet heroes of CSS angles


I love coming across little overlooked CSS gems, like the gradien (grad) and turn (turn) units that Ken Bellows uncovers in his post explaining them. I don't know, maybe y'all are already aware of them, but they're certainly new to me. They're additional options for dealing with angles, where...

Using the Little-Known CSS element() Function to Create a Minimap Navigator


W3C’s CSS Working Group often gives us brilliant CSS features to experiment with. Sometimes we come across something so cool that sticks a grin on our face, but it vanishes right away because we think, “that’s great, but what do I do with it?” The element() function was like that for me. It’s a...

In Defense of Utility-First CSS


A rather full-throated argument (or rather, response to arguments against) utility (atomic) CSS from Sarah Dayan. I wondered recently if redesigns were potentially a weakness of these types of systems (an awful lot of tearing down classes) which Sarah acknowledges and recommends more abstraction...

Git Checkout at Previous Timeframe


In the past I’ve blogged about checking out branches created on a specific date as well as sorting git branches by date, but one frequent usage of git and dates is checking out a commit at a given time in the past. For example, I often say “Weird, this feature was working a month...

The Most Hearted of 2018


We've released the Most Hearted Pens, Posts, and Collections on CodePen for 2018! Just absolutely incredible work on here — it's well worth exploring. Remember CodePen has a three-tiered hearting system, so while the number next to the heart reflects the number of users who hearted the item...

Quicklink


We're in the future now so, of course, we're working on ways to speed up the web with fancy new tactics above and beyond the typical make-pages-slimmer-and-cached-like-crazy techniques. One tactic, from years ago, was InstantClick: Before visitors click on a link, they hover over that link. Between...

Storing and Using the Last Known Route in Vue


There are situations where keeping a reference to the last route a user visited can come in handy. For example, let’s say we’re working with a multi-step form and the user proceeds from one step to the next. It would be ideal to have the route of that previous step in hand so we know where the user...

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