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Interviewing for a Technical Position Doesn’t Have to Be Scary


Jacob Schatz (@jakecodes) is a staff engineer over at GitLab and was kind enough to share how he conducts job interviews for technical positions and his thinking process for them. Technical interviews are talked about often and can be a touchy subject for some, so it’s worth noting that this...

A Gutenburg-Powered Newsletter


I like Gutenberg, the new WordPress editor. I'm not oblivious to all the conversation around accessibility, UX, and readiness, but I know how hard it is to ship software and I'm glad WordPress got it out the door. Now it can evolve for the better. I see a lot of benefit to block-based editors. Some...

Advanced Tooling for Web Components


Over the course of the last four articles in this five-part series, we’ve taken a broad look at the technologies that make up the Web Components standards. First, we looked at how to create HTML templates that could be consumed at a later time. Second, we dove into creating our own custom element....

Encapsulating Style and Structure with Shadow DOM


This is part four of a five-part series discussing the Web Components specifications. In part one, we took a 10,000-foot view of the specifications and what they do. In part two, we set out to build a custom modal dialog and created the HTML template for what would evolve into our very own custom...

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...

Learning to Learn


There’s been a lot of talk recently about whether or not you need a degree to be in tech (spoiler: you don’t). But please don’t take this to mean you don’t need any kind of education to be in tech, because by not getting a degree, you’re opting to replace the imposed learning structure of...

Why CSS Needs its Own Survey


2016 was only three years ago, but that’s almost a whole other era in web development terms. The JavaScript landscape was in turmoil, with up-and-comer React — as well as a little-known framework called Vue — fighting to dethrone Angular. Like many other developers, I felt lost. I needed some...

Keen makes it a breeze to build and ship customer-facing metrics


(This is a sponsored post.) Keen is an analytics tool that makes it wonderfully easy to collect data. But Keen is unique in that it is designed not just to help you look at that data, but to share that data with your own customers! Customer-facing metrics, as it were. Keen works just the way...

Create Your First Visual Studio Code Extension


When Visual Studio Code doesn't do what you want it to, you install an extension. When you can't find an extension that does exactly what you need, you create your own! In this article, we will loo

Colorful Typographic Experiments


There have been some interesting, boundary-pushing typography-related experiments lately. I was trying to think of a joke like "somethings in the descenders" but I just can't find something that will stand on its own leg without being easy to counter. Codrin Pavel created a fascinating multi-color...

SVG Filter Effects: Creating Texture with <feTurbulence>


Learn how you can use the powerful SVG filter primitive &#60;feTurbulence&#62; to create your own textures and distortion effects. SVG Filter Effects: Creating Texture with &lt;feTurbulence&gt; was written by Sara Soueidan and published on Codrops

“the closest thing web standards have to a golden rule”


The internet's own Mat Marquis plucks this choice quote from the HTML Design Principals spec: In case of conflict, consider users over authors over implementors over specifiers over theoretical purity. And then he applies the idea to putting images on websites in 2019. Direct Link to Article...

Slide an Image to Reveal Text with CSS Animations


I want to take a closer look at the CSS animation property and walk through an effect that I used on my own portfolio website: making text appear from behind a moving object. Here’s an isolated example if you’d like to see the final product. Here’s what we're going to work with: See the...

Creating Your Own Gravity and Space Simulator


Space is vast. Space is awesome. Space is difficult to understand — or so people tend to think. But in this tutorial I am going to show you that this is not the case. Quite the contrary; the laws that govern the motion of the stars, planets, asteroids and even entire galaxies are incredibly simple....

Netlify Makes Deployments a Cinch


(This is a sponsored post.) Let's say you were going to design the easiest way to deploy a static site you can possibly imagine. If I was tasked with that, I'd say, well, it would deploy whenever I push to my master branch, and I'd tell it what command to run to build my site. Or maybe it has...

SVG Filters 101


The first article in a series on SVG filters. This guide will help you understand what they are and show you how to use them to create your own visual effects. SVG Filters 101 was written by Sara Soueidan and published on Codrops

Why we need CSS subgrid


I’m a huge fan of CSS Grid and I use it on pretty much every project these days. However, there’s one part of it that makes things much more complicated than they really ought to be: the lack of subgrids. And in this post on the matter, Ken Bellows explains why they’d be so gosh darn useful: But...

Animated Mesh Lines


A set of five demos with animated WebGL lines created with the THREE.MeshLine library. Find out how to animate and build these lines to create your own animations. Animated Mesh Lines was written by Jérémie Boulay and published on Codrops

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