Search

Nalezeno "QR Code": 1642

Styling a Select Like It’s 2019


It's rather heartwarming to know you can style a <select> in a rather cross-browser friendly way that doesn't hurt accessibility. Kudos for documenting this Scott! See the Pen Styled <select&rt; by Chris Coyier (@chriscoyier) on CodePen. Direct Link to Article —...

Gradient Borders in CSS


Let's say you need a gradient border around an element. My mind goes like this: There is no simple obvious CSS API for this. I'll just make a wrapper element with a linear-gradient background, then an inner element will block out most of that background, except a thin line of padding around...

Nested Destructuring


Destructuring in JavaScript can initially feel confusing but the truth is that destructuring can make your code a bit more logical and straight forward. Destructuring does look a bit more complex when you’re looking for a property several objects deep, so let’s have a look at how to...

An Initial Implementation of clip-path: path();


One thing that has long surprised (and saddened) me is that the clip-path property, as awesome as it is, only takes a few values. The circle() and ellipse() functions are nice, but hiding overflows and rounding with border-radius generally helps there already. Perhaps the most useful value...

People Talkin’ Shapes


Codrops has a very nice article on CSS Shapes from Tania Rascia. You might know shape-outside is for redefining the area by which text is floated around that element, allowing for some interesting design opportunities. But there are a couple of genuine CSS tricks in here: Float shape-outside...

Regarding CSS’s Global Scope


html { font-family: Roboto, sans-serif; } With the except of some form elements, you've just set a font on every bit of text on a site! Nice! That's probably what you were trying to do, because of the probably hundreds of elements all over your site, setting that font-family every time would...

Fantastic Code Snippets for Trying Popular Gooey Effect


The gooey effect is one of those features that is able to separate the interface from the mass of projects with crude boxy aesthetics and standard solutions. Though of... The post Fantastic Code Snippets for Trying Popular Gooey Effect appeared first on Onextrapixel

Fighting FOIT and FOUT Together


Lots from Divya with the setup: There are 2 kinds of problems that can arise when using webfonts; Flash of invisible text (FOIT) and Flash of Unstyled Text (FOUT) ... If we were to compare them, FOUT is of course the lesser of the two evils If you wanna fight FOIT, the easiest tool is...

Google Fonts and font-display


The font-display descriptor in @font-face blocks is really great. It goes a long way, all by itself, for improving the perceived performance of web font loading. Loading web fonts is tricky stuff and having a tool like this that works as well as it does is a big deal for the web. It's such a...

A CSS Venn Diagram


This is pretty wild: Adrian Roselli has made a series of rather complex Venn diagrams using nothing but CSS. With a combination of the Firefox dev inspector, plus a mixture of CSS Grid and the shape-outside property, it’s possible to do this and without a ton of hacks, too. I also think it’s super...

Reversing an Easing Curve


Let’s take a look at a carousel I worked on where items slide in and out of view with CSS animations. To get each item to slide in and out of view nicely I used a cubic-bezier for the animation-timing-function property, instead of using a standard easing keyword. See the Pen Carousel with reversed...

Keep Math in the CSS


There is a sentiment that leaving math calculations in your CSS is a good idea that I agree with. This is for math that you could calculate at authoring time, but specifically chose not to. For instance, if you needed a 7-column float-based grid (don't ask), it's cleaner and more intuitive: .col...

Prototypes and production


There’s an interesting distinction that Jeremy Keith defines between prototype code and production code in this post and I’ve been thinking about it all week: ...every so often, we use the materials of front-end development—HTML, CSS, and JavaScript—to produce something that isn’t intended...

Creating an Animated Login Form for TouchID


I came across this amazing Dribbble shot by Jakub Reis a while back. It caught my eye and I knew that I just had to try recreating it in code. At that moment, I didn’t know how. I tried out a bunch of different things, and about a year later, I finally managed to make this demo. I learned a couple...

Why isn’t it <style src=””>?


The way JavaScript works is we can do scripts as an inline block: &#60;script&#62; let foo = "bar"; &#60;/script&#62; Or, if the script should be fetched from the network... &#60;script src="/js/global.js"&#62;&#60;/script&#62; With CSS, we can do an inline block of styles: &#60;style&#62; .foo...

Google Labs Web Components


I think it's kinda cool to see Google dropping repos of interesting web components. It demonstrates the possibilities of cool new web features and allows them to ship them in a way that's compatible with entirely web standards. Here's one: &#60;two-up&#62; I wanted to give it a try, so I linked...

Nahoru
Tento web používá k poskytování služeb a analýze návštěvnosti soubory cookie. Používáním tohoto webu s tímto souhlasíte. Další informace