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Nalezeno "css-tricks": 2941

Finding Front-End Development Scholarships


I’m often asked where to learn web development. The answer varies, of course, and we’ve published a few posts on the topic over the years, the most recent of which was Chris taking a stab at different learning paths in … Finding Front-End Development Scholarships originally...

Behind the CSScenes, November 2022


Is it Fall? Winter? I don’t know, but I woke up with snow in the front yard this morning and felt like it was time to write a little update about what’s been happening around CSS-Tricks this past month, as … Behind the CSScenes, November 2022 originally published on CSS-Tricks...

Classy and Cool Custom CSS Scrollbars: A Showcase


In this article we will be diving into the world of scrollbars. I know, it doesn’t sound too glamorous, but trust me, a well-designed page goes hand-in-hand with a matching scrollbar. The old-fashioned chrome scrollbar just doesn’t fit in as … Classy and Cool Custom CSS Scrollbars:...

CSS Grid and Custom Shapes, Part 3


After Part 1 and Part 2, I am back with a third article to explore more fancy shapes. Like the previous articles, we are going to combine CSS Grid with clipping and masking to create fancy layouts for image … CSS Grid and Custom Shapes, Part 3 originally published on CSS-Tricks, which...

What CSS Do You Absolutely Have to Know in 2022?


Sacha Greif openly wondered whether CSS has gotten to be, you know, too big. With all the goodies that’ve shipped in browsers the past couple of years — container queries! relative color syntax! cascade layers! logical properties… What CSS Do You Absolutely Have to Know in 2022?...

Managing CSS Styles in a WordPress Block Theme


The way we write CSS for WordPress themes is in the midst of sweeping changes. I recently shared a technique for adding fluid type support in WordPress by way of theme.json, a new file that WordPress has been pushing … Managing CSS Styles in a WordPress Block Theme originally published...

A Couple Changes Coming in Chrome 108


“A change to overflow on replaced elements in CSS”: From Chrome 108, the following replaced elements respect the overflow property: img, video and canvas. In earlier versions of Chrome, this property was ignored on these elements. This … A Couple Changes...

The Difference Between Web Sockets, Web Workers, and Service Workers


Web Sockets, Web Workers, Service Workers… these are terms you may have read or overheard. Maybe not all of them, but likely at least one of them. And even if you have a good handle on front-end development, there’s a … The Difference Between Web Sockets, Web Workers, and Service Workers...

Some Links About CSS Gradients


Every once in a while, the blogging zeitgiest seems to coalesce around a certain topic and it’s like the saved articles in my bookmarks folder are having a conversation. The conversation sitting in there now is all about CSS Gradients … Some Links About CSS Gradients originally...

Rendering External API Data in WordPress Blocks on the Back End


This is a continuation of my last article about “Rendering External API Data in WordPress Blocks on the Front End”. In that last one, we learned how to take an external API and integrate it with a block that … Rendering External API Data in WordPress Blocks on the Back...

The New CSS Media Query Range Syntax


The Media Queries Level 4 specification has introduced a new syntax for targeting a range of viewport widths using common mathematical comparison operators, like , and =, that make more sense syntactically while writing less code for responsive web design. The New CSS Media Query Range Syntax...

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...

Holographic Trading Card Effect


Simon Goellner (@simeydotme)’s collection of Holographic Trading Cards have captured our attention. Under the hood there is a suite of filter(), background-blend-mode(), mix-blend-mode(), and clip-path() combinations that have been painstakingly tweaked to reach the desired effect....

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...

Responsive Animations for Every Screen Size and Device


Before I career jumped into development, I did a bunch of motion graphics work in After Effects. But even with that background, I still found animating on the web pretty baffling. Video graphics are designed within a specific ratio and … Responsive Animations for Every Screen Size and Device...

How to Make a Folder “Slit” Effect With CSS


When you put something — say a regular sheet of paper — in a manilla folder, a part of that thing might peek out of the folder a little bit. The same sort of thing with a wallet and credit … How to Make a Folder “Slit” Effect With CSS originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of...

Manuel Matuzovic: max() Trickery


By way of a post by Manuel Matuzović which is by way of a demo by Temani Afif. .wrapper { margin-inline: max(0px, ((100% - 64rem) / 2)); } You’d be doing yourself a favor to read Manuel’s breakdown of … Manuel Matuzovic: max() Trickery originally published on CSS-Tricks, which...

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