DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! I was recently working on a modern take of the blogroll. The idea was to offer readers a selection of latest posts from those blogs in a magazine-style layout, instead of just popping a list of our favorite blogs in the sidebar. The easy part was grabbing a list of posts with excerpts from o
Our complete guide to links, buttons, and button-like inputs in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Brought to you by DigitalOcean DigitalOcean has the cloud computing services you need to support your growth at any stage. Get started with a free $200 credit! There is a lot to know about links and buttons in HTML. There is markup implementation and related attributes, styling best practices, things to avoi
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! Intrigued by the title and just wanna see some code? Skip ahead. This tutorial was written for Vue 2 and uses “inline templates”. Vue 3 has deprecated this feature, but there are alternatives (like putting your templates in script tags) that you could translate the idea to. A few months ago,
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! Since I first chimed in on the CSS4¹ thing, there’s been tons of more discussion on it. I’m going to round up my favorite thoughts from others here. There is an overwhelming amount of talk about this, so I’m going to distill it here down as far as I can, hopefully making it easier to follow.
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! There’s been news about Chrome freezing their User-Agent string (and all other major browsers are on board). That means they’ll still have a User-Agent (UA) string (that comes across in headers and is available in JavaScript as navigator.userAgent. By freezing it, it will be less useful over
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! When drawing lines with SVG, you often have a <path> element with a stroke. You set a stroke-dasharray that is as long as the path itself, as well as a stroke-offset that extends so far that the entire stroked path appears hidden initially. Then you animate the stroke-offset back to 0 so you
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! Snowpack. Love that name. This is the new thing from the Pika people, who are on to something. It’s a bundler alternative, in a sense. It runs over packages you pull from npm to make sure that they are ES module-compatible (native imports). This is how I digest it. When you write a line of c
Animating with requestAnimationFrame should be easy, but if you haven’t read React’s documentation thoroughly then you will probably run into a few things that might cause you a headache. Here are three gotcha moments I learned the hard way. TLDR: Pass an empty array as a second parameter for useEffect to avoid it running more than once and pass a function to your state’s setter function to make s
The sectioning elements in HTML5 are <nav>, <aside>, <article>, and <section>. <body> is also kind of a sectioning element since all content lying inside of it is part of the default document section. Here is a brief explanation of each sectioning element and how they are used: <nav> – Equivalent to role="navigation". Major site navigation that consistently appears frequently across the site. Exam
This works: var htmlString = "<div>This is a string.</div>"; This fails: var htmlSTring = "<div> This is a string. </div>"; Sometimes this is desirable for readability. Add backslashes to get it to work: var htmlSTring = "<div>\ This is a string.\ </div>"; Psst! Create a DigitalOcean account and get $200 in free credit for cloud-based hosting and services.
UGURUS offers elite coaching and mentorship for agency owners looking to grow. Start with the free Agency Accelerator today. The & is an extremely useful feature in Sass (and Less). It’s used when nesting. It can be a nice time-saver when you know how to use it, or a bit of a time-waster when you’re struggling and could have written the same code in regular CSS. Let’s see if we can really understa
DigitalOcean provides cloud products for every stage of your journey. Get started with $200 in free credit! There are lots of ways you can select elements in CSS. The most basic selection is by tag name, like p { }. Almost anything more specific than a tag selector uses attributes — class and ID both select on those attributes on HTML elements. But class and ID aren’t the only attributes developer
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く