Introduction I’ve been wanting to write this article for a long time - since August 25, 2015, to be exact. It’s been in the back of my mind and bugging me forever. I’m glad I’m finally going to sit down and bang this post out despite there probably being a ton of great resources out there on this. If you don’t already know, Bootstrap is an awesome front-end framework! I’ve been using it for a real
Introduction Google Material Design is all the rage right now. With Google announcing the new design philosophy and using Polymer to create rich animated applications, many developers are starting to incorporate these ideas into their own experiments. We created our own Google Material Design Checkboxes using CSS3 last week and here are some more examples of Google Material Design: Radio Buttons T
Introduction The Flexbox Layout officially called CSS Flexible Box Layout Module is a new layout module in CSS3 made to improve the alignment, directions, and order in the container even when they are with dynamic or even unknown size. The prime characteristic of the flex container is the ability to modify the width or height of its children to fill the available space in the best possible way on
Introduction Intelligent content caching is one of the most effective ways to improve the experience for your site’s visitors. Caching, or temporarily storing content from previous requests, is part of the core content delivery strategy implemented within the HTTP protocol. Components throughout the delivery path can all cache items to speed up subsequent requests, subject to the caching policies
Introduction With the growth of mobile ready webpages, menus and navigations have rapidly evolved into tons of creative and different styles. More and more websites are ditching the boring top-of-the-page site menu with side navigations, menu reveals, and other types of unique methods for navigating a website. This article will cover how to build these complex and responsive menus using almost not
Introduction Welcome to the third installment of the Learning React series. Today we will be learning about how Facebook’s Flux Architecture works, and how to use it in your own projects! If you haven’t already, I strongly recommend you check out the first two installments in this series, Getting Started & Concepts and Building a Real-Time Twitter Stream with Node and React. They aren’t a hard pre
Introduction Welcome to the second installation of Learning React, a series of articles focused on becoming proficient and effective with Facebook’s React library. If you haven’t read the first installation, Getting Started and Concepts, it is highly recommended that you do so before proceeding. Today we are going to build an application in React using Isomorphic Javascript. Iso-what? Isomorphic.
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