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If you wanted to identify an inflection point in the recent development of CSS thinking, you’d probably pick Christopher Chedeau’s “CSS in JS” talk from NationJS in November, 2014. It was a watershed moment that set a bunch of different minds spiralling off in their own directions like particles after a high-energy collision. For instance, React Style, jsxstyle and Radium are three of the newest,
CSS is a lot of things. Frustrating to newcomers, essential (even admirable) to those of us who use it day-to-day. It’s so intertwined with the browser’s rendering model that it can be hard to figure out what’s CSS and what’s the browser. And as most of us know from experience, it’s extremely easy to build an unmaintainable mess with it. Whatever you think of CSS, it’s demonstrably underspecified.
In the last few days of 2014, I resurrected my long-neglected GIF-beatmatching project DJGif to throw a New Year’s party on my rooftop: Ʌbelard playing his first set of 2015 A DJ using Ableton Live, a huge bundle of MaxMSP emitting a UDP stream of beat information (courtesy of the immensely pro Cade), a UDP ➝ WebSockets server, and DJGif pulling hundreds of GIFs off various Tumblrs to beatmatch <x
A few months ago, I read an article by Harry Roberts where he introduced an interesting concept for working with related classes in CSS. In his article, he describes the use of the [] characters in class attributes to help understand their purpose at a quick glance. He presents this example, arguing that it makes the class declaration more scannable - that is, more understandable at a glance: <div
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