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Let‘s take a quick stroll down memory-lane to revisit how vendor prefixing CSS properties came to be. I hope I don’t trigger PTSD for anyone! It‘s not clear who started prefixing, or when it began exactly. What is clear, is that by 2006, prefixed features were in Internet Explorer and Firefox. The raison d’être of prefixes was to specify browser-specific features. It was seen as a way to implement
There is a lot of hype on the :is() pseudo-selector lately, probably because now that Safari 14 has it, it’s supported across all the major browsers. You’ve got Miriam tweeting about it, Kevin Powell doing a video, Šime getting it into the Web Platform News, and Robin mentioning it. Bramus really puts a point on it with these “three important facts”: 1. The selector list of :is() is forgiving 2. T
So, you have been working on this new and fancy web application. Be it a recipe app, a document manager, or even your private cloud, you‘ve now reached the point of working with users and permissions. Take the document manager as an example: you don’t just want admins; maybe you want to invite guests with read-only access or people who can edit but not delete your files. How do you handle that log
The way routing works in JavaScript is usually that you specify which relative URL pattern you want for which component to render. So for /about you want the <About /> component to render. Let’s take a look at how to do this in Vue/Vue Router with lazy loading, and do it as cleanly as possible. I use this little tip all the time in my own work. A repo that includes everything covered in this post
Beyond Media Queries: Using Newer HTML & CSS Features for Responsive Designs Beyond using media queries and modern CSS layouts, like flexbox and grid, to create responsive websites, there are certain overlooked things we can do well to make responsive sites. In this article, we’ll dig into a number tools (revolving around HTML and CSS) we have at the ready, from responsive images to relatively new
Sometimes our sites need a little sprinkling of content management. Not always. Not a lot. But a bit. The CMS market is thriving with affordable, approachable products, so we’re not short of options. Thankfully, it is a very different world to the one that used to force companies to splash out a ga-jillionty-one dollars (not an exact cost: I rounded to the nearest bazillion) for an all-singing, al
Based on my tests, inputmode is indeed supported in Opera Mini and Opera Mobile, which contradicts the Caniuse data above. I’ve reached out to see if we can sync up our findings. But before we go deep into the ins and outs of the attribute, consider that the WHATWG living standard provides inputmode documentation while the W3C 5.2 spec no longer lists it in its contents, which suggests they consid
The way JavaScript works is we can do scripts as an inline block: <script> let foo = "bar"; </script> Or, if the script should be fetched from the network… <script src="/js/global.js"></script> With CSS, we can do an inline block of styles: <style> .foo { color: red; } </style> So why not <style src=""></style>? Instead, we have <link href="">. Harry Roberts asked about that the other day on Twitt
UGURUS offers elite coaching and mentorship for agency owners looking to grow. Start with the free Agency Accelerator today. The CSS Paint API is extremely exciting, not only for what it is, but what it represents, which is the beginning of a very exciting time for CSS. Let’s go over what it is, why we have it and how to start using it. What is the CSS Paint API? The API is just one part of a whol
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