One thing I noticed about building websites in 2020: despite all the social networks and publishing platforms craving our content, our stories, and our attention, people are somehow still building personal websites. Over the course of the year, many of you have launched or relaunched your website. It indeed feels like the personal website is experiencing a little revival. To me, this comes as no surprise. The benefits of having your own personal site are enormous and appealing. As a … Read article “Make it Personal”
The post Make it Personal appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.
Accedi per aggiungere un commento
Altri post in questo gruppo
The @view-transition
at-rule has two descriptions. One is the commonly used navigation
descriptor. The second is types
, the lesser-known of the two, and one t
After 20 years since Andy Clarke first published his book about Multi-Column Layout in CSS, he's back to encourage a fresh look at CSS columns for enhanced readability and design flexibility.
<
When it comes to positioning elements on a page, including text, there are many ways to go about it in CSS — the literal position
property with corresponding inset-*
prope
I was reading through Juan’s recent Almanac entry for the @counter-style
at-rule and I’ll be darned if he didn’t uncover and unpack some extremely interesting things
Chris wrote about “Likes” pages a long while back. The idea is rather simple: “Like” an item in your RSS reader and dis