A little thing happened on the way to publishing the CSS :has()
selector to the ol’ Almanac. I had originally described :has()
as a “forgiving” selector, the idea being that anything in its argument is evaluated, even if one or …
:has is an unforgiving selector originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.
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