I sure do love little reminders about HTML semantics, particularly semantics that are tougher to commit to memory. Scott has a great one, beginning with this markup:
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Didya see that Tumblr is getting a WordPress makeover? And it’s not a trivial move:
This won’t be easy. Tumblr hosts over half a billion blogs. We’re talking about one of the largest technical migrations in internet history. Some
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I created a little library at work to make those “skeleton screens” that I’m not sure anyone likes. […] We named it
skellyCSS
because… skeletons and CSS, I guess. We still aren’t even really using it very much, but it
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I think it’s worth listening to anything Sara Soueidan has to say. That’s especially true if she’s speaking at an event for the first time in four years, which was the case when she took the stage at CSS Day …
The “Other” C in CSS originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is
Happy birthday, Chris Coyier — and thank you for CSS-Tricks as well as everything you do at CodePen, ShopTalk, Boost, and even your personal blog!…
Quick Hit #13 originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the Digital
Giant kudos to Scott Jehl on releasing his new Web Components De-Mystified online course! Eight full hours of training from one of the best in the business.…
Quick Hit #12 originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the
Eric gifting us with his research on all the various things that anchors (not links) do when they are in :focus
.
Turns out, there’s a lot!
That’s an understatement! This is an incredi
A gem from Chris Ferdinandi that details how to use custom events to hook into Web Components. More importantly, Chris dutifully explains why custom events are a better fit than, say, callback functions.
With a typical JavaScript library, you pass
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Hey look at that, the State of CSS Survey for 2024 is open and taking submissions. …
Quick Hit #11 originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the