Sarah Drasner over at CSS Tricks…
Sarah Drasner over at CSS Tricks reminds us, “nothing in tech stays in one place, and the single most valuable skill you can possess to remain employable over time is learning how to learn.”
Sarah Drasner over at CSS Tricks reminds us, “nothing in tech stays in one place, and the single most valuable skill you can possess to remain employable over time is learning how to learn.”
Josh Comeau wrote a tutorial about CSS transitions — and how to use them to create polished animations.
A lot of big websites have ROT (Redundant, out-of-date, trivial) content, and it can make maintaining and improving websites incredibly difficult. If you’ve ever worked on a website with a few thousand pages you know what I mean; but the problem can be much bigger. Many corporate websites can have tens of thousands or hundreds of…
Years ago, Harry Roberts wrote about “code smells” on CSS Wizardry. He has a follow-up that I really enjoyed, and can give you an idea whether you’ve got some underlying problems with your Sass/CSS.
What are the four freedoms of open source and how do they impact us? Get a look in the Celebration of the Four Freedoms of Open Source. Try out the new WordPress Playground to run WordPress in the browser. Plugin and Theme developers note the new categorizations: Canonical, Community, and Commercial.
When you add new features to WordPress, there’s always someone wanting a way to remove it. Justin Tadlock walks us through how to remove the customize CSS option in WordPress 4.7, which many developer may not need, or want to give access to for their clients.
Gutenberg 4.0 is out, and this release covers a number of items from a long “pending items” list. Other than bug fixes, some new additions include colors for cover image overlays, a new font size picker, better pullquote features, post locking, a new data structure for RichText, and a lot of CSS and UI polishing. This release…