Found 22 bookmarks
Custom sorting
ct.css
ct.css
Let’s take a look inside your Your is the single biggest render-blocking part of your page—ensuring it is well-formed is critical. ct.css is a diagnostic CSS snippet that exposes potential performance issues in your page’s tags.
·csswizardry.com·
ct.css
David DeSandro: Intro to CSS 3D transforms
David DeSandro: Intro to CSS 3D transforms
Great demos for mostly-CSS card flip, cube, and carousels. With the introduction of CSS transforms, elements could be shifted, rotated, slanted, squashed and stretched. Web designers were finally able to catch up to print designers. With CSS 3D transforms, web designers can move past their print counterparts and explore a new realm in graphic design.
·3dtransforms.desandro.com·
David DeSandro: Intro to CSS 3D transforms
Chris Coyier: Using SVG (CSS-Tricks)
Chris Coyier: Using SVG (CSS-Tricks)
SVG is an image format for vector graphics. It literally means Scalable Vector Graphics. Basically, what you work with in Adobe Illustrator. You can use SVG on the web pretty easily, but there is plenty you should know.
·css-tricks.com·
Chris Coyier: Using SVG (CSS-Tricks)
Dave Klein: Interview with Paul Irish, HTML5 expert and community leader (Inspire Magazine)
Dave Klein: Interview with Paul Irish, HTML5 expert and community leader (Inspire Magazine)
I think it’s important to publish what you learn. There’s really no school for front-end development. You can’t go to a university for a JavaScript degree or a class about how browsers work. Most of us learn from blogs and Twitter. Early in my career, I learned a bunch of things whenever I worked on a project, but I never told other people about them. So my general advice is to publish what you learn, share with the community, and collaborate on projects that help move the community forward.
·instapaper.com·
Dave Klein: Interview with Paul Irish, HTML5 expert and community leader (Inspire Magazine)
Google Code: The Golden Grid
Google Code: The Golden Grid
This may be worth looking into. I waffle on whether this sort of thing is ultimately a good decision — you're relying on someone else's framework, it takes a while to learn and master, and once you decide to go with it you're essentially stuck with it. But isn't that the case with any pseudo-framework developed for a website design? I should test this on a little project.
·code.google.com·
Google Code: The Golden Grid