The end of responsive images - Piccalilli
Hallelujah! Support for sizes="auto" is finally landing in Firefox and Safari! Praise be!
A nice little pattern for generating a swish timeline in SVG from a plain ol’ definition list in HTML.
Hallelujah! Support for sizes="auto" is finally landing in Firefox and Safari! Praise be!
This is such a brilliant idea! Why not allow an img element inside video element in order to provide a responsive, accessible poster image?
Here’s another nice progressive web component for your forms, this time for showing error messages.
Here’s an excellent progressive web component from Aaron—wrap a custom element around your exising form and your good to go:
At its core,
form-saveris a small web component that wraps a form, keeps an eye on it, stores values inlocalStorage, and restores them when the page loads again. Better yet, it clears out saved data after a successful submission so you’re not accidentally resurrecting stale information the next time someone stops by.
I’m slapping my forehead—progressive web components is a perfect name for what I’ve been calling HTML web components. Why didn’t I think of that?
A Progressive Web Component is a native Custom Element designed in two layers: a base layer of HTML and CSS that renders immediately, without JavaScript, and an enhancement layer of JavaScript that adds reactivity, event handling, and more advanced templating.
A bit of feature detection for a proposed new HTML attibute.
Here’s an HTML web component you can use if you’re participating in the origin trial for the Web Install API.
In which I find a tagline for Web Day Out and a tagline for React.
Reminding myself just how much you can do with CSS these days.
Some handy tips courtesy of Chris Ferdinandi.