CSS Nesting and the Cascade | WebKit

As well as a very welcome announcement, Jen has a really good question for you about nesting in CSS.

If you have an opinion on the answer, please chime in.

CSS Nesting and the Cascade | WebKit

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CSS or BS?

We show you a CSS property name. You tell us if it’s real or if we made it up. That’s it. It starts easy. It does not stay easy.

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Quantity queries using has() selector

Here’s a handy little tool for generating CSS with :has() selectors in order to do quantity queries.

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Item Flow, Part 1: A new unified concept for layout | WebKit

I really like the idea of unifying some layout values in CSS. If you’ve got any feedback, please chip in!

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Building WebSites With LLMS - Jim Nielsen’s Blog

And by LLMS I mean: (L)ots of (L)ittle ht(M)l page(S).

I really like this approach: using separate pages instead of in-page interactions. I remember Simon talking about how great this works, and that was a few years back, before we had view transitions.

I build separate, small HTML pages for each “interaction” I want, then I let CSS transitions take over and I get something that feels better than its JS counterpart for way less work.

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Why I Like Designing in the Browser – Cloud Four

This describes how I like to work too.

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CSS snippets

Some styles I re-use when I’m programming with CSS.

Making the website for Research By The Sea

Having fun with view transitions and scroll-driven animations.

Hanging punctuation in CSS

A little fix for Safari.

Who knows?

Had you heard of these bits of CSS? Me too/neither!

Progressive disclosure defaults

If you’re going to toggle the display of content with CSS, make sure the more complex selector does the hiding, not the showing.