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Quiet UI Came and Went, Quiet as a Mouse

Written by: Ryan Trimble

The extremely new framework that caught lots of attention will continue as a personal project.

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Quick Hit #62

Written by: Geoff Graham

CSS Masonry shaping up now that the CSSWG has landed on display: grid-lanes to trigger the layout switch.

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Quick Hit #61

Written by: Geoff Graham

Bramus shares that Chrome Canary no longer forces CSS animations using width and height properties to run on the main […]

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The Range Syntax Has Come to Container Style Queries and if()

Written by: Daniel Schwarz

Being able to use the range syntax with container style queries — which we can do starting with Chrome 142 — means that we can compare literal numeric values as well as numeric values tokenized by custom properties or the attr() function.

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Headings: Semantics, Fluidity, and Styling — Oh My!

Written by: Geoff Graham

A few links about headings that I’ve had stored under my top hat.

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Explaining the Accessible Benefits of Using Semantic HTML Elements

Written by: Geoff Graham

Why should you use a semantic <button> instead of a generic <div>? Accessibility, right? By how exactly does it help accessibility?

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The “Most Hated” CSS Feature: tan()

Written by: Juan Diego Rodríguez

Last time, we discussed that, sadly, according to the State of CSS 2025 survey, trigonometric functions are deemed the “Most Hated” […]

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Getting Creative With Small Screens

Written by: Andy Clarke

On mobile, people can lose their sense of context and can’t easily tell where a section begins or ends. Good small-screen design can help orient them using a variety of techniques.

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Pure CSS Tabs With Details, Grid, and Subgrid

Written by: Silvestar Bistrović

Can we use the <details> element as the foundation for a tabbed interface? Why yes, we can!

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CSS Animations That Leverage the Parent-Child Relationship

Written by: Preethi

When we change an element’s intrinsic sizing, its children are affected, too. This is something we can use to our advantage.

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An Introduction to JavaScript Expressions

Written by: Mat Marquis

A thorough but approachable lesson on JavaScript expressions excerpted JavaScript For Everyone, a complete online course offered by our friends at Piccalilli.

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Building a Honeypot Field That Works

Written by: Zell Liew

Honeypots are fields that developers use to prevent spam submissions. They still work in 2025. But you got to set a couple of tricks in place so spambots can’t detect your honeypot field.

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