Quick Hit #99
Chrome 145 enables % units for letter-spacing and word-spacing as well as overscroll-behavior for all scroll containers, now baseline.
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Chrome 145 enables % units for letter-spacing and word-spacing as well as overscroll-behavior for all scroll containers, now baseline.
This issue of What’s !important is dedicated to our friends in the UK, who are currently experiencing a very miserable 43-day rain streak. Presenting: the five most interesting things to read about CSS from the last couple of weeks. Plus, the latest features from Chrome 145, and anything else you might’ve missed. TL;DR: lots of content, but also lots of rain.
Chrome 145 finally ships text-justify, which is almost baseline now.
This is the second part of a small two-part series. In this article, we will explore another type of grid: a pyramidal one. We are still working with hexagon shapes, but a different organization of the elements., while exploring other different shapes.
Continue reading "Making a Responsive Pyramidal Grid With Modern CSS" at CSS-Tricks
The new contrast-color() function is not fully supported yet. But can we still implement it in a cross-browser friendly way using other new CSS features?
Continue reading "Approximating contrast-color() With Other CSS Features" at CSS-Tricks
Chrome 145 becomes the first to ship customizable <select>, as well as column-wrap and column-height for better multicol layouts.
Can we make pie chart that’s semantic, with flexible markup, and avoids using a JavaScript library? Here’s how I tackled it.
Continue reading "Trying to Make the Perfect Pie Chart in CSS" at CSS-Tricks
Una Kravets announces border-shape with a couple of cool demos.
Adam Argyle quickly outlines the upcoming customizable <select>.
CSS-only bar charts are one of those things we’ve tackled a bunch of times in different ways. But how can modern CSS features finally make it not only trivial, but fun?
Continue reading "CSS Bar Charts Using Modern Functions" at CSS-Tricks
A quick warning about overscroll-behavior: contain.
You’d think that publishing a VS Code extension is an easy process, but it’s not. You have to publish your theme in at least two places.
Continue reading "No Hassle Visual Code Theming: Publishing an Extension" at CSS-Tricks