Quick Hit #111
Bramus announces at-rule feature queries for Chrome Canary 148.
You probably want CSS-Tricks
Bramus announces at-rule feature queries for Chrome Canary 148.
For this issue of What’s !important, we have a healthy balance of old CSS that you might’ve missed and new CSS that you don’t want to miss. This includes random(), random-item(), folded corners using clip-path, backdrop-filter, font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums, the Popover API, anchored container queries, anchor positioning in general, DOOM in CSS, the customizable select element, :open, scroll-triggered animations, the toolbar element, and somehow, more.
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Tailwind is really great for making layouts and there are many reasons why. Zell Liew looks at four specific examples of common use cases.
Continue reading "4 Reasons That Make Tailwind Great for Building Layouts" at CSS-Tricks
According to Luke Warlow, <toolbar> is coming along.
Chrome 146 becomes the first browser to ship scroll-triggered animations.
Let’s go over a few demos using the new customizable <select> feature that may be wild, but also give us a great chance to learn new things in CSS.
Continue reading "Abusing Customizable Selects" at CSS-Tricks
Font Awesome are launching a Kickstarter campaign to transform Eleventy (11ty) into Build Awesome.
How we look at the stacking order of our projects, how we choose z-index values, and more importantly, the implications of those choices.
A new version of Chrome will be released every two weeks (instead of four) starting from September 2026.
Sure, we can select the <html> element in CSS with, you know, a simple element selector, html. But what other (trivial and perhaps useless) ways can we do it?
Continue reading "The Different Ways to Select <html> in CSS" at CSS-Tricks
Safari TP 238 trials customizable <select>, which Chrome has fully implemented already.