Liquid Glass in the Browser
There was a quick surge of people re-creating liquid glass in the browser shortly after Apple’s debut of the aesthetic. Now that it’s settled in a bit, there have been some slower more detailed studies.
There was a quick surge of people re-creating liquid glass in the browser shortly after Apple’s debut of the aesthetic. Now that it’s settled in a bit, there have been some slower more detailed studies.
In JavaScript, you can detect a view transition happening, set a type, and have CSS do unique things based on that type.
Matt Smith with wonderfully straightforward writing on why default parameters for functions are a good idea. I like the tip where you can still do it with an object-style param.
There are no browser implementations of mixins yet, nor a fleshed out spec. So perhaps now is the best time to try to understand and opine.
Nikita Prokopov in I am sorry, but everyone is getting syntax highlighting wrong: … if everything is highlighted, nothing stands out. Your eye adapts and considers it a new norm: everything is bright and shiny, and instead of getting separated, it all blends together. I think there are some strong points made here. But 😬 […]
Banger page from the Chrome DevRel team showcasing the incredible year CSS had.
It maintains space for where a scrollbar would be, whether there actually is one or not. But do you always want that?
I think it’s cool our industry has these high quality documentaries documenting the stories behind some of the transformative tech in what we do. The Vite one just came out about a month ago. What would you pick if you could pick the next one? I wouldn’t mind hearing about early-days AWS or Docker. Maybe […]
Dan Abramov has an interesting article How to Fix Any Bug where he’s having Claude write the code, but a bug shows up he needs to fix. Claude just isn’t getting it and it keeps saying it’s fixed when it isn’t (classic). Claude was repeatedly wrong because it didn’t have a repro. Meaning Claude couldn’t see […]
Just a simple link tag in HTML can point to an online wallet to take payments, and a JavaScript API to react to them. But it’s (still) early days.
Frontend Masters donates to open source projects through thanks.dev and Open Collective, as well as donates to non-profits like The Last Mile, Annie Canons, and Vets Who Code.