This week Dave and I were joined by Jeffrey Zeldman for another #CROSSOVER show! (Jeffrey hosts The Big Web Show) . We talk about dogmatism in code, web design in isolation, and how A List Apart was maybe the first website ever to use floats for layout. Big thanks to Lynda.com and InControl 2013 …
In which Matt Holt discusses how jQuery plugins can be more adaptable to their environment. He showcases his liveAddress plugin that works with Smarty Streets to do proper address validation as an example. A proper autonomous plugin being: plug-and-play and event-based. He finished up with a …
We will ask a group of clever women out for coffees to pick their brains and share our conversations. We're not endorsing the obvious; we want to get under the surface of what it's like to be a woman working in tech. By a cracking team . Direct Link to Article — Permalink … Women …
In which explanations of recent phenomena are laid to bear and the veil of unknown unknowns lifts magnificently. CSS-Tricks Chronicle VIII is a post from CSS-Tricks
This week Dave and I were joined by the fellas from the Bizcraft show , Gene Crawford and Carl Smith. #CROSSOVER. We talk about working remotely, client overages, local vs. international SEO, learning as it relates to design, and much more. Thanks much to InControl 2013 (use SHOPTALKSHOW for …
Tim Pietrusky shares a number of different techniques for handling menus on smaller screens when the large screen version, unaltered, is untenable on the small screen. Responsive Menu Concepts is a post from CSS-Tricks
Daniel Herken introduces and explains the Webshims Lib. What it is, and how to use it. How to Use the Webshims Polyfill is a post from CSS-Tricks
Sadly we had some issues recording with Matthew Smith again (our fault). So Dave and I regrouped and did another RAPIDFIRE to catch up. We talk about @extend, image replacement and Google, organizing CSS properties with CSSComb, learning Backbone.js, and lots more. Thanks a bunch to Environments …
On a whim the other day I thought I'd build out an idea for navigation I had. It's nothing but a visual effect in which the hovered (or active) navigation item becomes the tallest "stair" and other items before and after it step down. It's simple, but it's not something you see very often. …
From the Twitter Bootstrap clan: Prototype iPhone apps with simple HTML, CSS and JS components. I wonder if they can make a business out projects like these. Direct Link to Article — Permalink … Ratchet is a post from CSS-Tricks