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Five Questions with Tab Atkins Read on! →

Nov 14 2011
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Tab Atkins (Twitter) is a member of the CSS working group and contributor to several other working groups in the W3C. He works for Google on the Google Chrome Team. Browsers and specs are the bones and blood of our industry so that makes Tab, uhm, a orthopedic surgeon, or something. I ask Tab about all that stuff, and more, below.

Yes/No Ipsum! Read on! →

Nov 9 2011

I’ve heard a number of people make statements lately like: “If you’re using Lorem Ipsum text, just stop it.” Or similar. That argument, expanded, goes something like this. Design exists to serve content. Lorem ipsum is fake content. If you’re already designing, and you are using fake content, you are not serving the content and thus not doing your job as a designer correctly.

Columns and the Greatest Common Divisor Read on! →

Nov 3 2011

I was recently putting together some CSS for columns. There was a few pre-determined widths that the columns needed to accommodate. For whatever reason (maybe because every grid framework in the world is this way) my mind went right to trying to find a common building block size. All columns are either the size of one building block or a multiple of a building block with gutter widths added.

Five Questions with Lea Verou Read on! →

Nov 1 2011

Lea is a front end web developer from Greece. You have likely heard of her, as ever since she started blogging in English (read more about that below), she’s had quite a boom in popularity. Or perhaps you’ve seen some of her work. She’s created a number of one-page sites that either show off amazing things CSS can do or help you with a difficult/tedious task.

I asked Lea some questions about critical reaction to her work,…

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#105: Using SpriteCow

In which I take a real example of somewhere I knew using sprites would be a good idea, create the sprite by hand in Photoshop (my preferred method), and then use SpriteCow to help with the exact position values needed to use the individual images. Pseudo elements are also used to help maintain accessibility.

Links from the video: