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Contents contributed and discussions participated by yc c

yc c

Web Developer Checklist - 0 views

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    Analyses any web page for violations of best practices
yc c

CSSPrefixer - 6 views

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    adapts code for all browsers (adds -webkit, -moz...)
yc c

Animate.css - a bunch of plug-and-play CSS animations - 0 views

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    To use them in your project, simply add the class to the element, or call the animation yourself in your CSS file. The classes and the animations have the same name.
yc c

CSS Test | CSS Class - 7 views

shared by yc c on 13 Dec 11 - No Cached
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    These are my CSS test pages. In these pages you will find a growing collection of test and demonstrations of browser support of CSS standards.
yc c

Zachary Johnson in Cyberspace - zachstronaut - 2 views

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    I have created a monkey patch for jQuery (tested through 1.4.3) which enables you to independently set and/or animate both the scale and rotation of any HTML content with jQuery. This code uses the scale() and rotate() CSS transformations that are only supported by Webkit, Safari, Chrome, Firefox 3.5+, IE9 (Platform Preview 7+), and some versions of Opera at this time.
yc c

Announcing cssess - The Bookmarklet That Finds Unused CSS Selectors | Razor Fast - 5 views

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    helps you find unused CSS selectors on any site.
yc c

BonBon Buttons - Sweet CSS3 buttons - 10 views

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    There was a goal: Create CSS buttons that are sexy looking, really flexible, but with the most minimalistic markup as possible.
yc c

CSS3 Playground by Mike Plate - 7 views

shared by yc c on 11 Aug 10 - Cached
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    The CSS3 Playground is a web application for experimenting with some new css3 capabilities. Primarily those than conform to the progressive enhancement philosophy, which means that the styles can be used on all sites without severely changing/limiting the experience on browsers that does not support them (=Internet Explorer 8.0 and older). But there are also styles that may need better replacements on Internet Explorer such as rotation, and I hope I will have the time to add more in the future.
yc c

welcome // CSS3 Playground - 8 views

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    This is a demo site for CSS3. For most stuff you need Safari 4+, Chrome, Firefox 4 beta or Opera 10.5x to make these demos work. For 3D stuff, you need Safari 5 or the WebKit Nightly build.
yc c

CSS3 Generator - 12 views

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     All the effects are fully customizable and you can choose from all the popular CSS3 properties.
yc c

Font Squirrel | Create Your Own @font-face Kits - 4 views

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    download and/or convert fonts Upload a font and this will spit out everything you need to embed it into a website including HTML, CSS and multiple font file formats. You'll definitely want to bookmark this one! Each @font-face font kit come with: Original TrueType or OpenType Fonts for Firefox 3.5+ , Opera 10+, Safari 3.1+, Chrome 4.0.249.4+EOT fonts for Internet Explorer 4+Demo.html and stylesheet.css so you can get going fastNOTE: All fonts are subset to the Mac Roman char set.
yc c

CSS3 Border Image Experiments : Nora Brown Design - 6 views

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    from article: Understanding border-image http://css-tricks.com/understanding-border-image/
yc c

Understanding border-image | CSS-Tricks - 6 views

  • Strangely, the percentages require the “%”, while pixels should be listed without the “px”:
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    The new CSS3 property border-image is a little tricky, but it can allow you to create flexible boxes with custom borders (or drop shadows, if that's your thing) with a single div and a single image. In this article I explain how the border-image shorthand property works in today's browsers.
yc c

CSS Filters | Speaking | Hicksdesign - 6 views

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    A 5 minute microslot on how to make sure the browser you want gets the CSS that you want it to have! Exclude IE6 and earlier from seeing your CSS3, and specify styles for mobiles and IE versions.
yc c

Blog | Graphicpeel - iOS Icons Made in Pure CSS - 5 views

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    The following demo was made using a variety of CSS techniques. Rounded corners, shadows, gradients, rgba, pseudo-elements, and transforms are just some of them. A lot of these were generated by helpful tools, such as westciv's tools and Border Radius. By combining these techniques, you can create rich graphics with just a few lines of code. Here are a few examples. In the contacts icon, I used 5 different shapes for the silhouette icon. The head is a rectangle with rounded corners, followed by another rectangle for the neck and a distorted semi-circle for the body. In order to get the curve of the shoulders to the neck, I placed two circles on top of the shapes. The weather icon has several rays of light shooting from behind the sun. Each one of these rays is actually a long rectangle with a gradient that fades to transparent on either end. I used -webkit-transform:rotate to rotate each rectangle to a different angle. The same effect was used for the iTunes icon. To get the cloud icon on the iDisk icon, I used two circles layered on top of each other, above a rounded rectangle. The larger circle has a gradient that cuts off just before the rectangle.
yc c

Handy CSS Debugging Snippet - 7 views

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    I use the following bit of CSS to help visualize the structure of an XHTML (or HTML) document by putting a colored outline around the border of every element. At each level in the hierarchy the color changes so you can see when "depth" changes.   * { outline: 2px dotted red }   * * { outline: 2px dotted green }   * * * { outline: 2px dotted orange }   * * * * { outline: 2px dotted blue }   * * * * * { outline: 1px solid red }   * * * * * * { outline: 1px solid green }   * * * * * * * { outline: 1px solid orange }   * * * * * * * * { outline: 1px solid blue }
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