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yc c

Button Maker - 9 views

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    clic the button to get the code
Hussain M Elius

CSSbake - 8 views

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    CSSbake is a design gallery with a difference. It focuses on highlighting the individual ingredients that bake together a great website for your inspiration and education.
Gemma Weirs

Typograph - Scale & Rhythm - 8 views

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    I've been searching for something like this!
yc c

CSS Portal - Templates, Tutorials, Books, Software, Code Examples - 8 views

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    Here at CSSPortal, we have gathered as much information as possible to try and help you learn CSS and improve your web design skills.
yc c

PrimerCSS - 8 views

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    Primer undercoats your CSS by pulling out all of your classes and id's and placing them into a starter stylesheet. Paste your HTML in to get started.
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.
Hussain M Elius

CssUserAgent (cssua.js) - 9 views

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    Avoid CSS hacks! Use cssua.js to apply special CSS classes to your pages allowing you to use valid CSS to work around browser-specific quirks
Zulkarnain K.

Prefixr - 8 views

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    Cross-Browser CSS in Seconds.
helloe

PingMag - The Tokyo-based magazine about "Design and Making Things" » Archive... - 7 views

  • Writing CSS is very much like having sex. Not everyone does it the same way and there is no particular “right” way to do it. I guess for me the similarities actually end there, seeing as writing CSS is something I do every day whereas having sex is…anyway I digress. The W3C have set the standards but beyond this, writing CSS is down to an individual’s preferences. Here are 5 little tips and ideas I’ve adopted in the last 6 months that you can use to make your CSS more streamlined, maintainable and easy to read. Written by Jon Disclaimer: The CSS example files are exactly that. They are not meant to be fully functional CSS documents. Class names in the CSS files are named merely so that you may visualise the document in your head (because there is no accompanying html), not because I condone the naming convention in them.
  • 1) Make a table of contents At the top of your CSS document, write out a table of contents. For example, you could outline the different areas that your CSS document is styling (header, main, footer etc). Then, use a large, obvious section break to separate the areas. Not only does this make your CSS look neater, but when it comes to making quick adjustments to certain areas of your website at a later date, finding the corresponding area in your CSS will be much easier. View Example File 1
  • 3) Isolate single properties that you are likely to reuse a lot If you find yourself using a single property a lot, isolate it to save yourself repeating it over and over again and also enabling you to change the display of all parts of the site that use it. View Example File 3
yc c

SpriteMe - 3 views

shared by yc c on 02 Feb 10 - Cached
yc c liked it
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    Check this out. This an amazing tool!
abdullah khan

Styleneat - CSS Organizer - 7 views

shared by abdullah khan on 04 Feb 10 - Cached
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    Styleneat organizes and standardizes your CSS in a structure that makes it easier to define page areas and see how they relate to each other.
Vernon Fowler

LESS « The Dynamic Stylesheet language - 8 views

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    The LESS Ruby gem compiles LESS code to CSS.  LESS is an extension of CSS. You can write LESS code just like you would write CSS, except you need to compile it to CSS. That's what the gem is for. If you are on Mac OS X, you can install the gem by typing the following command in the terminal:
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    LESS extends CSS with dynamic behavior such as variables, mixins, operations and functions. LESS runs on both the server-side (with Node.js and Rhino) or client-side (modern browsers only).
yc c

Complete CSS Guide The missing manual for CSS - Westciv Wiki - 7 views

shared by yc c on 14 Mar 10 - Cached
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    This Guide is a reference to all of CSS 2.1, the W3C recommended standard for web page appearance, as of July 2008. We will also cover some aspects of CSS 3, currently a work in progress.
Hussain M Elius

jQuery Masonry - 7 views

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    Masonry is a layout plugin for jQuery. Think of it as the flip side of CSS floats. Whereas floating arranges elements horizontally then vertically, Masonry arranges elements vertically then horizontally according to a grid. The result minimizes vertical gaps between elements of varying height, just like a mason fitting stones in a wall.
yc c

siteInspire | inspiring web design and CSS gallery - 7 views

shared by yc c on 06 May 10 - Cached
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    siteInspire is showcase and CSS gallery featuring the best web design today
yc c

HTML5 Watch - 7 views

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    Collecting examples of creative, innovative, and unexpected use of emerging web technologies such as HTML5 and CSS3
yc c

Web Browser CSS Support - 7 views

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    This document is a section of the web browser standards support document. It includes detailed information about CSS support in major web browsers.
mikhail-miguel

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 }
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

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.
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