As you are probably already aware you can declare a media type for your CSS stylesheet. This enables you to have a specific style for online, mobile, print etc. Declaring these sheets seperately means you have extra http requests. The more requests per page the less efficient it becomes..
CSS has a built in method of declaring the type as if it were an ‘if’ statement. Hence you can keep all your CSS in the one file!
I can’t believe how good this guy is.. he knows his design AND he can rap! No seriously he can RAP!
Getting a CSS drop down menu to work across all browsers can be very tricky especially as internet explorer doesn’t really like a hover state on anything other than a anchor tag! Check out this great collection of popular solutions including pure CSS, Javascript and AJAX!
If you write CSS then you will be aware how bulky it can become and, more importantly, difficult to read. Using shorthand CSS you can cut through a lot of the bulk by removing excessive property declarations and with a quick scan you can find a property to change or update.
Today I stumbled across a cool new online Web 2.0 application. It’s called ‘CSS Frame Generator’ but I think that title is a little bit confusing to what it actually does..
Two of the trickiest problems when coding with CSS is knowing the property name, the order of the property attributes (if using shorthand) and knowing which browser supports what..
As everybody knows, getting a website to look the same across different browsers is a tricky task to get right, if not impossible. That is because every browser has it’s own standard default CSS styling sheet built in. The only way to fix this is to include at the top of your own CSS style sheet a ‘CSS Reset’ script.