Hasty
CSS: Scroll Driven Animations
Introduction to capabilities of scroll driven animations to create interactive effects based on scroll position by scrubbing existing CSS animations and keyframes over a scroll timeline instead of time.
Hasty
Introduction to capabilities of scroll driven animations to create interactive effects based on scroll position by scrubbing existing CSS animations and keyframes over a scroll timeline instead of time.
Supper Club
Guests Una Kravitz and Adam Argyle discuss the evolution of CSS over the years, new CSS version numbering like CSS 4 and CSS 5, container queries, scroll state queries and other modern CSS features.
Tasty
Discussion on new Node.js features aligned with web standards and industry norms, including native TypeScript support, SQLite integration, dotenv support, and more.
Hasty
Discussion on using CSS theming properties like color scheme, light/dark functions, accent color, selection styling, relative color syntax, and future style queries to control themes and light/dark modes.
Supper Club
Daily Dev is a platform that helps developers stay up-to-date by providing a personalized feed. It was created by 3 developers and launched on Product Hunt, gaining its first users. It has since raised $11M in funding and grown to 30 team members and over 500,000 users.
Tasty
In this episode, Scott and Wes answer questions from listeners on topics like predicting the future of JavaScript frameworks, using local development proxies, building your own authentication system, designing relational databases, and more.
Hasty
Scott and Wes discuss different approaches to authoring component-scoped CSS, including class-based systems, BEM, CSS modules, utility classes, CSS-in-JS, and more.
Supper Club
Alex Reardon discusses building accessible and performant drag and drop interactions using native browser APIs and his Pragmatic Drag and Drop library.
Tasty
Scott and Wes discuss the State of React 2023 developer survey results, including React API and framework usage, trends, pain points and more.
Hasty
Scott and Wes discuss whether websites should work without JavaScript enabled. They cover reasons pages may fail, progressive enhancement, and ways to improve the experience when JavaScript is not available.