how does chrome still require so many goddamn prefixes? :p
user3186555
does anybody have suggestions for using a width transition that makes a div smaller that actually looks smooth? The issue is that the div has text and the text clips to the next line, which is highly unattractive. Just asking where to start. Hopefully a simple solution.
and also, looking at the spec, it's actually not defined
> CSS Text Level 3 does not define the exact rules for hyphenation, however UAs are strongly encouraged to optimize their line-breaking implementation to choose good break points and appropriate hyphenation point.
"We don't tell you what it is but you should do it"
@TylerH I don't get your point here, the word is longer than the line, so it needs to wrap (fine, using word-break: break-word;), and add a hyphen where it wraps. And why do you think it isn't needed? The word is longer than the container, so the text is overflowing.
@Billy I'm saying you can solve the problem by not breaking the word up
move it to a new line instead
until the spec can define (or better, point to a definition of when to hyphenate word breaks to new lines [IIRC the rule is "always" but then again grammar "rules" are often just "suggestions"]) then it probably shouldn't be done with CSS
@ZachSaucier already been on that page. it works except the background image doesn't resize properly and you scroll into a white background. I've tried putting the background image inside the body tag in css but that didn't work either
hmm, for a table resizer, if I'm using percentage width for <td> and the <table> should I use also a margin-left in percentage or it's fine in pixels (looks bad to me to mix px and %)
<table style="margin-left:20px; width:80%"> vs <table style="margin-left:10%; width:80%">
let's go full % for width/margin-left, and full px for height/margin-top
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2016/02/08/a-simple-solution-to-a-complicated-problem/ CommitStrip A simple solution to a complicated problem CommitStrip 1454953365
I am trying to use the CSS clip-path attribute to apply an SVG clipPath to some elements in a page. For example, HTML (note that clipPathUnits="objectBoundingBox" allows the circle to be expressed in fractions of the containing element size):
setTimeout(function(){
$('.circle:first div'...
I run something called Chrubuntu (I think you can guess what it does) which lets me run a version of FF among other things
ChromeOS natively does not let you install anything other than extensions (and maybe what they call "apps" or something - they seem like the same thing to me)
I have a friend who has a wordpress site. I have no experience with wordpress nor the time to learn it, php, etc.. but he wants what would basically be a plugin for his site that I offered to look into possibly doing. my background is in python/django. He basically wants a cost estimator which will pull from a large database of services/items/products. He wants it embedded into a specific page of his website, not it's own page and is adamant about this. My question is:
Could this be designed/backed by python/django, hosted on another webserver, and served to the user through his site via an iframe?
@TylerH ... yeah i wouldn't like to have to deal with desktop tech support tickets... but it seems like that happens often with small businesses
"Hey, you're a computer person, help fix this problem"
we even have a full department that's for handling those kinds of issues, and yet i still get them from time to time because I'm closer.
I wouldn't be happy if that became part of my job, where any time someone had that kind of problem it was my job to fix it... That would interrupt my work too much.