Can someone explain to me what is being referenced in this: body .buttons-wrapper input.w3slider-input:nth-child(1):checked ~ .slider > li:nth-child(1) {
Also how do i change the font of code in the chat? Ive seen people post little bits of code in the chat in a different font so that its distinguishable from text..
Interesting. if you have the same data type in a msgbox in vba you can use + for combining things e.g. MsgBox (String1 + " & " + String2) but if you mix them then you have to use & e.g. MsgBox (String1 & " & " & Integer1)
or only if you are using an integer?
let's do some testing
@MatthewSirkin It is selecting the li element that is the first child of the .slider element, but only when that .slider element appears somewhere after a checked input.w3slider-input checkbox *that is also the first child of .buttons-wrapper. Oh, and the .slider has to be at the same hierarchy level, AKA a sibling.
and you can use the ` key to encapsulate code. ` code here ` becomes code here (don't put any spaces between the ` and the code)
Yep - it's just when you are concatenating a string and an integer
@TylerH so the slider element can appear anywhere after the input element, and the input element has the class w3slider-input, and the style only happens when that input is checked?
the Mozilla Developer Network has a reference that is much more reliable and in depth
and they also have tutorials for general learning as well
Also check css-tricks.com/almanac/properties/p/perspective - Chris Coyier is a famous CSS author who regularly posts 'how to' articles for various CSS properties and things you wanna do in CSS
So you can set your perspective to be in the center of an element, at the element, or you can set it to be in the center of an element, at 50 levels "above" the element
When you set an element to position: fixed;, you remove it from the "normal document flow". Imagine your website is a river, and you're looking down at it from above. Each element is a rock in that river. Any margin you've applied to your elements is like a force field around one of those rocks.
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If not, that answer provides a quick overview/visual representation
yeah, so it's basically like, each of your elements is a piece of paper on a desk
and the ones with higher z-index levels are on top of the ones with lower z-index levels
you can set your perspective origin to be at the top piece of paper or the bottom piece of paper, or even some distance above the top piece of paper
Because in a geometrical sense, perspective is literally "the relation of two figures in the same plane, such that pairs of corresponding points lie on concurrent lines, and corresponding lines meet in collinear points."
AKA what you can see along your line of sight in relation to where you are viewing from
yeah, it looks really cool, and then i went to open the CSS and I saw 16 different styles (which I think is how each of the 4 slides look when each of the 4 are visible)