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10:56
@TinyGiant I have no doubt that you can explain it better, and I'd love to collaborate on something like this with you. You're an excellent coder and writer, which is rare on S.O. You have strong skills in JavaScript, JQuery, and CSS, which is also rare.
 
3 hours later…
14:06
Hi again Experts
I'm
An Important Q: I want to add a loading animation while the message is being sent...
Here: http://fastchat.ga
Please understand&help
Suck
JS dates sucks
Rlemon
Jan
Really Sorry!
But I want to add a loading animation while the message is being sent...
Here: fastchat.ga
Help needed
I am the CEO of Stack Exchange,Inc.
14:25
11 messages moved from JavaScript
@rlemon you kicked me
@rlemon hi
@JanDvorak hi
@JanDvorak reply
flagged for mod
meh. The last time I just 10k flagged all pings. Result: 6-hour auto-suspension
currently at 1h30m and one flag pending
 
3 hours later…
user4639281
17:03
@RickHitchcock I'll work on a draft and put it in a gist then post it here
17:55
!!bdsm
@ItachiUchiha That didn't make much sense. Use the !!/help command to learn more.
18:10
2 messages moved from Leaf Village Ninjas
 
3 hours later…
user4639281
20:54
@RickHitchcock gist.github.com/humbleRumble/4d6ee913cd0e7a9841bb let me know what you think
user4639281
Still needs a question general enough that this can be a good dupe catch-all and specific enough that it still follows the guidelines
21:20
@TinyGiant Fantastic. Some suggestions:
Remove the apostrophe in "it's": "half the width of it's parent"
user4639281
ahh yes
user4639281
updated to "the" instead to keep consistency with the rest of the post
(I'm married to an technical writer, who's taught me a thing or two about documentation, etc.)
user4639281
lol I could see how that would improve your documentation skills
Consider shortening to: "So to make an element that is half the width of its parent element keep an aspect ration of 2:1, cut the percentage in half."
user4639281
21:24
updated to "To make an element which is half the width of the parent element retain an aspect ration of 2:1, cut the percentage in half."
user4639281
oops ration should be ratio
user4639281
updated
Great. A sentence structure like, "To accomplish this, do this," is easy to follow. Even when commas aren't needed syntactically, they can help with legibility.
user4639281
yes
user4639281
Updated the third sentence to "It would be intuitive that horizontal padding percentages would reference the width of the containing block. However, the vertical padding properties also refer to the width, when you would assume that it would refer to the height."
user4639281
21:28
updated the second part to "However, vertical padding percentages also refer to the width, when you would assume that it would refer to the height."
That's much better! I was about to suggest something similar since not all "properties" would have that effect.
I'm having a bit of trouble parsing this: "However, if you set the position property as relative for the element, then include an absolutely positioned child element, set to take the width and height of the parent element."
user4639281
Updated to "If you put anything inside that div then the height will change.

However, if you set the position property as relative for the element and include an absolutely positioned child element which is set to take the width and height of the parent element, then you will have an element which retains its aspect ratio and can contain content."
user4639281
maybe div should be element
user4639281
It's hard to explain that part clearly
That reads pretty well now as-is. You could put a comma before the first "and" just to break it up a little.
21:33
user4639281
If that element contains anything which takes up space in the document flow, the height will change.

However, if you set `position: relative` on the element and include a child element with `position: absolute;` which is set to take the width and height of the element in question, then you will have an element which retains its aspect ratio and can contain content without changing the aspect ratio.
user4639281
maybe that needs more explanation of what it's doing
Since "element" may refer to the container or the child, you might consider replacing the word "element" with "container" and "child." I can understand what is meant by the context and because I'm familiar with the trick. But a newbie might get confused.
user4639281
If that element contains anything which takes up space in the document flow, the height will change.

However, you can set `position: relative` on the element to turn it into a containing block for any absolutely positioned child.

Then you can include an absolutely positioned child element and set it to take the width and height of the element in question

This will create an element which retains its aspect ratio and can contain content without changing the aspect ratio.
user4639281
maybe a quote from the docs about ancestral containing blocks and absolutely positioned children
21:38
I think it's more legible to include CSS (position: relative) rather than words ("position property as relative"). +1 : )
user4639281
yeah
user4639281
If the element in question contains any content which takes up space in the document flow, the height will change.

To avoid this you can set `position: relative` on the element which will turn it into a containing block for any absolutely positioned child elements. Then include an absolutely positioned child element and set it to take the width and height of the element in question.

This will create an element which retains its aspect ratio and can contain content without changing the aspect ratio.
You could remove the word "element" altogether in places. "child" by itself implies a "child element."
Your GitHub has real potential to clarify the technique. I'll check back later when I have some more time.
user4639281
cool
user4639281
one more update
user4639281
21:43
To avoid this you can set position: relative on the element which will turn it into a containing block for any absolutely positioned children. Then insert a child with position: absolute and set it to take the width and height of the parent using top: 0; width: 100%; bottom: 0;.
Perfect!
user4639281
now for the question
user4639281
gist.github.com/humbleRumble/8a56c59989b4bd8b1487 that's the best I have so far. Not very in line with the guidelines
I know Felix Kling has asked and answered a number of canonical questions. I don't know what the guidelines are for that type of question.
user4639281
21:49
it still has to fit within the normal guidelines for posting a question on SO
user4639281
But maybe he would have some good insight

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