haha, just kidding la.. most important is to learn and there is quite a lot to learn from your answers... nobody is going to get any awards for being a high rep person (ofcourse you get some privileges)
hey guys, am back... and I managed to find out the link to cross browser testing....lol @ me, it was available only for saved pens and I was trying without saving :D
btw @web-tiki and @chipChocolate.py, if you guys want to get in touch with me outside of SO you would find my contact details on my free site (link is in my profile)... but don't lol at the site design tho, I am no professional :D
true @web-tiki. same here... nice to see followers increasing
I have a div called .testimonial-inner and using the :after pseudo element I have an arrow that sits underneath it pointing down. The problem I'm having is adding a box-shadow to it all so they both look like one natural element.
Without box-shadow on the triangle:
body {
background: #...
I'm working on a project of mine to create multiple geometrical shapes in one element. Although i succeeded in the past ones, i'm having trouble with the star. Tried googling for help but didn't find anything. So i'm turning to you my wise friends.
This is a picture of the desired end result
I'm attempting to create a button style for a client, and cannot seem to get it working using the after pseudo-class.
<style>
$varBase:40px;
.btn {
height: $varBase;
background: red;
width: 200px;
/*float: left;*/
&:after {
width: 0px;
height: inherit/2;
border-left: $varB...
I am trying to create a triangle using purely CSS which has curved edges.
Is this possible without it being totally over the top?
I've added an example below of what I'm trying to achieve (the curved lines - not the straight lines).
So far I have been working with the following code but it's...
I'm trying to cut out the top-left corner of a span element that has a top border set to it.
All works well, except for the fact that the border keeps running over the white CSS triangle. This can be fixed by removing overflow: hidden; from the .contract span's. I am, however, using the overflow...