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@mikefarrell Lol. I think Amazon pushes this anti-pattern, especially related to popcorn… twitter.com/stop/status/88…
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@rogie Fun. I remember when the dribbble team used to host things like this. Good vibes. Wish I could be there!
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This is a big deal. The easier it is to do the right thing, the more often that right thing will happen. Well done, @mattxcurtis and team! twitter.com/getstarkco/sta…
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@jinen I lived on pitchers and pitchers of that stuff. Haven’t had it in decades tho.
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@NullSprite You’re correct. Since I’m targeting a parent’s child by examining the characteristics of another child of that parent’s older sibling, the two elements in my selector are cousins.
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@romainst Because :has() is actually a pseudo-class. And can take a “forgiving relative selector list” developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web…
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@NathanaelCBR Yeah, :has seems to have gotten very quick adoption recently, even though I believe the spec has been in the works for over 10 years.
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@stop Technically, I could call this a nephew selector, since I’m targeting the child of a parent based on characteristics of that parent’s younger sibling.
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@NathanaelCBR Almost everything that matters. Especially when considering I’m using it for enhancement, not necessity. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web…
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Just wrote this CSS selector to target a previous sibling, and I’m in disbelief that it works. :has is 🤯 .class-info:has(+ .more-info > button[aria-expanded=”true”]) .meta::after {}
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@stop @luxuryluke If my project, I’d be trying really hard to pull the TT tighter together into one shape, so the TTI could create uniform rhythm.
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@luxuryluke Can’t get over how tight the i is in both versions.
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@dajorevyn @sandofsky What are you using on your network to filter or block requests?
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@Malarkey meetings.”
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@kfury Or when someone does it (intentionally or accidentally) in a theater.