What distinguishes modern art from the art of other ages is criticism.”And, everything is subjected to modifications. Modernity is a qualitative, not a chronological category. And, this is what we tend to take the basis of this post wherein CSS has never failed to amaze us with the flexibility it accompanies.
For today’s post, I got inspired by Ahmed El Gabri and his article CSS3 Gradients Coffee cup. I figured if you could make a coffee cup, you could make just about anything with CSS3!
The Google Font API hides a lot of complexity behind the scenes. Google’s serving infrastructure takes care of converting the font into a format compatible with any modern browser (including Internet Explorer 6 and up), sends just the styles and weights you select, and the font files and CSS are tuned and optimized for web serving. For example, cache headers are set to maximize the likelihood that the fonts will be served from the browser’s cache with no need for a network roundtrip, even when the same font is linked from different websites.
As I have previously mentioned, CSS3 allows for web techniques such as: text shadows, rounded borders, animations, custom web fonts, and much more. CSS3 has a great future in web development and I have being reading and learning as much as I can about it!
As I have previously mentioned in my other posts on color, color is one of the web designer’s most indispensable tools, because it is one of the main building blocks of a superior website.
Although both CSS and JavaScript may be included within an HTML page, best practices encourage storing CSS and JavaScript in external files that can be downloaded and cached separately. Performance research asks: How can these external resources be downloaded and applied most efficiently? The first approach is to limit the number of external requests since the overhead of each HTTP request is high. The second approach? Make your code as small as possible.
Web design market is continuously growing. Nowadays, there is really a tough competition between all the players in the market. An important parameter for judging the competency of any player is the ‘Time factor’ accompanied by ‘Quality Assessment.’
Though there are so many markup service providers in the market but PixelCrayons has emerged as a market leader due to its commitment and dedication towards quality and customer support.
Inspired by CSS Sprites2 – It’s JavaScript Time from A List Apart and Using jQuery for Background Image Animations written over a year ago, I decided to create a short tutorial about a animated menu just using CSS3.
Today, I have prepared a tutorial about how to use CSS3 to make an image gallery with animation. I recommend to use one of these browsers to see the animations; however, the gallery is going to be usable in browsers without support of the animation.
css regex codeigniter javascript php mysql mootools framework ci mvc forms ajax blog regularexpressions world flash jquery dom svn dojo xml xhtml nav navigation menu effect plugins jqueryui twitter curl ui plugin wordpress event tinyurl photoshop apache google safari python mac search zend zendframework api json html sprites osx fade

For all the newest TUTs, follow @tutlist
JohnGalt (105 Tuts)
JDStraughan (96 Tuts)
linkbuild (48 Tuts)
TJHooker (47 Tuts)
girish (39 Tuts)
Drag TUTmark to your bookmarks
to begin using our bookmarklet.
Don't know how to use a bookmarklet?
Check out this tutorial.
Home Page (RSS and ATOM)
New TUTS (RSS and ATOM)
Subscribe by Email
To learn how to get your ad here.
CONTACT US TODAY!