Garrett Dimon :ruby: on Nostr: CSS is improving and expanding so rapidly that I can’t keep up. But every time ...
CSS is improving and expanding so rapidly that I can’t keep up.
But every time I’m working in CSS these days, I find a new widely supported feature that 20 years ago we were fancifully day-dreaming about how amazing it would be while also believing it would never actually happen.
Now CSS offers one-liners to do things that were borderline impossible (or entirely impractical) even with JavaScript. Why anybody still leans heavily on JS is beyond me unless it’s a lack of awareness.
But every time I’m working in CSS these days, I find a new widely supported feature that 20 years ago we were fancifully day-dreaming about how amazing it would be while also believing it would never actually happen.
Now CSS offers one-liners to do things that were borderline impossible (or entirely impractical) even with JavaScript. Why anybody still leans heavily on JS is beyond me unless it’s a lack of awareness.