Firefox’s developer tools excel at finding and fixing accessibility problems quickly. For example, to find all contrast issues on a page fire up the accessibility inspector and scan the tree. My favorite developer tools? You guessed it — Firefox.
The
flexible box layout (flexbox
) is a
great spec. The flex-direction
property allows rearranging the position of
children inside a flex
container. This works in pretty much every browser —
even defunct ones like
Internet Explorer. Don’t work
hard and write JavaScript
, be lazy and write CSS
.
It’s nice to read an article with real content from real people on the Internet, not
spam. These
individuals work around
the data to page building limitation in hugo
by using
resources.FromString
to programmatically create
Markdown. Thought about this, searched
to see if it was tried, and it sure was.
Ultimately means that if I get around to it, articles from feeds can be made to appear as native posts in this timeline.
Whenever I’m handcrafting , content selection rules are usually the first declarations on my sheet. Might as well ensure user selected text is readable. Easiest win for accessibility.
::selection {
color: #fff;
background-color: #000;
}
::-webkit-selection {
color: #fff;
background-color: #000;
}
::-moz-selection {
color: #fff;
background-color: #000;
}