Safari recently implemented a non-standard (yet?) CSS random() function (currently only in WebKit, and not yet part of any CSS specification). Since many recent CSS features are directly aimed at replacing common JavaScript functionality, I expected this function to do the same. While it has some neat use cases, it doesn’t cover most of the scenarios where I currently use JavaScript’s Math.random(). What it does The basic format of the function follows the pattern “random(min, max, step...| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for the University of Notre Dame Web Team.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
My presentation for HighEdWeb 2024 was an overview of many recent and forthcoming additions to the web platform, specifically HTML and CSS. Description CSS is Awesome Over the past few years, CSS has been gaining features at a rate that is almost impossible to follow. Features that once required pre-processors are now native to the platform. Variables? Check. Nesting? Check. And now there’s even whispers of mixins. During this presentation we will examine many of the latest features added t...| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon
Home of Erik Runyon. Technical Director for Marketing Communications at the University of Notre Dame.| Erik Runyon