There is a so-called false bottom effect. Once, I had to ask support how to add the CNAME DNS record because I couldn't find it in the list of available options. That happened because the height of the dropdown and the total height of visible items were exactly the same. Since macOS does not show a scroll bar until you hover over an area, I missed that there are more items than I could see. P.S. If you can't see the images, please let me know, since I got some complains that there are empty squares instead of actual images. As always, thank you and have a nice day! |
I'm a full-stack developer that is passionate about good user interfaces. In my newsletter, I talk mainly about UI/UX stuff. You could expect an email or two in a month, I'm not aiming to spam you with non-useful info.
Today we'll cover another CSS media query: prefers-reduced-motion, and how to load (or avoid loading) styles based on user preferences — this is genuinely cool stuff! I've just posted the same article on LinkedIn, for my first time. Accessibility concern There’s a condition called VIMS: Visually induced motion sickness (VIMS)—a subcategory of motion sickness that specifically relates to nausea, oculomotor strain, and disorientation from the perception of motion while remaining still. To...
After a rough patch, I’m getting back to writing. More practical stuff that you can apply directly in your projects. One topic that looks really good is how to use modern CSS to support UI/UX and accessibility. Preference Media Queries Preference Media Queries allow you to adapt your UI based on the user's system-level settings and personal preferences — like reduced motion, high contrast, or dark mode. They're mostly used to improve accessibility and user experience. Let's cover one of them....
I've been skimming through my list of topics to cover and found an interesting CSS property that’s especially useful when you need to highlight a specific phrase inside a block of text. Normally, when a text block breaks into multiple lines, the browser treats the whole element as a single box — which often results in broken or inconsistent styling. So this code: Results in the following styling: To fix that, all you need is: box-decoration-break: clone; It tells the browser to treat each...