@pawel_handle@threejs@googlechrome I saw this in the wild and was very impressed, both with the quality of the rendering and the amount of coordination it must have taken to accurately show the plan of the shelf based on the user input. Great work!
So much good stuff in new Safari.
- loading=“lazy”
- :has()
- new viewport units
- :focus-visible
- fixes accessibility for display:contents
- scroll-behavior
https://t.co/rMRu1QuonK
Is it possible to migrate from #Strapi v3 to v4? I know a migration guide is coming during Q1 but if anyone has any experience I would be interested to hear about it.
@seldo Thanks for putting this down. The topic is so polarizing, and I appreciate the open-minded take. I am genuinely interested in where crypto/web3 is going but find it difficult to see past the hype.
I've been annoyed by how text-overflow: ellipsis requires white-space: nowrap, and thus has no way of working with multi-line text. Turns out I'm just not caught up on what's going on in this area. (Thanks, @TheDidrik!)
The -webkit-line-clamp property is widely supported, even by Firefox (despite the vendor prefix), and has been for a while. It's non-standard but hey, if it does what we need… https://t.co/pHtLXIVJ08
@wesbos I've found that TypeScript helps to communicate what's actually going on in JavaScript code, and I would teach it from early on. A JR dev does not need to know all the intricacies of the type system to get most of the benefits.
This is a big day for CSS. After 25 years of devs being told that CSS cannot have parent selectors because they’re too slow, Safari TP 137 not only implements :has(), but enables it by default.
And AFAIK @igalia is working on a Chrome implementation!
https://t.co/sIJxTbAH86