How’s it going, I'm a Adam, a Full-Stack Engineer, actively searching for work. I'm all about JavaScript. And Frontend but don't let that fool you - I've also got some serious Backend skills.
Location
City of Bath, UK 🇬🇧
Education
11 plus years* active enterprise development experience and a Fine art degree 🎨
What does "background:background!important;" do? Apart from make the browser wonder what you are talking about whilst getting nervous about the fact that it was important? XD
How’s it going, I'm a Adam, a Full-Stack Engineer, actively searching for work. I'm all about JavaScript. And Frontend but don't let that fool you - I've also got some serious Backend skills.
Location
City of Bath, UK 🇬🇧
Education
11 plus years* active enterprise development experience and a Fine art degree 🎨
I'm so glad you spotted that mostly everyone else just pretended they knew what that was. It is the most obscure CSS you can imagine. Consider your desktop walpaper, now remove the image, you will notice a colour. Black blue red yellow. background: background; uses the OS background colour as a CSS property. The important is.. just for fun.
You know, I did know that, but it was burred deep in my brain. Now that you explain it, I remember you explaining it to me in person last year! It is a really unusual thing...I'm guessing that it is a throwback to a really creaky old behaviour, as opposed to a new exciting feature!
Emoji CSS classes I love it!
Braille unicode is also possible. Your team will thank you 😁
What does "background:background!important;" do? Apart from make the browser wonder what you are talking about whilst getting nervous about the fact that it was important? XD
I'm so glad you spotted that mostly everyone else just pretended they knew what that was. It is the most obscure CSS you can imagine. Consider your desktop walpaper, now remove the image, you will notice a colour. Black blue red yellow. background: background; uses the OS background colour as a CSS property. The important is.. just for fun.
You know, I did know that, but it was burred deep in my brain. Now that you explain it, I remember you explaining it to me in person last year! It is a really unusual thing...I'm guessing that it is a throwback to a really creaky old behaviour, as opposed to a new exciting feature!
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