I think "scroll shadows" in CSS is one of my favorite CSS tricks of all times. Originally by Roman Komarov, explained and improved by Lea Verou. I saw a tool the other day around the idea by Stefan Judis.
It's a real mind-bender involving four layered gradient backgrounds, each positioned, sized, and colored differently, and then behavioraly different regarding scrolling.
It's not just a neat trick, it has real UX implications. Showing a shadow of where you can scroll is important UX. Consider this story of a recent design update in iOS that led to complete confusion UI actions hidden behind a place you could scroll to, but had zero affordence on how to get there. (Happens to me all the time in Spotify, for the record.)
I think "scroll shadows" in CSS is one of my favorite CSS tricks of all times. Originally by Roman Komarov, explained and improved by Lea Verou. I saw a tool the other day around the idea by Stefan Judis.
It's a real mind-bender involving four layered gradient backgrounds, each positioned, sized, and colored differently, and then behavioraly different regarding scrolling.
It's not just a neat trick, it has real UX implications. Showing a shadow of where you can scroll is important UX. Consider this story of a recent design update in iOS that led to complete confusion UI actions hidden behind a place you could scroll to, but had zero affordence on how to get there. (Happens to me all the time in Spotify, for the record.)
Awesome sauce. Thanks for sharing Chris!