Well, it turns out that SVG's built-in animation features were never deprecated as planned. Sure, CSS and JavaScript are more than capable of carrying the load, but it's good to know that SMIL is not dead in the water as previously thought, and is actually well-supported.
SMIL on? originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.
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Okay, nobody is an exaggeration, but have you seen the stats for hwb()
? They show a steep decline, and after working a lot on color in the CSS-Tricks almanac, I’ve just been wondering


Using scroll shadows, especially for mobile devices, is a subtle bit of UX that Chris has covered before. Geoff covered a newer approach that uses the animation-timeline
property. Here

The CSS shape()
function recently gained support in both Chromium and WebKit browsers. It's a way of drawing complex shapes when clipping elements with the clip-path
prope


Let’s run through a quick refresher. Image maps date all the way back to HTML 3.2, where, first, server-side maps and then client-side maps defined clickable regions over an image using map and are