This is the second part of a series that dives deep into the CSS shape()
command, continuing with a more detailed look at the arc
command.
Better CSS Shapes Using shape() — Part 2: More on Arcs originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.
https://css-tricks.com/better-css-shapes-using-shape-part-2-more-on-arcs/
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This is the third article in a series about the CSS shape()
function. We've covered drawing lines and arcs in previous articles and, this time, we look specifically at the curve

The State of CSS 2025 Survey dropped a few days ago, and besides anticipating the results, it's exciting to see a lot of the new things shipped to CSS reflected in the questions.
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The contrast-color()
function doesn’t check color contrast, but rather it outright resolves to either black or white (whichever one contrasts the most with your chosen color). Safari T

So, how can you take dialogue box design beyond the generic look of frameworks and templates? How can you style them to reflect a brand’s visual identity and help to tell its stories? Here’s how I

The reading-flow and reading-order proposed CSS properties are designed to specify the source order of HTML elements in the DOM tree, or in simpler terms, how accessibility tools deduce the order o


Clever, clever that Andy Bell. He shares a technique for displaying image alt
text when the image fails to load. Well, more precisely, it's a technique to apply styles to the alt