I first blogged about responsive data tables in 2011. When responsive web design was first becoming a thing, there were little hurdles like data tables that had to be jumped. The nature of elements are that they have something a minimum width depending on the content they contain and that can easily exceed the width of a small screen device. This image I made then still covers the issue pretty well: Except… maybe they don’t equally suck. If that … Read article “Under-Engineered Responsive Tables”
The post Under-Engineered Responsive Tables appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.
https://adrianroselli.com/2020/11/under-engineered-responsive-tables.html
Zaloguj się, aby dodać komentarz
Inne posty w tej grupie


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