Also b and HTML
Re: Getting ready for an alpha release: CSS fixes
« Reply #15, on September 2nd, 2012, 09:37 AM »
I never, reduce the width of my window, so, 'a' for me. Fuck small windows, fuck mobile! :whistle:
.horizontal_arrow virtual
:after
opacity: .25
&:hover:after
opacity: .5I think a lot of it is that I don't really think we can fully understand the consequences for the changes, that's one of the problems. I have no idea of what the consequences will be for any of the choices.
Stick a fork in it SMF | ![]() |


I don't really have a take on this, mainly because I'd probably not be using it reduced. If I had a preference I think I'd rather the sidebar be hidden. Having to choose from the options above I'd go with b since thats where everyone else seems to be :P^^^This is me for sure ^^^Quote from Arantor on September 4th, 2012, 07:14 PM I think a lot of it is that I don't really think we can fully understand the consequences for the changes, that's one of the problems. I have no idea of what the consequences will be for any of the choices.
What do you think, guys...?
I say go for x, but make a comment in the CSS so that people will know that JS witchcraft is being performed. Seems to me to be the least horrific way to go about things. If people have JS disabled it won't change too much, and if they have it enabled it won't be the end of the world.
CSS is so neat at most times, but can be oh so stupid for some things.
EDIT: http://www.w3.org/TR/selectors4/#subject <-- In five years we will all be telling new CSS users how lucky they are to have all the neat tools they currently have, and they will still whine that CSS is insufficient. It will be grand times
The only 'important' thing I feel that CSS is missing (and that is hardly targetable in WeCSS either), is "selector < subselector", i.e. "target any selector that has the specific subselector". That one would be so dead cool... And I don't care about performance issues, eh!