- @media
- Aaron Martone
- API
- Cascading Style Sheets
- Computing
- CSS filter
- David Storey
- DOM
- HTML
- HTML
- Internet Explorer
- JavaScript
- Manuel Bieh
- Mark Senff
- Markup languages
- Moritz Gießmann
- online forms
- php
- php
- Sam Bennett
- Sass
- Shane Hudson
- Style sheet
- swiss army
- W3C Working Group
- Web design
- web developers
- World Wide Web
Any -webkit- feature that doesn’t exist in a specification (not even an Editor’s draft) is not CSS3. Yes, they are commonly evangelized as such, but they are not part of CSS at all. This distinction is not nitpicking. It’s important because it encourages certain vendors to circumvent the standards process, implement whatever they come up with in WebKit, then evangelize it to developers as the best thing since sliced bread. In our eagerness to use the new bling, we often forget how many people fought in the past decade to enable us to write code without forks and hacks and expect it to work interoperably. Lea Verou explains why single-vendor solutions are not the same as standards and not healthy for your professional practice or the future of the web.
- ActiveX
- Athens University of Economics and Business
- Cascading Style Sheets
- Code Browsers CSS HTML5
- Computing
- David Storey
- Eric Meyer
- HTML
- Lea Verou
- less minute spent developing web standards
- Markup languages
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- Scalable Vector Graphics
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- Sylvain Galineau
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- web technologies
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