10
Wesley
5y

Without CSS, all websites are perfectly responsive and look great on any device or screen size. We break them with CSS, then need to fix them... ponder that a bit.

By Timothy Smith on CSS-tricks.com (https://css-tricks.com/hmtl-css-and...)

Comments
  • 7
    "Websites aren't broken by default, they are functional, high-performing, and accessible. You break them. You son-of-a-bitch."

    ( https://motherfuckingwebsite.com/ )
  • 1
    He's right.

    The author should fill the content, the markup should define the outline, and the browser should build the local view.

    For more than 20 years web devs try to define the final view on their side. But that never worked and never will, there are too many different devices.
  • 1
    @Fast-Nop A nice site 👍Just one thing wrong, websites don't have to look the same everywhere. The view strongly depends on the viewers needs.
  • 1
    @Fast-Nop That's a great website ! Thanks mate.
  • 0
    curl -Ls https://devrant.io | w3m -Thtml | less -R . Does that work? (I'm not so sure about the w3m flag)
  • 2
  • 1
    @ihatecomputers Thanks for your contribution, that's pretty good but that's not perfect yet. I think we need an other motherfuckingwebsite update to improve accessibility to people with disabilities.

    For exemple :

    - Cat picture don't have an ALT attribute which is important to people who visite a website with a screen reader.

    - Add an option to let the user choose between Default, Reinforced or inverted contrasts.

    - Add an adapted font to dyslexics (Open-Dyslexic font)

    - An option to let the user increased line spacing, etc.
  • 0
    @ddephor Let's go back to gopher!
  • 0
    @sbiewald Sure. Most of the data transferred from a site is useless. This would be real fun for sites that only provide information.
  • 0
    Does noone notice that the link says hmtl instead of html? It's really disturbing if you ask me
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