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HTML5 Texas Recap

February 3, 2013 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

HTML5 TX Conference 2013 Logo
HTML5 TX Conference 2013

The HTML5 Texas 2013 Conference was great! Here are notes, slides and other resources I collected.

  • Conference Website
  • Eventifier Recap
  • Lanyrd Recap
  • HTML5TX Schedule

My blog posts of sessions that I attended.

  • HTML5TX 2013
  • Adaptive Images for Responsive Web Design
  • Backbone: 3 Ways
  • Managing a Large Front-End Project with Automated Build Tools
  • You Got your MVC into my Components: Adding Bindings to Enyo
  • 10 Things You Didn’t Know a Browser Could Do
  • Front End Legos
  • Model-View-Websockets
  • Rapid Templating: “Designing in the Browser” with Sass, Compass, and Serve
  • Closing Panel at HTML5TX Conference

JavaScript Workshop by Pamela Fox

  • JavaScript Workshop Resources

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Filed Under: HTML5, Web Development Tagged With: Adaptive Images, Automated Build Tools, blog post, blog posts, Conference JavaScript Workshop, conference notes, Conference Website, Data Formats, FAQs Help and Tutorials, HTML5 Texas, HTML5 Texas Recap, HTML5TX Conference JavaScript, HTML5TX Schedule, JavaScript Workshop, JavaScript Workshop Resources, Large Front-End Project, Legos Model-View-Websockets Rapid, Markup Languages, Pamela Fox, Pamela Fox JavaScript, Pamela Fox JavaScript Workshop Resources, Recap Lanyrd Recap, responsive web, Responsive Web Design, Responsive Web Design Backbone, Serve Closing Panel, Technology Internet, Ways Managing, Web browser, Web Design

Front End Legos

February 2, 2013 By Jonathan Jeter 2 Comments

by Shay Howe at HTML5 Texas Conference in Austin, TX (Deck)

There are a million ways to write HTML and CSS, and everyone has their own, but is there a right way? Our code needs to be well structured, written in an organized manner, and performance driven. Sharing code with others should be a joyful experience, not absolute terror.

In this session, Shay will cover some best practices and performance tips for writing the highest quality HTML and CSS possible. Writing code is the easy part, finding a practice and structure that works well across the board is the hard part. Shay will outline HTML and CSS conventions that can be applied to your everyday practice.

Front End Legos - Building Modular CSSCommon Problems

  • Websites have difficulty scaling
  • code becomes brittle
  • Files and code bases begin to swell

What’s Wrong

Best practices aren’t exactly best practices

Read the rest of Front End Legos

  • avoid extra elements

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Filed Under: Front-End Development, Web Development Tagged With: bad Low Specificity, Base Core styles, Best Practices, Cache Files, Cascading Style Sheets, Class (computer programming), class names avoid unnecessary, code bases, common files, Components User interface, conference notes, container element selectors, CSS conventions, CSS Jonathan Snook, CSS Lint, CSS Nicole Sullivan, CSS Performance, CSS Sneak Peek, Data Formats, date content, default elements, design patterns Alerts, elements Accommodate Content, elements Great ideas, Elements High Specificity, entire site, entire site Normalize, extra elements, great ideas, grid separate presentation, highest quality HTML, HTML, HTML5 Texas Conference, Jonathan Snook, layout code, leverage descendent selectors, leverage type selectors, lists Modules Business, Maintainability Code, Markup Languages, modular performant Organization, modularity Modularity, nested selectors, Nicole Sullivan, old code, old code defer, oocss.org SMACSS Scalable, performance tips, reusable elements, right way, Shay Howe, smacss.com Reuse Code, Specificity determines, Specificity Formula count, specificity Methodologies OOCSS, Style Sheets, styles Minimize Requests, Technology Internet, Texas, Texas conference, Use data, User interface, Zurb Foundation

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