author:Eric_Meyer

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http://www.brunildo.org/test/#pop The pages listed here contain tests and experiments about features, possibilities, browsers’ bugs concerning CSS. I would love to hear any comments that you may have, especially if you find errors. If the right part of the daisy background of this page looks strange, with unnatural colors, then that's nice, you are using a browser which understands ICC profiles embedded in images.

CSS tests

http://www.alistapart.com/authors/m/ericmeyer/

A List Apart: Authors: M: Eric Meyer

Mobile First ’s data-driven strategies and battle tested techniques will make you a master of mobile—and improve your non-mobile designs, too!
Par Eric A. Meyer Vous les avez forcément déjà croisés : des liens qui disent « Cliquez ici pour une version imprimable », ou une phrase du même genre. http://www.pompage.net/traduction/impression

Faites bonne impression avec les CSS

meyerweb.com

http://meyerweb.com/ Assuming you don’t want to spend the hours and lines of code necessary to push ahead with span and a whole lot of dynamic CSS rewriting, the obvious solution is to invent a new element and drop that into place. If you’re doing kerning, then a kern element makes a lot of sense, right? Right. And you can certainly do that in browsers today, as well as years back. Stuff in a new element, hit it up with some CSS, and you’re done. Now, how does this fit with the HTML5 specification?