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Friday, March 20, 2026

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Thursday, March 19, 2026

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March 20, 2026 at 10:02AM

JavaScript for Everyone: Destructuring

Editor’s note: Mat Marquis and Andy Bell have released JavaScript for Everyone, an online course offered exclusively at Piccalilli. This post is an excerpt from the course taken specifically from a chapter all about JavaScript destructuring. We’re publishing it here because we believe in this material and want to encourage folks like yourself to sign up for the course. So, please enjoy this break from our regular broadcasting to get a small taste of what you can expect from enrolling in the full JavaScript for Everyone course.

I’ve been writing about JavaScript for long enough that I wouldn’t rule out a hubris-related curse of some kind. I wrote JavaScript for Web Designers more than a decade ago now, back in the era when packs of feral var still roamed the Earth. The fundamentals are sound, but the advice is a little dated now, for sure. Still, despite being a web development antique, one part of the book has aged particularly well, to my constant frustration.

An entire programming language seemed like too much to ever fully understand, and I was certain that I wasn’t tuned for it. I was a developer, sure, but I wasn’t a developer-developer. I didn’t have the requisite robot brain; I just put borders on things for a living.

JavaScript for Web Designers

I still hear this sentiment from incredibly talented designers and highly technical CSS experts that somehow can’t fathom calling themselves “JavaScript developers,” as though they were tragically born without whatever gland produces the chemicals that make a person innately understand the concept of variable hoisting and could never possibly qualify — this despite the fact that many of them write JavaScript as part of their day-to-day work. While I may not stand by the use of alert() in some of my examples (again, long time ago), the spirit of JavaScript for Web Designers holds every bit as true today as it did back then: type a semicolon and you’re writing JavaScript. Write JavaScript and you’re a JavaScript developer, full stop.

Now, sooner or later, you do run into the catch: nobody is born thinking like JavaScript, but to get really good at JavaScript, you will need to learn how. In order to know why JavaScript works the way it does, why sometimes things that feel like they should work don’t, and why things that feel like they shouldn’t work sometimes do, you need to go one step beyond the code you’re writing or even the result of running it — you need to get inside JavaScript’s head. You need to learn to interact with the language on its own terms.

That deep-magic knowledge is the goal of JavaScript for Everyone, a course designed to help you get from junior- to senior developer. In JavaScript for Everyone, my aim is to help you make sense of the more arcane rules of JavaScript as-it-is-played — not just teach you the how but the why, using the syntaxes you’re most likely to encounter in your day-to-day work. If you’re brand new to the language, you’ll walk away from this course with a foundational understanding of JavaScript worth hundreds of hours of trial-and-error; if you’re a junior developer, you’ll finish this course with a depth of knowledge to rival any senior.

Thanks to our friends here at CSS-Tricks, I’m able to share the entire lesson on destructuring assignment. These are some of my favorite JavaScript syntaxes, which I’m sure we can all agree are normal and in fact very cool things to have —syntaxes are as powerful as they are terse, all of them doing a lot of work with only a few characters. The downside of that terseness is that it makes these syntaxes a little more opaque than most, especially when you’re armed only with a browser tab open to MDN and a gleam in your eye. We got this, though — by the time you’ve reached the end of this lesson, you’ll be unpacking complex nested data structures with the best of them.

And if you missed it before, there’s another excerpt from the JavaScript for Everyone course covering JavaScript Expressions available here on CSS-Tricks.

Destructuring Assignment

When you’re working with a data structure like an array or object literal, you’ll frequently find yourself in a situation where you want to grab some or all of the values that structure contains and use them to initialize discrete variables. That makes those values easier to work with, but historically speaking, it can lead to pretty wordy code:

const theArray = [ false, true, false ];
const firstElement = theArray[0];
const secondElement = theArray[1];
const thirdElement = theArray[2];

This is fine! I mean, it works; it has for thirty years now. But as of 2015’s ES6, we’ve had a much more elegant option: destructuring.

Destructuring allows you to extract individual values from an array or object and assign them to a set of identifiers without needing to access the keys and/or values one at a time. In its most simple form — called binding pattern destructuring — each value is unpacked from the array or object literal and assigned to a corresponding identifier, all of which are declared with a single let or const (or var, technically, yes, fine). Brace yourself, because this is a strange one:

const theArray = [ false, true, false ];
const [ firstElement, secondElement, thirdElement ] = theArray;

console.log( firstElement );
// Result: false

console.log( secondElement );
// Result: true

console.log( thirdElement );
// Result: false

That’s the good stuff, even if it is a little weird to see brackets on that side of an assignment operator. That one binding covers all the same territory as the much more verbose snippet above it.

When working with an array, the individual identifiers are wrapped in a pair of array-style brackets, and each comma separated identifier you specify within those brackets will be initialized with the value in the corresponding element in the source Array. You’ll sometimes see destructuring referred to as unpacking a data structure, but despite how that and “destructuring” both sound, the original array or object isn’t modified by the process.

Elements can be skipped over by omitting an identifier between commas, the way you’d leave out a value when creating a sparse array:

const theArray = [ true, false, true ];
const [ firstElement, , thirdElement ] = theArray;

console.log( firstElement );
// Result: true

console.log( thirdElement );
// Result: true

There are a couple of differences in how you destructure an object using binding pattern destructuring. The identifiers are wrapped in a pair of curly braces rather than brackets; sensible enough, considering we’re dealing with objects. In the simplest version of this syntax, the identifiers you use have to correspond to the property keys:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
const { theProperty, theOtherProperty } = theObject;

console.log( theProperty );
// result: true

console.log( theOtherProperty );
// result: false

An array is an indexed collection, and indexed collections are intended to be used in ways where the specific iteration order matters — for example, with destructuring here, where we can assume that the identifiers we specify will correspond to the elements in the array, in sequential order.

That’s not the case with an object, which is a keyed collection — in strict technical terms, just a big ol’ pile of properties that are intended to be defined and accessed in whatever order, based on their keys. No big deal in practice, though; odds are, you’d want to use the property keys’ identifier names (or something very similar) as your identifiers anyway. Simple and effective, but the drawback is that it assumes a given… well, structure to the object being destructured.

This brings us to the alternate syntax, which looks absolutely wild, at least to me. The syntax is object literal shaped, but very, very different — so before you look at this, briefly forget everything you know about object literals:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
const { theProperty : theIdentifier, theOtherProperty : theOtherIdentifier } = theObject;

console.log( theIdentifier );
// result: true

console.log( theOtherIdentifier );
// result: false

You’re still not thinking about object literal notation, right? Because if you were, wow would that syntax look strange. I mean, a reference to the property to be destructured where a key would be and identifiers where the values would be?

Fortunately, we’re not thinking about object literal notation even a little bit right now, so I don’t have to write that previous paragraph in the first place. Instead, we can frame it like this: within the parentheses-wrapped curly braces, zero or more comma-separated instances of the property key with the value we want, followed by a colon, followed by the identifier we want that property’s value assigned to. After the curly braces, an assignment operator (=) and the object to be destructured. That’s all a lot in print, I know, but you’ll get a feel for it after using it a few times.

The second approach to destructuring is assignment pattern destructuring. With assignment patterns, the value of each destructured property is assigned to a specific target — like a variable we declared with let (or, technically, var), a property of another object, or an element in an array.

When working with arrays and variables declared with let, assignment pattern destructuring really just adds a step where you declare the variables that will end up containing the destructured values:

const theArray = [ true, false ];
let theFirstIdentifier;
let theSecondIdentifier

[ theFirstIdentifier, theSecondIdentifier ] = theArray;

console.log( theFirstIdentifier );
// true

console.log( theSecondIdentifier );
// false

This gives you the same end result as you’d get using binding pattern destructuring, like so:

const theArray = [ true, false ];

let [ theFirstIdentifier, theSecondIdentifier ] = theArray;

console.log( theFirstIdentifier );
// true

console.log( theSecondIdentifier );
// false

Binding pattern destructuring will allow you to use const from the jump, though:

const theArray = [ true, false ];

const [ theFirstIdentifier, theSecondIdentifier ] = theArray;

console.log( theFirstIdentifier );
// true

console.log( theSecondIdentifier );
// false

Now, if you wanted to use those destructured values to populate another array or the properties of an object, you would hit a predictable double-declaration wall when using binding pattern destructuring:

// Error
const theArray = [ true, false ];
let theResultArray = [];

let [ theResultArray[1], theResultArray[0] ] = theArray;
// Uncaught SyntaxError: redeclaration of let theResultArray

We can’t make let/const/var do anything but create variables; that’s their entire deal. In the example above, the first part of the line is interpreted as let theResultArray, and we get an error: theResultArray was already declared.

No such issue when we’re using assignment pattern destructuring:

const theArray = [ true, false ];
let theResultArray = [];

[ theResultArray[1], theResultArray[0] ] = theArray;

console.log( theResultArray );
// result: Array [ false, true ]

Once again, this syntax applies to objects as well, with a few little catches:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
let theProperty;
let theOtherProperty;

({ theProperty, theOtherProperty } = theObject );

console.log( theProperty );
// true

console.log( theOtherProperty );
// false

You’ll notice a pair of disambiguating parentheses around the line where we’re doing the destructuring. You’ve seen this before: without the grouping operator, a pair of curly braces in a context where a statement is expected is assumed to be a block statement, and you get a syntax error:

// Error
const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
let theProperty;
let theOtherProperty;

{ theProperty, theOtherProperty } = theObject;
// Uncaught SyntaxError: expected expression, got '='

So far this isn’t doing anything that binding pattern destructuring couldn’t. We’re using identifiers that match the property keys, but any identifier will do, if we use the alternate object destructuring syntax:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
let theFirstIdentifier;
let theSecondIdentifier;

({ theProperty: theFirstIdentifier, theOtherProperty: theSecondIdentifier } = theObject );

console.log( theFirstIdentifier );
// true

console.log( theSecondIdentifier );
// false

Once again, nothing binding pattern destructuring couldn’t do. But unlike binding pattern destructuring, any kind of assignment target will work with assignment pattern destructuring:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : false
};
let resultObject = {};

({ theProperty : resultObject.resultProp, theOtherProperty : resultObject.otherResultProp } = theObject );

console.log( resultObject );
// result: Object { resultProp: true, otherResultProp: false }

With either syntax, you can set “default” values that will be used if an element or property isn’t present at all, or it contains an explicit undefined value:

const theArray = [ true, undefined ];
const [ firstElement, secondElement = "A string.", thirdElement = 100 ] = theArray;

console.log( firstElement );
// Result: true

console.log( secondElement );
// Result: A string.

console.log( thirdElement );
// Result: 100
const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theOtherProperty" : undefined
};
const { theProperty, theOtherProperty = "A string.", aThirdProperty = 100 } = theObject;

console.log( theProperty );
// Result: true

console.log( theOtherProperty );
// Result: A string.

console.log( aThirdProperty );
// Result: 100

Snazzy stuff for sure, but where this syntax really shines is when you’re unpacking nested arrays and objects. Naturally, there’s nothing stopping you from unpacking an object that contains an object as a property value, then unpacking that inner object separately:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theNestedObject" : {
    "anotherProperty" : true,
    "stillOneMoreProp" : "A string."
  }
};

const { theProperty, theNestedObject } = theObject;
const { anotherProperty, stillOneMoreProp = "Default string." } = theNestedObject;

console.log( stillOneMoreProp );
// Result: A string.

But we can make this way more concise. We don’t have to unpack the nested object separately — we can unpack it as part of the same binding:

const theObject = {
  "theProperty" : true,
  "theNestedObject" : {
    "anotherProperty" : true,
    "stillOneMoreProp" : "A string."
  }
};
const { theProperty, theNestedObject : { anotherProperty, stillOneMoreProp } } = theObject;

console.log( stillOneMoreProp );
// Result: A string.

From an object within an object to three easy-to-use constants in a single line of code.

We can unpack mixed data structures just as succinctly:

const theObject = [{
  "aProperty" : true,
},{
  "anotherProperty" : "A string."
}];
const [{ aProperty }, { anotherProperty }] = theObject;

console.log( anotherProperty );
// Result: A string.

A dense syntax, there’s no question of that — bordering on “opaque,” even. It might take a little experimentation to get the hang of this one, but once it clicks, destructuring assignment gives you an incredibly quick and convenient way to break down complex data structures without spinning up a bunch of intermediate data structures and values.

Rest Properties

In all the examples above we’ve been working with known quantities: “turn these X properties or elements into Y variables.” That doesn’t match the reality of breaking down a huge, tangled object, jam-packed array, or both.

In the context of a destructuring assignment, an ellipsis (that’s ..., not , for my fellow Unicode enthusiasts) followed by an identifier (to the tune of ...theIdentifier) represents a rest property — an identifier that will represent the rest of the array or object being unpacked. This rest property will contain all the remaining elements or properties beyond the ones we’ve explicitly unpacked to their own identifiers, all bundled up in the same kind of data structure as the one we’re unpacking:

const theArray = [ false, true, false, true, true, false ];
const [ firstElement, secondElement, ...remainingElements ] = theArray;

console.log( remainingElements );
// Result: Array(4) [ false, true, true, false ]

Generally I try to avoid using examples that veer too close to real-world use on purpose where they can get a little convoluted and I don’t want to distract from the core ideas — but in this case, “convoluted” is exactly what we’re looking to work around. So let’s use an object near and dear to my heart: (part of) the data representing the very first newsletter I sent out back when I started writing this course.

const firstPost = {
  "id": "mat-update-1.md",
  "slug": "mat-update-1",
  "body": "Hey, great to meet you, everybody. I'm Mat — \\"Wilto\\" is good too — and I'm here to teach you JavaScript. Not just what JavaScript is or what JavaScript does, but the *how* and the *why* of JavaScript. The weird stuff. The *deep magic_.\\n\\nWell, okay, I'm not *currently* here to teach you JavaScript, but I will be soon. Right now I'm just getting things in order for the course — planning, outlining, polishing the fancy semicolons that I only take out when I'm having company over, writing like 5,000 words about `this` as a warm-up that completely got away from me, that kind of thing.",
  "collection": "emails",
  "data": {
    "title": "Meet your Instructor",
    "pubDate": "2025-05-08T09:55:00.630Z",
    "headingSize": "large",
    "showUnsubscribeLink": true,
    "stream": "javascript-for-everyone"
  }
};

Quite a bit going on in there. For purposes of this exercise, assume this is coming in from an external API the way it is over on my website — this isn’t an object we control. Sure, we can work with that object directly, but that’s a little unwieldy when all we need is, for example, the newsletter title and body:

const firstPost = {
  "id": "mat-update-1.md",
  "slug": "mat-update-1",
  "body": "Hey, great to meet you, everybody. I'm Mat — \\"Wilto\\" is good too — and I'm here to teach you JavaScript. Not just what JavaScript is or what JavaScript does, but the *how* and the *why* of JavaScript. The weird stuff. The *deep magic_.\\n\\nWell, okay, I'm not *currently* here to teach you JavaScript, but I will be soon. Right now I'm just getting things in order for the course — planning, outlining, polishing the fancy semicolons that I only take out when I'm having company over, writing like 5,000 words about `this` as a warm-up that completely got away from me, that kind of thing.",
  "data": {
    "title": "Meet your Instructor",
    "pubDate": "2025-05-08T09:55:00.630Z",
    "headingSize": "large",
    "showUnsubscribeLink": true,
    "stream": "javascript-for-everyone"
  }
};

const { data : { title }, body } = firstPost;

console.log( title );
// Result: Meet your Instructor

console.log( body );
/* Result:
Hey, great to meet you, everybody. I'm Mat — \\"Wilto\\" is good too — and I'm here to teach you JavaScript. Not just what JavaScript is or what JavaScript does, but the *how* and the *why* of JavaScript. The weird stuff. The *deep magic_.

Well, okay, I'm not *currently* here to teach you JavaScript, but I will be soon. Right now I'm just getting things in order for the course — planning, outlining, polishing the fancy semicolons that I only take out when I'm having company over, writing like 5,000 words about `this` as a warm-up that completely got away from me, that kind of thing.
*/

That’s tidy; a couple dozen characters and we have exactly what we need from that tangle. I know I’m not going to need those id or slug properties to publish it on my own website, so I omit those altogether — but that inner data object has a conspicuous ring to it, like maybe one could expect it to contain other properties associated with future posts. I don’t know what those properties will be, but I know I’ll want them all packaged up in a way where I can easily make use of them. I want the firstPost.data.title property in isolation, but I also want an object containing all the rest of the firstPost.data properties, whatever they end up being:

const firstPost = {
  "id": "mat-update-1.md",
  "slug": "mat-update-1",
  "body": "Hey, great to meet you, everybody. I'm Mat — \\"Wilto\\" is good too — and I'm here to teach you JavaScript. Not just what JavaScript is or what JavaScript does, but the *how* and the *why* of JavaScript. The weird stuff. The *deep magic_.\\n\\nWell, okay, I'm not *currently* here to teach you JavaScript, but I will be soon. Right now I'm just getting things in order for the course — planning, outlining, polishing the fancy semicolons that I only take out when I'm having company over, writing like 5,000 words about `this` as a warm-up that completely got away from me, that kind of thing.",
  "data": {
    "title": "Meet your Instructor",
    "pubDate": "2025-05-08T09:55:00.630Z",
    "headingSize": "large",
    "showUnsubscribeLink": true,
    "stream": "javascript-for-everyone"
  }
};

const { data : { title, ...metaData }, body } = firstPost;

console.log( title );
// Result: Meet your Instructor

console.log( metaData );
// Result: Object { pubDate: "2025-05-08T09:55:00.630Z", headingSize: "large", showUnsubscribeLink: true, stream: "javascript-for-everyone" }

Now we’re talking. Now we have a metaData object containing anything and everything else in the data property of the object we’ve been handed.

Listen. If you’re anything like me, even if you haven’t quite gotten your head around the syntax itself, you’ll find that there’s something viscerally satisfying about the binding in the snippet above. All that work done in a single line of code. It’s terse, it’s elegant — it takes the complex and makes it simple. That’s the good stuff.

And yet: maybe you can hear it too, ever-so-faintly? A quiet voice, way down in the back of your mind, that asks “I wonder if there’s an even better way.” For what we’re doing here, in isolation, this solution is about as good as it gets — but as far as the wide world of JavaScript goes: there’s always a better way. If you can’t hear it just yet, I bet you will by the end of the course.

Anyone who writes JavaScript is a JavaScript developer; there are no two ways about that. But the satisfaction of creating order from chaos in just a few keystrokes, and the drive to find even better ways to do it? Those are the makings of a JavaScript developer to be reckoned with.


You can do more than just “get by” with JavaScript; I know you can. You can understand JavaScript, all the way down to the mechanisms that power the language — the gears and springs that move the entire “interactive” layer of the web. To really understand JavaScript is to understand the boundaries of how users interact with the things we’re building, and broadening our understanding of the medium we work with every day sharpens all of our skills, from layout to accessibility to front-end performance to typography. Understanding JavaScript means less “I wonder if it’s possible to…” and “I guess we have to…” in your day-to-day decision making, even if you’re not the one tasked with writing it. Expanding our skillsets will always make us better — and more valued, professionally — no matter our roles.

JavaScript is a tricky thing to learn; I know that all too well — that’s why I wrote JavaScript for Everyone. You can do this, and I’m here to help.

I hope to see you there.


JavaScript for Everyone: Destructuring originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.



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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Clear today!



With a high of F and a low of 43F. Currently, it's 50F and Clear outside.

Current wind speeds: 9 from the West

Pollen: 0

Sunrise: March 18, 2026 at 06:58PM

Sunset: March 19, 2026 at 07:01AM

UV index: 0

Humidity: 23%

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March 19, 2026 at 10:02AM

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Clear today!



With a high of F and a low of 38F. Currently, it's 50F and Clear outside.

Current wind speeds: 10 from the West

Pollen: 0

Sunrise: March 17, 2026 at 06:59PM

Sunset: March 18, 2026 at 07:00AM

UV index: 0

Humidity: 36%

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March 18, 2026 at 10:02AM

Monday, March 16, 2026

Clouds Early/Clearing Late today!



With a high of F and a low of 28F. Currently, it's 39F and Cloudy outside.

Current wind speeds: 10 from the South

Pollen: 0

Sunrise: March 16, 2026 at 07:01PM

Sunset: March 17, 2026 at 06:59AM

UV index: 0

Humidity: 33%

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March 17, 2026 at 10:02AM

What’s !important #7: random(), Folded Corners, Anchored Container Queries, and More

For this issue of What’s !important, we have a healthy balance of old CSS that you might’ve missed and new CSS that you don’t want to miss. This includes random(), random-item(), folded corners using clip-path, backdrop-filter, font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums, the Popover API, anchored container queries, anchor positioning in general, DOOM in CSS, customizable <select>, :open, scroll-triggered animations, <toolbar>, and somehow, more.

Let’s dig in.

Understanding random() and random-item()

Alvaro Montoro explains how the random() and random-item() CSS functions work. As it turns out, they’re actually quite complex:

width: random(--w element-shared, 1rem, 2rem);
color: random-item(--c, red, orange, yellow, darkkhaki);

Creating folded corners using clip-path

My first solution to folded corners involved actual images. Not a great solution, but that was the way to do it in the noughties. Since then we’ve been able to do it with box-shadow, but Kitty Giraudel has come up with a CSS clip-path solution that clips a custom shape (hover the kitty to see it in action):

Revisiting backdrop-filter and font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums

Stuart Robson talks about backdrop-filter. It’s not a new CSS property, but it’s very useful and hardly ever talked about. In fact, up until now, I thought that it was for the ::backdrop pseudo-element, but we can actually use it to create all kinds of background effects for all kinds of elements, like this:

font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums is another one. This property and value prevents layout shift when numbers change dynamically, as they do with live clocks, counters, timers, financial tables, and so on. Amit Merchant walks you through it with this demo:

Getting started with the Popover API

Godstime Aburu does a deep dive on the Popover API, a new(ish) but everyday web platform feature that simplifies tooltip and tooltip-like UI patterns, but isn’t without its nuances.

Unraveling yet another anchor positioning quirk

Just another anchor positioning quirk, this time from Chris Coyier. These quirks have been piling up for a while now. We’ve talked about them time and time again, but the thing is, they’re not bugs. Anchor positioning works in a way that isn’t commonly understood, so Chris’ article is definitely worth a read, as are the articles that he references.

Building dynamic toggletips using anchored container queries

In this walkthrough, I demonstrate how to build dynamic toggletips using anchored container queries. Also, I ran into an anchor positioning quirk, so if you’re looking to solidify your understanding of all that, I think the walkthrough will help with that too.

Demo (full effect requires Chrome 143+):

DOOM in CSS

DOOM in CSS. DOOM. In CSS.

DOOM fully rendered in CSS. Every surface is a <div> that has a background image, with a clipping path with 3D transforms applied. Of course CSS does not have a movable camera, so we rotate and translate the scene around the user.

[image or embed]

— Niels Leenheer (@html5test.com) Mar 13, 2026 at 20:32

Safari updates, Chrome updates, and Quick Hits you missed

In addition, Chrome will ship every two weeks starting September.

From the Quick Hits reel, you might’ve missed that Font Awesome launched a Kickstarter campaign to transform Eleventy into Build Awesome, cancelled it because their emails failed to send (despite meeting their goal!), and vowed to try again. You can subscribe to the relaunch notification.

Also, <toolbar> is coming along according to Luke Warlow. This is akin to <focusgroup>, which we can actually test in Chrome 146 with the “Experimental Web Platform features” flag enabled.

Right, I’m off to slay some demons in DOOM. Until next time!

P.S. Congratulations to Kevin Powell for making it to 1 million YouTube subs!


What’s !important #7: random(), Folded Corners, Anchored Container Queries, and More originally published on CSS-Tricks, which is part of the DigitalOcean family. You should get the newsletter.



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Clear today!

With a high of F and a low of 45F. Currently, it's 52F and Clear outside. Current wind speeds: 7 from the Northwest Pollen: 0 Su...