Stop Using Hacks for Transparent Cutouts Imagine this scenario: your designer hands you a Figma file where a beautiful hero image fades into the background via a complex grunge texture or a smooth radial gradient. Or better yet, a scrollable list that subtly vanishes at the bottom to hint at more content. Ten years ago, we would probably have reached for a glass of whiskey and started hacking toge
Hello, I am currently making my own HTML+CSS+JS framework, you can view it at my GitHub Repository here: github.com/29cmosier-dev/ZiggyLabs-Framework I call it ZiggyLabs Framework for now, I might rename it, and my main goal is to reduce the HTML clutter that Bootstrap has, and possibly figure out more goals later. I would also like to show off my navbar, as you can see from this post's image abov
An opinionated list of Python frameworks, libraries, tools, and resources
SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE & REFACTORING 3 Domain-Centric Architectures Every Software Architect Should Know The first concern of the architect is to make sure that the house is usable; it is not to ensure that the house is made of brick. — Uncle Bob The expression domain is occurring in software bibles for a very long time now and is heavily discussed in the book Domain-Driven
Wabi-Sabi and Whitespace: Eastern Philosophy for Web Design What I learned from studying traditional aesthetics that completely changed how I build interfaces Last year, I spent three weeks in Kyoto. Temples everywhere. One rainy afternoon, I ducked into a small museum dedicated to traditional craftwork. I wasn't expecting much. I'm a web developer, not an art historian. But something clicked. T
I’m going on a short vacation this week, so this post is coming out a bit earlier than usual. I actually had a different, more “useful” topic in mind — something educational, something responsible. But then I came across this fascinating article: I don’t like Tailwind. Sorry not sorry written by @freshcaffeine , and I couldn’t get it out of my head. So I decided to write a response instead. I actu
Or: what broke on my first three attempts so you don't have to repeat it I've built two prediction markets from scratch. The first one crashed on testnet. The second one launched but had zero users for two months. The third one? Actually works. Here's what I learned in the process. Ask yourself three boring but critical questions: Binary outcomes (Yes/No) or multiple choices? Who decides the trut
What Should Humans Design When AI Can Write Most of the Code? AI can now write code. Not perfectly. Not always safely. Not without review. But it can write a great deal of code. It can generate functions, create tests, call APIs, build UI components, handle common errors, and produce large amounts of implementation detail at a speed no human developer can match. This changes the meaning of prog