Displaying the Progress of Tasks with HTML5

With the progress element, HTML5 pages can display the progress of a task, for example a download or background activity. In this tutorial we will demonstrate how to use the progress element in your pages, with a simple JavaScript function updating the element as the task executes. At the moment the progress element is only really supported in Firefox, Chrome and Opera, with support developing in Internet Explorer and Safari, so you can’t rely on it just yet.

Use Compass In Your Sass Projects

If you have started to dive into the wonderful world of CSS preprocessors (LESS or Sass), you might have also heard of Compass. If you haven’t decided on either LESS or Sass, I would make the investment and learn one, or both, of the technologies. It’s well worth the time and will make your coding and development life a lot easier. Today, we’re going to look at Compass, an open-source CSS authoring framework built on Sass.

Introduction to Sass, Part II

We will look at a much simpler way to get set up with Sass. CodeKit. I’ll be upfront, I’m a user of CodeKit and I recommend the software to any web developer who works in Sass, LESS, Compass, JavaScript, or any other web language, however neither I nor Developer Drive has any relationship (personal or financial) with CodeKit, and my post does not necessarily signify an endorsement by Developer Drive for CodeKit.

New ‘Adaptive Image’ HTML Tag Stirs Controversy

The rising global popularity of smart phones and other small-screen Internet devices has created a number of dilemmas for web developers. Among the most pressing is the issue of serving the proper image files for widely divergent screen sizes. The industry has responded with a variety of solutions, including separate mobile websites that are much leaner in terms of shown images.