#css generator
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bloomstruck · 2 months ago
Text
A lot of the incorrect quote generators out there were missing so many quotes that are amazing so I made my own, super girliepop generator (including sources where the quotes come from!). I am totally open to suggestions of quotes to add. ♥ It took forever to get the glitter trail for the cursor on desktop but I DID IT (i am ass with java in my defense).
I've never coded a website before so please be kind and if you have any code suggestions please let me know <3
ETA: There are no NSFW quotes YET but I plan on adding some so the option is already there. :3
Tumblr media Tumblr media
13 notes · View notes
littlepillbugs · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
random sparklefur generator now up on my site!!
20 notes · View notes
wachi-delectrico · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
HTML Article Generator is still a little rough around the edges, but basic functionality should be down! If you want to create your own HTML article quickly (like for inserting in your own website for example), you can head over to:
And like the image says, if you want to submit your own article to be randomly displayed on the site, you can go over to the Issues page on Github
9 notes · View notes
pencildragons · 20 days ago
Text
they invented python code language to torment me, studying an environmental science, specifically
3 notes · View notes
nicomoon69 · 9 months ago
Text
everyday I get closer to realizing my dream of creating a semi-interactive story for my ocs
7 notes · View notes
jcmarchi · 5 months ago
Text
The Importance of Investing in Soft Skills in the Age of AI
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/the-importance-of-investing-in-soft-skills-in-the-age-of-ai/
The Importance of Investing in Soft Skills in the Age of AI
I’ll set out my stall and let you know I am still an AI skeptic. Heck, I still wrap “AI” in quotes a lot of the time I talk about it. I am, however, skeptical of the present, rather than the future. I wouldn’t say I’m positive or even excited about where AI is going, but there’s an inevitability that in development circles, it will be further engrained in our work.
We joke in the industry that the suggestions that AI gives us are more often than not, terrible, but that will only improve in time. A good basis for that theory is how fast generative AI has improved with image and video generation. Sure, generated images still have that “shrink-wrapped” look about them, and generated images of people have extra… um… limbs, but consider how much generated AI images have improved, even in the last 12 months.
There’s also the case that VC money is seemingly exclusively being invested in AI, industry-wide. Pair that with a continuously turbulent tech recruitment situation, with endless major layoffs and even a skeptic like myself can see the writing on the wall with how our jobs as developers are going to be affected.
The biggest risk factor I can foresee is that if your sole responsibility is to write code, your job is almost certainly at risk. I don’t think this is an imminent risk in a lot of cases, but as generative AI improves its code output — just like it has for images and video — it’s only a matter of time before it becomes a redundancy risk for actual human developers.
Do I think this is right? Absolutely not. Do I think it’s time to panic? Not yet, but I do see a lot of value in evolving your skillset beyond writing code. I especially see the value in improving your soft skills.
What are soft skills?
A good way to think of soft skills is that they are life skills. Soft skills include:
communicating with others,
organizing yourself and others,
making decisions, and
adapting to difficult situations.
I believe so much in soft skills that I call them core skills and for the rest of this article, I’ll refer to them as core skills, to underline their importance.
The path to becoming a truly great developer is down to more than just coding. It comes down to how you approach everything else, like communication, giving and receiving feedback, finding a pragmatic solution, planning — and even thinking like a web developer.
I’ve been working with CSS for over 15 years at this point and a lot has changed in its capabilities. What hasn’t changed though, is the core skills — often called “soft skills” — that are required to push you to the next level. I’ve spent a large chunk of those 15 years as a consultant, helping organizations — both global corporations and small startups — write better CSS. In almost every single case, an improvement of the organization’s core skills was the overarching difference.
The main reason for this is a lot of the time, the organizations I worked with coded themselves into a corner. They’d done that because they just plowed through — Jira ticket after Jira ticket — rather than step back and question, “is our approach actually working?” By focusing on their team’s core skills, we were often — and very quickly — able to identify problem areas and come up with pragmatic solutions that were almost never development solutions. These solutions were instead:
Improving communication and collaboration between design and development teams
Reducing design ��hand-off” and instead, making the web-based output the source of truth
Moving slowly and methodically to move fast
Putting a sharp focus on planning and collaboration between developers and designers, way in advance of production work being started
Changing the mindset of “plow on” to taking a step back, thoroughly evaluating the problem, and then developing a collaborative and by proxy, much simpler solution
Will improving my core skills actually help?
One thing AI cannot do — and (hopefully) never will be able to do — is be human. Core skills — especially communication skills — are very difficult for AI to recreate well because the way we communicate is uniquely human.
I’ve been doing this job a long time and something that’s certainly propelled my career is the fact I’ve always been versatile. Having a multifaceted skillset — like in my case, learning CSS and HTML to improve my design work — will only benefit you. It opens up other opportunities for you too, which is especially important with the way the tech industry currently is.
If you’re wondering how to get started on improving your core skills, I’ve got you. I produced a course called Complete CSS this year but it’s a slight rug-pull because it’s actually a core skills course that uses CSS as a context. You get to learn some iron-clad CSS skills alongside those core skills too, as a bonus. It’s definitely worth checking out if you are interested in developing your core skills, especially so if you receive a training budget from your employer.
Wrapping up
The main message I want to get across is developing your core skills is as important — if not more important — than keeping up to date with the latest CSS or JavaScript thing. It might be uncomfortable for you to do that, but trust me, being able to stand yourself out over AI is only going to be a good thing, and improving your core skills is a sure-fire way to do exactly that.
4 notes · View notes
divinector · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Random Quotes Generator
3 notes · View notes
aloftmelevar · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
i'm not a DNI person but actually do not fw me if you're like this
21 notes · View notes
kriskukko · 2 years ago
Note
Hello!! I hope you are doing well. Your art is so freaking amazing 👏 I'm just enjoying my time looking at all of it!!! I did have a question tho-- how did you make your webcomic website? I'm curious of the all the steps you took!
this is going to expose my age and personality, but my website making process has two steps in total
-- get the domain/hosting (mine is over at a finnish hosting site) -- code it
and when i say code i mean like, some real mid 2000s shit when i was 13 years old. straight up barebones html and css. there are many good actual website makers these days, but i am a self-proclaimed control freak nincompoop so to me it has always appeared faster to just 'make it from scratch' to get exactly what i wanted (i owe w3schools.com my everything by now probably). i figured -- worked for me a nigh decade ago why wouldn't it now? its still just a string of links is it not (and while it was A THING to have back in the day, am glad iframes are no longer around). i have upgraded my game with some very rudimentary php since ye olden days, but even that i only use for one of the graphic novels. turns out you can really make updating a website and layouts and stuff easier by making a composite out of multiple files and then updating the parts separately. SO NEAT. i will acknowledge that while i thought of responsiveness in the coding process, it is probably not perfect. this is my blatant mirror marketing, since i personally prefer to read things on bigger screens and it is the headscape the art was made etc etc. as such, i'll just take this opportunity and formally apologize to everyone on mobile if the experience is atrocious at your end. with that said -- thank you for the kind words and the question! they brought much joy and nostalgia to my afternoon <3
42 notes · View notes
a-tools · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
CSS Gradient Text Generator is a CSS code generation tool that helps developers and designers create visually appealing colorful gradient text effects. It allows you to apply gradient colors to text elements effortlessly.
2 notes · View notes
askblog-cvesocs · 1 year ago
Text
General…
picture references of Clue, Skipper, and Sketch
pictures under the cut
___
CSS:
Clue:
Tumblr media
Skipper:
Tumblr media
Sketch:
Tumblr media
___
7 notes · View notes
thxrgism · 7 months ago
Text
idk why my neocities website is updated in the thumbnail but not when i actually go to it? perplexing
2 notes · View notes
elftwink · 1 year ago
Text
am currently working on a neocities site (which i cannot give you the url for yet because im working on the css still and there's no content also it looks ugly still) and oh man does it take me back to ye olde days of custom theme editing on here. i still use a custom theme obvs but back in like 2014/2015ish when i was really into indie rp custom themes were all the rage and you would spend hours editing some character specific image for your bg and then another several hours trying to make the css line up with your image (never at any point did i attempt to actually like. learn html or css. i just read other people's theme codes and edited the parts i could understand and solved problems as they arose. i distinctly remember one time i was using a base that had two sidebars and i only wanted one and deleting the section broke the theme in disastrous ways [bc i had no idea what i was doing] so i literally just made all the elements in the sidebar transparent and moved them off the screen LMAO. the best i ever got was moving from fully built custom themes that i edited to base themes that i built off of)
anyway while im slightly better now (im even reading tutorials! am i following them? sorry i have to go i think someones calling me) i am using a layout builder to build the homepage so it is even more reminding me of mid-2010s tumblr. much like building off a base theme, and definitely easier to understand than tumblr theme building (this time i at least know what all the different pieces of code are doing, even when im not sure how or why, or how to duplicate the effect under slightly different circumstances. but progress is progress!).
a good but annoying thing about the layout that im using is that i havent actually edited the site wide stylesheet, just used internal css on that one page, so when i go to make literally any other page i'll have to start from scratch. this is good because i am learning a lot and i think without doing it this way i would end up with a bunch of useless stuff in the stylesheet that really should be page-specific that i would have to correct with internal or inline css later. annoying because what do you mean i have to make decisions about the sizing and positions of the content? i literally just did that
also im kind of nervous to touch the general stylesheet because im pretty sure what i'll actually want to do is have a couple of stylesheets for different 'sections' of the website, to maintain cohesion between pages of the 'same' type but still allow a lot of fun customization on a per-page basis, but that requires deciding what 'sections' i want on the website and that is a whole other can of worms. but also you can't start without starting so i should probably just try to build a really simple layout and go from there (after all, if it sucks, it's not like i can't just create a new stylesheet, or do the css for each page independently until i hit a groove that's actually worth moving to the stylesheet). but also first i have to finish this goddamn homepage. which means i gotta find a header image that doesn't look ugly as shit
7 notes · View notes
fliquadv · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Casper's Scare School Reboot! (FAKE)
28 notes · View notes
pyrriax · 2 years ago
Text
i love workskins. i learnt you can actually just. put rainbow text on ao3. i fully anticipated it eating it (as it does with a lot of things) but no.
Tumblr media
apparently this is acceptable.
(ignore the temporary background color & slightly unreadable text. it's a work in progress and i'm just getting the basic idea down. im gonna see if i can get away with text glow to make spoke's text more readable. but also there's a joke about it being unreadable in there. it seems right for him)
11 notes · View notes
newcodesociety · 2 years ago
Text
7 notes · View notes