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Responsive Web Design with HTML5 and CSS - Fourth Edition

You're reading from  Responsive Web Design with HTML5 and CSS - Fourth Edition

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803242712
Pages 498 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Ben Frain Ben Frain
Profile icon Ben Frain
Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section I: The Fundamentals of Responsive Web Design
2. The Essentials of Responsive Web Design 3. Writing HTML Markup 4. Media Queries and Container Queries 5. Fluid Layout and Flexbox 6. Layout with CSS Grid 7. Section II: Core Skills for Effective Front-End Web Development
8. CSS Selectors, Typography, and More 9. CSS Color 10. Stunning Aesthetics with CSS 11. Responsive Images 12. SVG 13. Transitions, Transformations, and Animations 14. Custom Properties and CSS Functions 15. Forms 16. Section III: Latest Platform Features and Parting Advice
17. Cutting-Edge CSS Features 18. Bonus Techniques and Parting Advice 19. Other Books You May Enjoy
20. Index

Background gradients

In days gone by, to achieve a background gradient on an element, it was necessary to tile a thin, graphical slice of the gradient. It was a pain to tweak as it meant round trips into a graphics application, and then when a site was live, you would often experience a flash of unloaded gradient while the background image was fetched.

Thankfully, such hassle is now nothing more than a memory; with a CSS background-image gradient, things are far more flexible. CSS now enables us to create linear, radial, and conic background gradients, and repeating versions of each. Let’s look at how we can define them.

The specification for CSS Image Values and Replaced Content Module 4 can be found at https://www.w3.org/TR/css-images-4/.

The linear-gradient notation

The linear-gradient notation, in its simplest form, looks like this:

.linear-gradient {
  background: linear-gradient(red, blue);
}

This will create a linear gradient that...

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