Engineer on @googlechrome. Involved in CSS and W3C standards. Previously @mozilla, @w3ctag. Mastodon: @dbaron@w3c.social

Rockville, Maryland, USA
Joined March 2008
Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
Replying to @davatron5000
@davatron5000 @philwalton I tried implementing max() and min() as part of calc(), but concluded it too hard to do right in CSS.
2
2
Replying to @stubbornella
@stubbornella I don't see a difference between Firefox/Linux and Chrome/Linux. What platform are you looking at?
2
@sayrer Do you know a good place to report bugs in m.twitter.com?
1
Replying to @annevk
@annevk That will remind you to use it without restarting the browser, I guess. (It applies live, but only to CSS not yet parsed.)
New blog post: How you can help with removing -moz- prefixes: dbaron.org/log/20130225-remo…
5
1
Replying to @LeaVerou
@LeaVerou Anyway, not sure how long you're in town, but would still be nice to say hello while you are.
1
@paulrouget skew() was added back to the spec because not having it was a Web-compat problem: dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-transf…
1
2
1
Replying to @dolske
@dolske @LeaVerou @WebPlatform to enter an Adobe building. W3C has rule against NDAs for WG meetings, but rule may not cover doc sprints.
1
Replying to @LeaVerou
@LeaVerou @WebPlatform They wanted am NDA signed at the door, so I left.
5
15
1
Replying to @LeaVerou
@LeaVerou @WebPlatform What would happen if I showed up despite not having registered?
1
I wish C/C++ at least defined unsigned-to-signed integer conversion behavior when the types have the same number of bits.
Replying to @jeresig
@jeresig Do you have a list of Gecko bugs that you work around?
2
Replying to @simevidas
@SimeVidas In full, yes, though I believe Bert also wrote a summary changes section in the WD.
1
Replying to @heycam
@heycam Stop by when you're in SF?
1
Replying to @simevidas
@SimeVidas @csswg Most specs are in version control (but we should probably link to that more clearly). ChangeLog files are pointless.
I'd expect <ol reversed><li><li value="10"><li></ol> to give 11-10-1 rather than 3-10-9.
1
1
1
I find HTML5's processing model for <ol reversed> weird. I'd rather number backwards than count children and then number forwards.
1
1
Replying to @glazou
@glazou and the majority of the PCs are running Linux (at least, the 4 on my side of the table all are).
Replying to @slightlylate
@slightlylate Seems to support the idea that first-past-the-post districts are the problem.
1