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seirdy.one/assets/css/main.css
Rohan Kumar 41be095485
Fix: don't use system-ui for inputs
Thanks, forever!
2022-05-28 16:51:37 -07:00

393 lines
12 KiB
CSS

/* CSS that adds the bare minimum for a simple layout.
* Nothing here exists purely for aesthetics; everything addresses a
* specific a11y, compatibility, or critical
* usability need.
*
* One exception: I re-set the input styles so Safari wouldn't make them
* pill-shaped.
*
* I also don't use any classes except for image presentation. (e.g. to
* specify that an image should have pixelated rendering or be inverted
* in dark mode).
* My HTML contains microformats2 classnames for IndieWeb parsers, but I
* don't actually use those for styling.
*
* To keep myself from caring about minute details, I limited myself to
* only defining spacing in increments of .125em. Pixels are 1px or
* multiples of 3px. This also improves compression. No more "finding
* the perfect value".
*
* I cite WCAG 2.2 success criteria with "SC". I also tried to meet
* the Google a11y requirement of 48px tap targets separated by atl
* 8px, excluding inline links. This involved increasing font size,
* padding, line-height, and margins. */
html {
/* Mobile screens benefit from greater line-spacing so links are
* further apart. Dyslexic users prefer the spacing too.
* Necessary to meet SC 1.4.8.
* <100dpi screens: sans-serif is better. Why did browsers settle
* on serif being the default?? */
font: 100%/1.5 sans-serif;
/* Nearly every page on my site is taller than the viewport.
* Paint the scrollbar ASAP to prevent layout shifts. */
overflow-y: scroll;
}
/* This should not take effect on printouts, to save paper. */
@media screen {
body {
/* Default font sizes are one-size-fits-all; they're optimized for a
* wide variety of complex pages. For single-column websites like
* mine, it's ideal to bump it up ever so slightly. This also makes
* <sup>, <sub>, <small>, etc. large enough to have decent contrast
* with minimal adjustment, and makes tap-targets larger.
* Only do this on screen, since printouts already improve legibility
* and cost paper + ink.
* 108.75% is the minimum required to get superscripts to reach 14.5
* CSS pixels with most default stylesheets. At that size, my dark
* color palette has sufficient contrast.*/
font-size: 108.75%;
/* Aligning to the center with space on both sides prevents accidental
* link activation on tablets, and is a common practice that users are
* more used to for articles. */
margin: auto;
/* WCAG recommends a max line width. Not everyone can resize the
* viewport. This isn't for large blocks of text yet, so we don't have
* to go by SC 1.4.8.
* 45em = lowest acceptable width for titles, nav, footers, etc */
max-width: 45em;
/* Phone cases can cover the edges. Swipe-from-edge navigations
* should not conflict with the page elements. Focus outlines for
* heavily-padded nav links should not be cut-off. All three concerns
* are addressed by adding some body padding.
* I followed Google's a11y recommendations of "at least 8px space
* between tappables" by creating margins/paddings between nav links;
* re-use that same amount of space here. 24px is what it takes to
* create atl 48px of non-interactive space on <ul> and <ol> elements
* containing lists of interactives, with 8px in between.
* Don't use relative units here; this margin shouldn't scale with
* zoom, or else text will get narrower with zoom. */
padding: 0 24px;
}
/* 45em is too wide for long body text.
* Typically meets SC 1.4.8, plus or minus a few characters. */
div[itemprop="articleBody"] {
margin: auto;
max-width: 35em;
}
/* Compensate for misalignment and wasted space caused by padding
* and margin adjustments in nav children made to meet SC 2.5.5 */
footer > nav,
header > nav,
dt > a,
h2 + a {
margin-left: -.25em;
}
header > nav {
margin-bottom: -.75em;
}
summary {
/* The tappable region of a <summary> extends across the page.
* we need to tell users that the full space is interactive.
* Use a border for that. */
border: 1px solid #999;
/* It's not obvious that a <summary> has button semantics.
* "cursor: pointer" is used on MDN, web.dev, GitHub, gov.uk, and
* others so it's not "novel" and won't surprise users. */
cursor: pointer;
}
/* If we have a list of disclosure widgets, we need some
* non-interactive space on the screen that's safe to tap. */
form,
li details {
margin: .5em 0;
}
/* SC 2.5.5, Google a11y: Increase tap target size a bit
* - Summary is a tappable button
* - standalone links in lists are usually parts of collections of
* links that should be easy to fat-finger
* - links that directly follow h2 without being contained in a
* paragraph are section permalinks. */
dt,
dt > a,
summary,
h2 + a,
li > a,
nav li,
li details li,
input {
padding: .875em .25em;
}
/* Make superscripts a bit easier to tap. */
sup > a {
padding-bottom: .25em;
}
nav li ol {
/* Don't duplicate bottom space: the last list item in the nested
* list and the list item that is the entire nested list will both
* have bottom padding */
margin-bottom: -1em;
/* Prevent nested lists from overlapping */
padding-top: 1em;
}
}
/* narrow screens: reduce list indentation, hyphenate nested lists
* touch screens: lists of links should be easy to tap so give them
* some spacing (partial SC 2.5.5). There should be non-interactive
* space to the left that's safe to tap. */
dd,
ol,
ul {
margin: 0;
padding-left: 1.625em;
}
ol ol,
ul ul {
-webkit-hyphens: auto;
hyphens: auto;
padding-left: 1em;
}
/* Save some space and paper by making the site nav and footer links
* single-line without bullets. The title should be visible in the fold
* on most screens so users can identify the current page. */
/* Step 1 to making the single-line nav: remove the bullet padding. */
nav ul {
padding: 0;
}
/* step 2: remove bullets and make elements inline.
* Also: bump up the line-height and margins to increase space
* between tap-targets (SC 2.5.5). Google a11y guidelines require 8 CSS
* pixels between tap targets. */
nav ul li {
display: inline-block;
margin-right: .375em;
}
/* Make search box and submit button as wide as possible while keeping
* them next to each other. */
/* Use table-style layout (no, not actual tables. eww.). It's like a
* single-row flexbox that supports more browsers. Kanged this CSS from
* ww.gov.uk. Give the entire width of the row to the search box, but
* allow the minimum width for the submit button. */
form {
display: table;
width: 100%
}
/* A text box should not look like a button */
input[type="search"] {
display: table-cell;
width: 98%;
}
form > div {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: top; /* IE and some botique browsers need this */
width: 1%;
}
input {
/* Browsers like Safari make the submit button pill-shaped which
* clashes with the input box. The only purely-cosmetic change on this
* site. */
appearance: none;
/* Don't shrink the size of the text in forms or make it system-ui. */
font-family: sans-serif;
font-size: inherit;
}
/* narrow screens: reduce margin for blockquotes a lot, using
* a border instead. Put it on the left and right to make it
* LTR/RTL-neutral, for machine translators that change text
* direction (e.g. the one in Edge). */
blockquote {
border-left: 3px solid;
margin: 0;
padding: 0 1em;
}
/* Narrow screens: allow hyphenating titles
* I can't add soft hyphens to these. */
h1 {
-webkit-hyphens: auto;
hyphens: auto;
}
/* Very narrow screens: full hyphenation.
* This is the typical width of a smart feature phone. */
@media (max-width: 15em) {
body {
font-size: 100%;
-webkit-hyphens: auto;
hyphens: auto;
padding: 0 8px;
}
}
/* <kbd> should be distinguished from <code> and surrounding text
* in a way beyond font-face; at least two visual distinctions needed
* Also, Small text is easier to read when slightly bolder.
* This is important in the dark theme where I set my own colors and
* try to maintain good perceptual contrast even for small text, but
* I don't want toggling the theme to impact anything besides color so
* I set the weight here. */
kbd {
font-weight: bold;
}
/* <ins> should not be mistaken for hyperlinks. */
ins {
text-decoration: none;
font-style: italic;
}
/* narrow screens: remove unused figure margins
* figure captions shouldn't look like regular paragraphs; there should
* be some extra space.
* This does not hold true for figures in somewhat distinct sections; the
* section should instead get the spacing. A section that constitutes a
* separate schema.org object would qualify. */
section[itemprop="mentions"],
figure {
margin: 1.5em 0;
}
section[itemprop="mentions"] > figure {
margin: 0;
}
/* browsers make monospace small and unreadable for some dumb legacy
* reason and this somehow fixes that without overriding the user's
* font size preferences. */
code,
kbd,
pre, /* Needed for ancient browsers */
samp {
font-family: monospace, monospace;
}
/* Some browsers don't support the hidden attr */
span[hidden] {
display: none;
}
/* Narrow screens: long words can cause content to flow out of the
* viewport, triggering horizontal scrolling. Allow breaking words in
* content I don't control (comments, names). For content I do control,
* I just add soft hyphens to the HTML. */
div[itemprop="comment"],
:not(pre) > code,
:not(pre) > samp,
span[itemtype="https://schema.org/Person"] {
overflow-wrap: break-word;
}
/* Narrow screens: allow horizontal scroll in a pre block. */
pre {
overflow: auto;
padding: .5em;
}
/* Distinguish images from the background in case their color is
* too similar to the page background color. Also put a border around
* <pre> and <code> to distinguish them in ways besides font-family.
* This is Technique C25 of SC 1.4.8 */
input,
img,
pre {
border: 1px solid;
}
/* A black border is too harsh; the extra visual noise is distracting
* to users with eye-tracking or ADHD. Only special items like headings
* should draw gaze. */
:not(pre) > code,
:not(pre) > samp {
border: 1px solid #999;
/* borders shouldn't touch text */
padding: 0 0.125em;
}
/* center standalone images; same justification as
* for centering the body contents. Also makes images easier to see
* for people holding a device with one hand. */
picture > img {
display: block;
height: auto;
margin: auto;
max-width: 100%;
}
/* Some images look blurry when scaled; this makes them easier to
* read. */
.pix {
image-rendering: pixelated;
}
/* WCAG Technique C25: use borders to separate sections.
* Also use "content-visibility: auto" to improve performance by
* reducing the number of DOM nodes rendered at once. */
aside nav,
footer,
section[role="doc-endnotes"],
section[aria-labelledby="webmentions"] {
border-top: 1px solid;
content-visibility: auto;
}
/* Some browser focus indicators are inaccessible; override them with
* something more visible. See WCAG 2.x SC 2.4.12. I also tried to
* match browser behavior; mainstream browsers use :focus-visible
* instead of focus but older/simpler browsers only support :focus.
* I borrowed these directives from
* https://www.tempertemper.net/blog/refining-focus-styles-with-focus-visible
* To my knowledge: <a>, <summary>, and <pre tabindex=0> are the only
* focusable elements.
* */
a:focus,
summary:focus,
pre[tabindex]:focus,
form :focus {
outline: 3px solid;
}
/* Remove :focus styling for browsers that do support :focus-visible.
* Leave it on for form stuff. */
@supports selector(:focus-visible) {
a:focus:not(:focus-visible),
summary:focus:not(:focus-visible),
pre[tabindex]:focus:not(:focus-visible) {
outline: none;
}
}
/* Todo:
* - Some browsers don't scale SVGs properly; the img container
* dimensions crop the image rather than scale it. Investigate
* if this only applies to Internet Explorer or if it applies to
* other uncommon browsers too. If any non-IE browsers do this and/or
* if the spec allows this behavior, try to correct it here.
* - Wait till Webkit fixes its broken-ass default dark stylesheet
* then consider trimming the dark stylesheet I provide.
* */