Modals have been an important part of websites for two decades. Stacking contents and using fetch
to accomplish tasks are a great way to improve UX on both desktop and mobile. Unfortunately most developers don’t know that the HTML and JavaScript specs have implemented a native modal system via the popover
attribute — let’s check it out!
The HTML
Creating a native HTML modal consists of using the popovertarget
attribute as the trigger and the popover
attribute, paired with an id
, to identify the content element:
This is the contents of the popover
Upon clicking the button
, the popover will open. The popover, however, will not have a traditional background layer color so we’ll need to implement that on our own with some CSS magic.
The CSS
Styling the contents of the popover content is pretty standard but we can use the browser stylesheet selector’s pseudo-selector to style the “background” of the modal:
/* contents of the popover */ [popover] { background: lightblue; padding: 20px; } /* the dialog's "modal" background */ [popover]:-internal-popover-in-top-layer::backdrop { background: rgba(0, 0, 0, .5); }
:-internal-popover-in-top-layer::backdrop
represents the “background” of the modal. Traditionally that UI has been an element with opacity such to show the stacking relationship.
CSS Animations Between Media Queries
CSS animations are right up there with sliced bread. CSS animations are efficient because they can be hardware accelerated, they require no JavaScript overhead, and they are composed of very little CSS code. Quite often we add CSS transforms to elements via CSS during…
Introducing MooTools Templated
One major problem with creating UI components with the MooTools JavaScript framework is that there isn’t a great way of allowing customization of template and ease of node creation. As of today, there are two ways of creating: new Element Madness The first way to create UI-driven…
9 Incredible CodePen Demos
CodePen is a treasure trove of incredible demos harnessing the power of client side languages. The client side is always limited by what browsers provide us but the creativity and cleverness of developers always pushes the boundaries of what we think the front end can do. Thanks to CSS…
Sexy Album Art with MooTools or jQuery
The way that album information displays is usually insanely boring. Music is supposed to be fun and moving, right? Luckily MooTools and jQuery allow us to communicate that creativity on the web. The XHTML A few structure DIVs and the album information. The CSS The CSS…
Discover more from TrendyShopToBuy
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.