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HTML5 Web Application Development By Example : Beginner's guide

You're reading from   HTML5 Web Application Development By Example : Beginner's guide Learn how to write rich, interactive web applications using HTML5 and CSS3 through real-world examples. In a world of proliferating platforms and devices, being able to create your own “go-anywhere” applications gives you a significant advantage.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849695947
Length 276 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jody Gustafson Jody Gustafson
Author Profile Icon Jody Gustafson
Jody Gustafson
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Task at Hand FREE CHAPTER 2. Let's Get Stylish 3. The Devil is in the Details 4. A Blank Canvas 5. Not So Blank Canvas 6. Piano Man 7. Piano Hero 8. A Change in the Weather 9. Web Workers Unite 10. Releasing an App into the Wild A. Pop Quiz Answers Index

Rounded corners


The first CSS3 effect that we'll look at is rounded corners, since that was such a sought-after feature before CSS3. In the past, if you wanted rounded corners, there were only a few non-optimal solutions available. You could load four images, one for each corner, and add some extra markup to get them to line up (and try to make it work in all browsers). Or implement some kind of hack using multiple div tags to "draw" a rounded border. Or one of a half a dozen other ways. In the end none of them were great solutions. So why did we go to such lengths to make rounded corners work before CSS3? Because people are attracted to them and they just seem to make your design look more natural.

Rounded corners are ridiculously easy to add to elements using CSS3's new border-radius property. If you want each corner to have the same border radius, just give it one value, like this:

border-radius: 0.5em;

If you want to set each corner of the border to a different radius, you can do that too...

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