forked from filipg/gonito
723 lines
19 KiB
CSS
723 lines
19 KiB
CSS
/*
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So you like the style of impress.js demo?
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Or maybe you are just curious how it was done?
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You couldn't find a better place to find out!
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Welcome to the stylesheet impress.js demo presentation.
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Please remember that it is not meant to be a part of impress.js and is
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not required by impress.js.
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I expect that anyone creating a presentation for impress.js would create
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their own set of styles.
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But feel free to read through it and learn how to get the most of what
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impress.js provides.
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And let me be your guide.
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Shall we begin?
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*/
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/*
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We start with a good ol' reset.
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That's the one by Eric Meyer http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/css/reset/
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You can probably argue if it is needed here, or not, but for sure it
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doesn't do any harm and gives us a fresh start.
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*/
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html, body, div, span, applet, object, iframe,
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h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, p, blockquote, pre,
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a, abbr, acronym, address, big, cite, code,
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del, dfn, em, img, ins, kbd, q, s, samp,
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small, strike, strong, sub, sup, var,
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b, u, i, center,
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dl, dt, dd, ol, ul, li,
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fieldset, form, label, legend,
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table, caption, tbody, tfoot, thead, tr, th, td,
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article, aside, canvas, details, embed,
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figure, figcaption, footer, header, hgroup,
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menu, nav, output, ruby, section, summary,
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time, mark, audio, video {
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margin: 0;
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padding: 0;
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border: 0;
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font-size: 100%;
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font: inherit;
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vertical-align: baseline;
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color: #002d69;
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}
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.stats tr td {
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padding: 12px
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}
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h1 {
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padding-bottom: 12px;
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font-weight: bold;
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color: #002d69;
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}
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h2 {
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padding-bottom: 12px;
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font-weight: bold;
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color: #002d69;
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}
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ul {
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padding-bottom: 12px;
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}
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/* HTML5 display-role reset for older browsers */
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article, aside, details, figcaption, figure,
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footer, header, hgroup, menu, nav, section {
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display: block;
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}
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body {
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line-height: 1;
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}
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blockquote, q {
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quotes: none;
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}
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blockquote:before, blockquote:after,
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q:before, q:after {
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content: '';
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content: none;
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}
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table {
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border-collapse: collapse;
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border-spacing: 0;
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}
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/*
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Now here is when interesting things start to appear.
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We set up <body> styles with default font and nice gradient in the background.
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And yes, there is a lot of repetition there because of -prefixes but we don't
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want to leave anybody behind.
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*/
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body {
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font-family: 'PT Sans', sans-serif;
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min-height: 740px;
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background: rgb(215, 215, 215);
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background: -webkit-gradient(radial, 50% 50%, 0, 50% 50%, 500, from(rgb(240, 240, 240)), to(rgb(190, 190, 190)));
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background: -webkit-radial-gradient(rgb(240, 240, 240), rgb(190, 190, 190));
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background: -moz-radial-gradient(rgb(240, 240, 240), rgb(190, 190, 190));
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background: -ms-radial-gradient(rgb(240, 240, 240), rgb(190, 190, 190));
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background: -o-radial-gradient(rgb(240, 240, 240), rgb(190, 190, 190));
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background: radial-gradient(rgb(240, 240, 240), rgb(190, 190, 190));
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}
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/*
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Now let's bring some text styles back ...
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*/
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b, strong { font-weight: bold }
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i, em { font-style: italic }
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/*
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... and give links a nice look.
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*/
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a {
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color: inherit;
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text-decoration: none;
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padding: 0 0.1em;
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background: rgba(255,255,255,0.5);
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text-shadow: -1px -1px 2px rgba(100,100,100,0.9);
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border-radius: 0.2em;
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-webkit-transition: 0.5s;
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-moz-transition: 0.5s;
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-ms-transition: 0.5s;
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-o-transition: 0.5s;
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transition: 0.5s;
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}
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a:hover,
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a:focus {
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background: rgba(255,255,255,1);
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text-shadow: -1px -1px 2px rgba(100,100,100,0.5);
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}
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/*
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Because the main point behind the impress.js demo is to demo impress.js
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we display a fallback message for users with browsers that don't support
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all the features required by it.
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All of the content will be still fully accessible for them, but I want
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them to know that they are missing something - that's what the demo is
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about, isn't it?
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And then we hide the message, when support is detected in the browser.
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*/
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.fallback-message {
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font-family: sans-serif;
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line-height: 1.3;
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width: 780px;
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padding: 10px 10px 0;
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margin: 20px auto;
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border: 1px solid #E4C652;
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border-radius: 10px;
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background: #EEDC94;
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}
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.fallback-message p {
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margin-bottom: 10px;
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}
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.impress-supported .fallback-message {
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display: none;
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}
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/*
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Now let's style the presentation steps.
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We start with basics to make sure it displays correctly in everywhere ...
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*/
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.step {
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position: relative;
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width: 900px;
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padding: 40px;
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margin: 20px auto;
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-webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
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-moz-box-sizing: border-box;
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-ms-box-sizing: border-box;
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-o-box-sizing: border-box;
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box-sizing: border-box;
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font-family: 'PT Serif', georgia, serif;
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font-size: 48px;
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line-height: 1.5;
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}
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/*
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... and we enhance the styles for impress.js.
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Basically we remove the margin and make inactive steps a little bit transparent.
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*/
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.impress-enabled .step {
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margin: 0;
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opacity: 0.3;
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-webkit-transition: opacity 1s;
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-moz-transition: opacity 1s;
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-ms-transition: opacity 1s;
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-o-transition: opacity 1s;
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transition: opacity 1s;
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}
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.impress-enabled .step.active { opacity: 1 }
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/*
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These 'slide' step styles were heavily inspired by HTML5 Slides:
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http://html5slides.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/styles.css
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;)
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They cover everything what you see on first three steps of the demo.
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*/
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.slide {
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display: block;
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width: 900px;
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height: 700px;
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padding: 40px 60px;
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background-color: white;
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border: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, .3);
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border-radius: 10px;
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box-shadow: 0 2px 6px rgba(0, 0, 0, .1);
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/*color: rgb(102, 102, 102);*/
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color: #002d69;
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text-shadow: 0 2px 2px rgba(0, 0, 0, .1);
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font-family: 'Open Sans', Arial, sans-serif;
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font-size: 30px;
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line-height: 36px;
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letter-spacing: -1px;
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}
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.slide q {
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display: block;
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font-size: 50px;
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line-height: 72px;
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margin-top: 100px;
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}
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.slide q strong {
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white-space: nowrap;
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}
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/*
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And now we start to style each step separately.
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I agree that this may be not the most efficient, object-oriented and
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scalable way of styling, but most of steps have quite a custom look
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and typography tricks here and there, so they had to be styled separately.
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First is the title step with a big <h1> (no room for padding) and some
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3D positioning along Z axis.
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*/
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#title {
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padding: 0;
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}
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#title .try {
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font-size: 64px;
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position: absolute;
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top: -0.5em;
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left: 1.5em;
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(20px);
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transform: translateZ(20px);
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}
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#title h1 {
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font-size: 190px;
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(50px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(50px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(50px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(50px);
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transform: translateZ(50px);
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}
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#title .footnote {
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font-size: 32px;
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}
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/*
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Second step is nothing special, just a text with a link, so it doesn't need
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any special styling.
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Let's move to 'big thoughts' with centered text and custom font sizes.
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*/
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#big {
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width: 600px;
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text-align: center;
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font-size: 60px;
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line-height: 1;
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}
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#big b {
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display: block;
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font-size: 250px;
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line-height: 250px;
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}
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#big .thoughts {
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font-size: 90px;
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line-height: 150px;
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}
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/*
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'Tiny ideas' just need some tiny styling.
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*/
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#tiny {
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width: 500px;
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text-align: center;
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}
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/*
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This step has some animated text ...
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*/
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#ing { width: 500px }
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/*
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... so we define display to `inline-block` to enable transforms and
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transition duration to 0.5s ...
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*/
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#ing b {
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display: inline-block;
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-webkit-transition: 0.5s;
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-moz-transition: 0.5s;
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-ms-transition: 0.5s;
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-o-transition: 0.5s;
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transition: 0.5s;
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}
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/*
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... and we want 'positioning` word to move up a bit when the step gets
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`present` class ...
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*/
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#ing.present .positioning {
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-webkit-transform: translateY(-10px);
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-moz-transform: translateY(-10px);
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-ms-transform: translateY(-10px);
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-o-transform: translateY(-10px);
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transform: translateY(-10px);
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}
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/*
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... 'rotating' to rotate a quarter of a second later ...
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*/
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#ing.present .rotating {
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-webkit-transform: rotate(-10deg);
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-moz-transform: rotate(-10deg);
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-ms-transform: rotate(-10deg);
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-o-transform: rotate(-10deg);
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transform: rotate(-10deg);
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-webkit-transition-delay: 0.25s;
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-moz-transition-delay: 0.25s;
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-ms-transition-delay: 0.25s;
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-o-transition-delay: 0.25s;
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transition-delay: 0.25s;
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}
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/*
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... and 'scaling' to scale down after another quarter of a second.
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*/
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#ing.present .scaling {
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-webkit-transform: scale(0.7);
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-moz-transform: scale(0.7);
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-ms-transform: scale(0.7);
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-o-transform: scale(0.7);
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transform: scale(0.7);
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-webkit-transition-delay: 0.5s;
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-moz-transition-delay: 0.5s;
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-ms-transition-delay: 0.5s;
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-o-transition-delay: 0.5s;
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transition-delay: 0.5s;
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}
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/*
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The 'imagination' step is again some boring font-sizing.
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*/
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#imagination {
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width: 600px;
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}
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#imagination .imagination {
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font-size: 78px;
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}
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/*
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There is nothing really special about 'use the source, Luke' step, too,
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except maybe of the Yoda background.
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As you can see below I've 'hard-coded' it in data URL.
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That's not the best way to serve images, but because that's just this one
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I decided it will be OK to have it this way.
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Just make sure you don't blindly copy this approach.
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*/
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#source {
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width: 700px;
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padding-bottom: 300px;
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}
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#source q {
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font-size: 60px;
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}
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/*
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And the "it's in 3D" step again brings some 3D typography - just for fun.
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Because we want to position <span> elements in 3D we set transform-style to
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`preserve-3d` on the paragraph.
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It is not needed by webkit browsers, but it is in Firefox. It's hard to say
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which behaviour is correct as 3D transforms spec is not very clear about it.
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*/
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#its-in-3d p {
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-webkit-transform-style: preserve-3d;
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-moz-transform-style: preserve-3d; /* Y U need this Firefox?! */
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-ms-transform-style: preserve-3d;
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-o-transform-style: preserve-3d;
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transform-style: preserve-3d;
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}
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/*
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Below we position each word separately along Z axis and we want it to transition
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to default position in 0.5s when the step gets `present` class.
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Quite a simple idea, but lot's of styles and prefixes.
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*/
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#its-in-3d span,
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#its-in-3d b {
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display: inline-block;
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(40px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(40px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(40px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(40px);
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transform: translateZ(40px);
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-webkit-transition: 0.5s;
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-moz-transition: 0.5s;
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-ms-transition: 0.5s;
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-o-transition: 0.5s;
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transition: 0.5s;
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}
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#its-in-3d .have {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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transform: translateZ(-40px);
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}
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#its-in-3d .you {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(20px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(20px);
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transform: translateZ(20px);
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}
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#its-in-3d .noticed {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(-40px);
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transform: translateZ(-40px);
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}
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#its-in-3d .its {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(60px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(60px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(60px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(60px);
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transform: translateZ(60px);
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}
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#its-in-3d .in {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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transform: translateZ(-10px);
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}
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#its-in-3d .footnote {
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font-size: 32px;
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(-10px);
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transform: translateZ(-10px);
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}
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#its-in-3d.present span,
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#its-in-3d.present b {
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-webkit-transform: translateZ(0px);
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-moz-transform: translateZ(0px);
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-ms-transform: translateZ(0px);
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-o-transform: translateZ(0px);
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transform: translateZ(0px);
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}
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/*
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The last step is an overview.
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There is no content in it, so we make sure it's not visible because we want
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to be able to click on other steps.
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*/
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#overview { display: none }
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/*
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We also make other steps visible and give them a pointer cursor using the
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`impress-on-` class.
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*/
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.impress-on-overview .step {
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opacity: 1;
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cursor: pointer;
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}
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/*
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Now, when we have all the steps styled let's give users a hint how to navigate
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around the presentation.
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The best way to do this would be to use JavaScript, show a delayed hint for a
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first time users, then hide it and store a status in cookie or localStorage...
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But I wanted to have some CSS fun and avoid additional scripting...
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Let me explain it first, so maybe the transition magic will be more readable
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when you read the code.
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First of all I wanted the hint to appear only when user is idle for a while.
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You can't detect the 'idle' state in CSS, but I delayed a appearing of the
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hint by 5s using transition-delay.
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You also can't detect in CSS if the user is a first-time visitor, so I had to
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make an assumption that I'll only show the hint on the first step. And when
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the step is changed hide the hint, because I can assume that user already
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knows how to navigate.
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To summarize it - hint is shown when the user is on the first step for longer
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than 5 seconds.
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The other problem I had was caused by the fact that I wanted the hint to fade
|
|
in and out. It can be easily achieved by transitioning the opacity property.
|
|
But that also meant that the hint was always on the screen, even if totally
|
|
transparent. It covered part of the screen and you couldn't correctly clicked
|
|
through it.
|
|
Unfortunately you cannot transition between display `block` and `none` in pure
|
|
CSS, so I needed a way to not only fade out the hint but also move it out of
|
|
the screen.
|
|
|
|
I solved this problem by positioning the hint below the bottom of the screen
|
|
with CSS transform and moving it up to show it. But I also didn't want this move
|
|
to be visible. I wanted the hint only to fade in and out visually, so I delayed
|
|
the fade in transition, so it starts when the hint is already in its correct
|
|
position on the screen.
|
|
|
|
I know, it sounds complicated ... maybe it would be easier with the code?
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
.hint {
|
|
/*
|
|
We hide the hint until presentation is started and from browsers not supporting
|
|
impress.js, as they will have a linear scrollable view ...
|
|
*/
|
|
display: none;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
... and give it some fixed position and nice styles.
|
|
*/
|
|
position: fixed;
|
|
left: 0;
|
|
right: 0;
|
|
bottom: 200px;
|
|
|
|
background: rgba(0,0,0,0.5);
|
|
color: #EEE;
|
|
text-align: center;
|
|
|
|
font-size: 50px;
|
|
padding: 20px;
|
|
|
|
z-index: 100;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
By default we don't want the hint to be visible, so we make it transparent ...
|
|
*/
|
|
opacity: 0;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
... and position it below the bottom of the screen (relative to it's fixed position)
|
|
*/
|
|
-webkit-transform: translateY(400px);
|
|
-moz-transform: translateY(400px);
|
|
-ms-transform: translateY(400px);
|
|
-o-transform: translateY(400px);
|
|
transform: translateY(400px);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
Now let's imagine that the hint is visible and we want to fade it out and move out
|
|
of the screen.
|
|
|
|
So we define the transition on the opacity property with 1s duration and another
|
|
transition on transform property delayed by 1s so it will happen after the fade out
|
|
on opacity finished.
|
|
|
|
This way user will not see the hint moving down.
|
|
*/
|
|
-webkit-transition: opacity 1s, -webkit-transform 0.5s 1s;
|
|
-moz-transition: opacity 1s, -moz-transform 0.5s 1s;
|
|
-ms-transition: opacity 1s, -ms-transform 0.5s 1s;
|
|
-o-transition: opacity 1s, -o-transform 0.5s 1s;
|
|
transition: opacity 1s, transform 0.5s 1s;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
Now we 'enable' the hint when presentation is initialized ...
|
|
*/
|
|
.impress-enabled .hint { display: block }
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
... and we will show it when the first step (with id 'bored') is active.
|
|
*/
|
|
.impress-on-bored .hint {
|
|
/*
|
|
We remove the transparency and position the hint in its default fixed
|
|
position.
|
|
*/
|
|
opacity: 1;
|
|
|
|
-webkit-transform: translateY(0px);
|
|
-moz-transform: translateY(0px);
|
|
-ms-transform: translateY(0px);
|
|
-o-transform: translateY(0px);
|
|
transform: translateY(0px);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
Now for fade in transition we have the oposite situation from the one
|
|
above.
|
|
|
|
First after 4.5s delay we animate the transform property to move the hint
|
|
into its correct position and after that we fade it in with opacity
|
|
transition.
|
|
*/
|
|
-webkit-transition: opacity 1s 5s, -webkit-transform 0.5s 4.5s;
|
|
-moz-transition: opacity 1s 5s, -moz-transform 0.5s 4.5s;
|
|
-ms-transition: opacity 1s 5s, -ms-transform 0.5s 4.5s;
|
|
-o-transition: opacity 1s 5s, -o-transform 0.5s 4.5s;
|
|
transition: opacity 1s 5s, transform 0.5s 4.5s;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
And as the last thing there is a workaround for quite strange bug.
|
|
It happens a lot in Chrome. I don't remember if I've seen it in Firefox.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes the element positioned in 3D (especially when it's moved back
|
|
along Z axis) is not clickable, because it falls 'behind' the <body>
|
|
element.
|
|
|
|
To prevent this, I decided to make <body> non clickable by setting
|
|
pointer-events property to `none` value.
|
|
Value if this property is inherited, so to make everything else clickable
|
|
I bring it back on the #impress element.
|
|
|
|
If you want to know more about `pointer-events` here are some docs:
|
|
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/CSS/pointer-events
|
|
|
|
There is one very important thing to notice about this workaround - it makes
|
|
everything 'unclickable' except what's in #impress element.
|
|
|
|
So use it wisely ... or don't use at all.
|
|
*/
|
|
.impress-enabled { pointer-events: none }
|
|
.impress-enabled #impress { pointer-events: auto }
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
There is one funny thing I just realized.
|
|
|
|
Thanks to this workaround above everything except #impress element is invisible
|
|
for click events. That means that the hint element is also not clickable.
|
|
So basically all of this transforms and delayed transitions trickery was probably
|
|
not needed at all...
|
|
|
|
But it was fun to learn about it, wasn't it?
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
That's all I have for you in this file.
|
|
Thanks for reading. I hope you enjoyed it at least as much as I enjoyed writing it
|
|
for you.
|
|
*/
|
|
|
|
.readme {
|
|
line-height: 130%;
|
|
}
|