Is 54 units too many units, or not enough?

This week, I'm going to be talking a lot about CSS length units because one of the complaints I hear about CSS is the number of length units it has, with a total of 54 (not all of them are supported yet, though). That is a lot of units. But this is a feature and not a bug. Other awesome stuff around the web:z * Sara Soueidan's article on setting up screen readers [https://www.sarasoueidan.com/blog/testing-environment-setup/] What I've been up to this week: * The flowchart [https://whatunit.com/] * The flowchart video [https://youtu.be/Utc_uhvTluk] * Keeping up with CSS: The features released in 2023 [https://youtu.be/LGRogkgRrOs] * Select all siblings of an element using :has() [https://youtube.com/shorts/Ue3VUsZwAJ0?feature=share] Find me elsewhere on the web: * My Newsletter [https://kevinpowell.co/newsletter] * This podcast's YouTube channel [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClQDYiE75-po906ZDbx_11g] * My Primary YouTube Channel [https://youtube.com/@kevinpowell] * Twitter [https://twitter.com/kevinjpowell] * Threads [https://www.threads.net/@kevinpowellcss]

Om Podcasten

I have a newsletter where I usually start things off with pretty long general musings before I share the content I've created in the previous week, as well as any interesting articles I've stumbled across in the last week.  Not everyone likes reading or having more emails in their inbox, though, so this podcast is an audio version of my newsletters. They aren't tutorials or technical explorations like my regular videos are, but instead tend to talk about a wide range of different topics, though they're generally at least somewhat related to front-end development in some way.