Did you know that you can set up a review system so that every pull request you make shows you exactly what has changed visually on your site?
That's exactly what Percy does. It assumes what you have on master is correct (configurable) and, when you do a pull request, it literally takes screenshots and compares them to the screenshots of what is on master. If anything has changed, it lets you know, just like unit or integration tests would. …
#191: Learn by doing: CUBE CSS
#190: CSS Custom Properties Penetrate the Shadow DOM
#189: Notion for Personal & Public Use
#188: Exploring the Overlapping Header Pattern
#187: Notion for Team Meetings & Documentation
#186: Notion for Web Development Teams
#185: Playing with CSS Masks
#184: Inside & Aligned Lists
#183: Art Directing Images, the Picture Element, and Image CDNs
#182: Baby’s First Vue SFC
#181: Poking at HTML Lists
#180: Tinkering with Video on Mobile
#179: A Grid of Squares
#178: Percy Catches Visual Changes in any Workflow
#177: Local WordPress Development to Production Workflow
#176: Working with Framer Motion
#175: 7 Things to Know About Webflow
#174: Using Local Overrides in DevTools
#173: Ooooops I guess we’re full-stack developers now.
#172: Hand SVGing a Curved Line
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