Printing music with CSS grid
Laying out sheet music with CSS grid—sounds extreme until you see it abstracted into a web component.
We need fluid and responsive music rendering for the web!
I like how Paul has recreated his own version of This Is My Jam and I really like how he’s done it with an HTML web component.
Laying out sheet music with CSS grid—sounds extreme until you see it abstracted into a web component.
We need fluid and responsive music rendering for the web!
A personal website ain’t got no wrong words.
Effects pedals in the browser, using the Web Audio API. Very cool!
Be sure to read Trys’s write-up too.
I really enjoyed chatting with Mark and Ben on the Relative Paths podcast. We talked about service workers and Going Offline, but we also had a good musical discussion.
A massively in-depth study of boundary-breaking music, recreated through the web audio API.
You don’t have to be a musician or an expert in music theory to follow this guide. I’m neither of those things. I’m figuring things out as I go and it’s perfectly fine if you do too. I believe that this kind of stuff is well within reach for anyone who knows a bit of programming, and you can have a lot of fun with it even if you aren’t a musician.
One thing that definitely won’t hurt though is an interest in experimental music! This will get weird at times.
Stop me before I use ARIA incorrectly again.
Tweaking some ARIA attributes.
How do we share the means of the web’s production?
Adding `alt` text to uploaded images.
Also, tipblogging.