Daily Shaarli

Unsure how to design and implement user-interface patterns? Use this collection of links to our content about specific patterns.
- A Note on Interface Guidelines
- Input Controls
- Forms and Wizards
- Tooltips, Dialogs, Instructional Overlay
- Icons and Indicators
- Menu Design
- Site Navigation Elements
- In-Page Navigation
- Search
- Errors
- Privacy and Ethics

Adding a new light or receptacle to your garage or basement is easier than you think.
Always work from the power source to the end of your pipe run. That way, you always have an “open” end of the conduit for adding boxes and fittings. (It’s really hard to jam a piece of pipe in between existing, attached boxes.) Remove the existing box from the stud. If you have extra Romex in the wall, great! Pull it through the hole.

Trimwork can be challenging to install. Here are some tips to help you handle the most troublesome situations that finish carpentry poses.
Tighten Up Open Miters
The quickest and easiest way to cut a slight back bevel is to shim the molding so it’s resting at an angle to the saw blade. A pencil makes a handy shim and is just about the right thickness.
Cut Steep Angles on Your Miter Saw
It’s not common, but occasionally you’ll run into a situation that requires miters greater than the 45- or 50-degree angle available on miter saws. An easy way to handle this is to cut a block of wood at a 45-degree angle and cut a flat spot for the clamp. Clamp the molding to the block and line up the miter saw with the mark to make the cut.
Scribe Trim to Fit Uneven Walls
Angle a Nail to Close Baseboard Gaps
Make Blocks for Tough Transitions
Big Humps Require Surgery
A stud that’s not lined up with the plate causes a big hump in the wall, making it difficult to get the baseboard tight.
Clean Out Corners Before You Start
Keep Baseboard from Tipping
Cut strips of wood to the thickness of the drywall and cut off small pieces to use as spacers at inside corners or wherever they’re needed.
Join Moldings with Biscuits

Using sewn fabric to make gelli prints

Tooltips are a very common pattern used in CSS for years. There are a lot of ways to approach tooltips in CSS, though some evoke headaches with all the magic numbers they require. In this article, Temani Afif presents modern techniques to create tooltips with the smallest amount of markup and the greatest amount of flexibility.