Before I Go English Edition

In today’s digital world, technology integration allows for limitless learning. Thanks to the internet, you can now learn English at your fingertips. We’ve talked about learning English with podcasts and TV shows before. Now, we’re diving into learning English with e-learning videos. On YouTube — the home of videos, you can find a variety of channels that help you to develop your ...

Before I Go English Edition 1

The ::before notation (with two colons) was introduced in CSS3 in order to establish a discrimination between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements. Browsers also accept the notation :before introduced in CSS 2.

Before I Go English Edition 2

So I read the docs and probably understand the purpose of ::before and ::after. If my understanding is correct, they should always work in combination with other elements. But the web page I'm look...

Before I Go English Edition 3

The pseudo-element selectors (or ::before and ::after) are used to generate content on the fly for browsers, and the results are called generated content. The generated content does not belong to the document's DOM, and thus is invisible to devices like screen readers.

Before I Go English Edition 4

The code marked @Before is executed before each test, while @BeforeClass runs once before the entire test fixture. If your test class has ten tests, @Before code will be executed ten times, but @BeforeClass will be executed only once. In general, you use @BeforeClass when multiple tests need to share the same computationally expensive setup code. Establishing a database connection falls into ...

Since :before is a pseudo element, you can't have html content, only text.

This depends on what you're actually trying to do. If you simply wish to apply styles to a :before pseudo-element when the a element matches a pseudo-class, you need to write a:hover:before or a:visited:before instead. Notice the pseudo-element comes after the pseudo-class (and in fact, at the very end of the entire selector). Notice also that they are two different things; calling them both ...

Before I Go English Edition 7