Yuji Tomita

?

Channel Reputation Rank

#121
?

Activity Status

Stale

last updated

According to the data and stats that were collected, 'Yuji Tomita' channel has an excellent rank. Despite such a rank, the feed was last updated more than a year ago. In addition 'Yuji Tomita' includes a significant share of images in comparison to the text content. The channel mostly uses medium-length articles along with sentence constructions of the intermediate readability level, which is a result indicating a well-balanced textual content on the channel.

About 'Yuji Tomita' Channel

Yuji's Increasingly Infrequent Ramblings

? Updates History Monthly Yearly
? Content Ratio
? Average Article Length

Short articles, prevailing on the channel, can be a good choice for 'Yuji Tomita' if they’re going to gain their audience’s sympathy with brevity. Also, there are medium-length pieces making up more than a quarter of all articles.

short

long

? Readability Level

Intermediate readability level is common for 'Yuji Tomita' articles as it addresses the matters that demand certain level of education to be understood. Sometimes the channel gets even more difficult by issuing pieces of advanced readability level (there are just a few of them). In addition the channel contains materials of a basic readability level, making up more than one third of its content.

advanced

basic

? Sentiment Analysis

Neutral sentiment normally indicates an unbiased attitude that prevails in the channel’s articles (e.g. it may include some kind of scientific or professional materials).

positive

negative

Recent News

Unfortunately Yuji Tomita has no news yet.

How to cross fade elements with variable heights: Responsive Design’s Dirty Litt...

[...] margin-left attribute. The negative margin right allows you to use what almost looks like absolute positioning, but while still keeping the elements "in the flow" vertically. That’s [...]

How to stack elements on top of each other without absolute positioning

This is extremely useful if you need to preserve height flow, but need to stack elements for the all too common use case of cross fading between eleme [...]

How to cross fade elements with variable heights: Responsive Design’s Dirty Litt...

[...] "in the flow" vertically. That’s right.. with this trick, you can still have vertical flow while giving up horizontal flow. Every time you’ve used absolute positioning to achieve [...]

How to stack elements on top of each other without absolute positioning

[...] clearfix to your parent, and now you have stacked elements that are still contribute to vertical flow. Amazing. .configuration-image-wrapper { @include clearfix; img { position: relative; [...]

?Key Phrases
How to cross fade elements with variable heights: Responsive Design’s Dirty Litt...

[...] margin-left attribute. The negative margin right allows you to use what almost looks like absolute positioning, but while still keeping the elements "in the flow" vertically. That’s [...]

How to stack elements on top of each other without absolute positioning

This is extremely useful if you need to preserve height flow, but need to stack elements for the all too common use case of cross fading between eleme [...]