The proposal for adding triggered delays to CSS for interactive elements could refine user experience by allowing web authors to respond meaningfully to user input, such as displaying tooltips.
There’s a sense of irony as CSS is increasingly encroaching on JavaScript’s territory, igniting discussions about whether features traditionally reserved for JavaScript should now become part of CSS.
The CSSWG minutes highlight differing views on whether customizing delay features should be allowed, emphasizing that delays can enhance user interactions yet should align with platform standards.
Current CSS methods like animation-delay and transition-delay suggest that integrating triggered delays into CSS is a natural evolution, potentially expanding interactivity without fully relying on JavaScript.
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