4/5 rating based on 21 reviews. Read all reviews for CSS Pro Quick Guide for iPhone.
CSS Pro Quick Guide is paid iOS app published by Tom Bigelow
Illuin
This is a great reference tool. My favorite way to use this app is to have it by my side ready to reference elements when I'm coding on my desktop. This is especially nice for working with specific colors and some of the more obscure elements that are rarely used because no one remembers they even exist - even though they should be used because you can do really cool things with these forgotten little goodies. I wish someone however, would develop an app that clearly explained 'sprites' and how to use them with ease. You can't even find sprites explained well online anywhere. Oh well, maybe someday. BTW, Thom1234, are you trolling? An iPad 3? Really? Don't listen to this joker, the app works great, and is very well done ;-)
tankedfrank
This app is perfect for any developer. I wanted something to sit on my desk while I'm coding so I don't have to switch to the browser. Plus it is better than a book in that it is searchable and up to date. Great work!
MicVan Horn
I'm in my first semester of Web Development & Design so the coding is all still new to me. I love this app and all the other apps by Maui IT. I have all of them, and use them everyday in class.
RK101
Really dense but easy to locate the syntax I'm looking for. I'm finding that I'm using this a lot as I'm coding, and the portability is great when someone calls me to answer a layout question. Really great job!
Steven757
And also a great beginners guide, if your like me and would rather just get to the point.
Violin_Player
This app is fantastic. Very easy to use and super comprehensive. Nice examples, too.
DC0SBY
I wish there was a way to change the list display, abc style is annoy with Moz, WebKit and O.
Popper189
Very informative, with great examples. The only things missing are Gradients and Animations. Other than that; Terrific App!
ou812app
This is a great reference app, as are all the apps by this provider, but voiceover support is minimal. Voiceover is fine for the text content of the app, but if you own multiple Pro Guide apps don't expect to be able to distinguish between them when trying to find a specific app to open using voice over. I own 6 of their Pro Guides and they all have the exact same voice over label "Pro Guide", so as a blind/low vision user I have to guess which one to open until I find the specific Pro Guide I need. Again, this is a simple fix, clearly one that was overlooked, but one that gives Voiceover users fits when app developers ignore accessibility concerns.