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<div class="notice">Your browser does not support the <code>overflow-clip-margin</code> property.</div>
<div class="box">
Need more handwriting resources? There’s an app for that. Designed to help young children learn the correct way to form letters and numbers and to show parents how to support that learning, LWT has launched "Wet, Dry, Try," for use on an iPad. With over four hours of instruction and technology that identifies individual student needs, the app provides a multisensory approach, with customized audio instructions that give teachers a way to monitor student progress remotely, when they can’t be in school.Learning loss during school shutdown has parents, teachers, and kids worried, stressed, and looking for solutions, and LWT resources are improving this unsettled situation. So teachers can be as effective remotely as they are in the classroom, LWT’s +Live Insights – its platform that brings all of its solutions together for in-school, at-home, and hybrid teaching – facilitates crucial data-driven individualized student instruction, as well as "whole class" gallery approach that was typical of remote teaching in the spring.The only thing certain about back-to-school this year, is its uncertainty. So teachers can be as effective remotely as they are in the classroom, LWT’s +Live Insights – its platform that brings all of its solutions together for in-school, at-home, and hybrid teaching – facilitates crucial data-driven individualized student instruction, as well as "whole class" gallery approach that was typical of remote teaching in the spring.The only thing certain about back-to-school this year, is its uncertainty. So teachers can be as effective remotely as they are in the classroom, LWT’s +Live Insights – its platform that brings all of its solutions together for in-school, at-home, and hybrid teaching – facilitates crucial data-driven individualized student instruction, as well as "whole class" gallery approach that was typical of remote teaching in the spring.The only thing certain about back-to-school this year, is its uncertainty.
</div>
<div class="second-container">
<input class="zdirection" type="range" min="0" max="100" step="1" value="1">
<output class="code-container">overflow-clip-margin: <span class="token-function">0px;</span> </output>
</div>
html,
body {
height: 100vh;
width: 100%;
background: #90caf9;
font-family: system-ui;
text-align: center;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
align-items: center;
justify-content: center;
min-height: 100vh;
}
.box {
height: 150px;
width: 60%;
background-color: #ddd;
overflow: clip;
overflow-clip-margin: 70px;
padding: 1rem;
}
.second-container {
margin-top: 50px;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
align-items: center;
}
input {
width: 200px;
}
.code-container {
margin-top: 50px;
display: inline-block;
padding: 15px;
text-align: center;
background-color: #272822;
border-radius: 3px;
color: #f8f8f2;
text-shadow: 0 1px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3);
font-family: Consolas, Monaco, "Andale Mono", monospace;
}
.token-function {
color: #e6db74;
width: 40px;
}
.notice {
background: #fff9c4;
color: #3e2723;
display: none;
padding: 15px 0;
margin: 0 auto 30px;
width: 60%;
}
@supports not (overflow-clip-margin: 0) {
.notice {
display: block;
}
}
var box = document.querySelector(".box"),
sliderZ = document.querySelector(".zdirection"),
Zvalue = 0,
ans = "0px";
sliderZ.addEventListener(
"input",
function () {
Zvalue = this.value;
ans = `${Zvalue}px`;
box.style.overflowClipMargin = ans;
document.querySelector(".token-function").textContent = ans;
},
false
);
Also see: Tab Triggers