[M132] Change overflow style in Throttling settings page on edit Before: https://i.imgur.com/YBfjk5t.png After: https://i.imgur.com/PTXSIwY.png Drive-by: Make 'optional' text below visible Fixed: 381218238 Change-Id: I4cd952679a6929fc480f4cecaa2e36d5983991d1 Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/devtools/devtools-frontend/+/6054263 Commit-Queue: Kim-Anh Tran <kimanh@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Kateryna Prokopenko <kprokopenko@chromium.org> (cherry picked from commit 9d043d24db143a4fcc5056c21db85617dc788f16) Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/devtools/devtools-frontend/+/6063483 Commit-Queue: Kateryna Prokopenko <kprokopenko@chromium.org> Auto-Submit: Kim-Anh Tran <kimanh@chromium.org>
The client-side of the Chrome DevTools, including all TypeScript & CSS to run the DevTools webapp.
The frontend is available on chromium.googlesource.com. Check out the Chromium DevTools documentation for instructions to set up, use, and maintain a DevTools front-end checkout, as well as design guidelines, and architectural documentation.
DevTools frontend repository is mirrored on GitHub.
DevTools frontend is also available on NPM as the chrome-devtools-frontend package. It's not currently available via CJS or ES modules, so consuming this package in other tools may require some effort.
The version number of the npm package (e.g. 1.0.373466) refers to the Chromium commit position of latest frontend git commit. It's incremented with every Chromium commit, however the package is updated roughly daily.
There are a few options to keep an eye on the latest and greatest of DevTools development:
Follow What's new in DevTools.
Follow Umar's Dev Tips.
Follow these individual Twitter accounts: @umaar, @malyw, @kdzwinel, @addyosmani, @paul_irish, @samccone, @mathias, @mattzeunert, @PrashantPalikhe, @ziyunfei, and @bmeurer.
Follow to g/devtools-reviews@chromium.org mailing list for all reviews of pending code, and view the log, or follow @DevToolsCommits on Twitter.
Checkout all open DevTools tickets on crbug.com
Use Chrome Canary and poke around the experiments.