What’s !important #12 talks about the old (testing in Safari when you don’t have Safari), the new ( ::checkmark ), the in-between (anchor positioning but with HTML), and more. Buckle up! Testing in Safari when you don’t have Safari Source: Frontend Masters Safari is the second most popular web browser, but is only available to Apple users. Fair enough. I mean, Apple are heavily invested in making Safari a proprietary browser that’s deeply integrated with Apple’s software and hardware. However, this makes testing websites in Safari a bit of a pain. Declan Chidlow explained what our options are in regards to testing in Safari when you don’t have Safari . A first look at ::checkmark Sunkanmi Fafowora gave us our first look at the ::checkmark pseudo-element , which solves the age-old problem of not (really) being able to style checkmarks. Note that this also targets the checked state indicator of radios and selects, not just checkboxes!…