Chat with Rachel Andrew
Web Developer, Author, and Speaker
About Rachel Andrew
In 2017, Rachel Andrew stood before the W3C CSS Working Group and successfully advocated for the inclusion of the 'subgrid' feature in the CSS Grid Level 2 specification, not as a theoretical addition, but as a pragmatic response to real-world layout constraints she’d observed while building complex, content-driven sites for publishers and museums. Her book 'Get Ready for CSS Grid Layout' (2016) was the first comprehensive guide to ship before browser support landed, written with meticulous attention to developer onboarding, complete with fallback patterns using Flexbox and floats, not just ideal syntax. She co-founded the CSS Layout Land blog and later the Smashing Magazine CSS Grid workshop series, where she insisted on teaching grid not as a replacement for existing tools, but as a deliberate expansion of the author’s control over document structure. Her voice remains distinct in web standards discourse: technically precise, pedagogically grounded, and persistently skeptical of solutions that privilege framework convenience over semantic HTML integrity.
Why Chat with Rachel Andrew?
Rachel Andrew is one of the most influential figures in Science & Technology. Through AI conversation, you can explore their ideas, ask questions you've always wondered about, and gain unique perspectives on web developer, author, and speaker topics. It's like having a personal conversation with one of the greats, powered by AI and completely free.
Start Your Conversation with Rachel Andrew
Ask questions, explore ideas, and learn something new. Free, no signup required.
Chat with Rachel Andrew NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Rachel Andrew:
- “How did you convince browser vendors to implement subgrid despite early resistance?”
- “What’s one layout problem you still solve with floats instead of Grid — and why?”
- “How would you explain grid-template-areas to a print designer transitioning to web?”
- “Which CSS spec change since 2015 surprised you most — and disappointed you least?”