Munira Tursunova is a software engineer with nine years of experience specializing in front-end web platform features and browser engine CSS implementations, currently working at Google in Oslo. She has contributed to high-profile open-source projects such as Mozilla's gecko-dev and Chromium, implementing and testing advanced CSS functions like attr() and if(), and improving web-platform-tests for CSS Fonts Module Level 4. Her background includes backend experience at Yandex and research work in mechanical engineering applications, reflecting a strong foundation in both practical product engineering and academic rigor. Munira holds a master’s degree in Computer Software Engineering from Saint Petersburg State University and brings a knack for turning nuanced spec-level behavior into robust, test-covered implementations.
9 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Master's degree, Computer Software Engineering, Master's degree, Computer Software Engineering at Saint Petersburg State University
Test suites for Web platform specs — including WHATWG, W3C, and others
Role in this project:
Front-end Developer
Contributions:3 reviews, 15 commits, 10 PRs in 1 year 5 months
Contributions summary:Munira's commits primarily focus on implementing and testing features related to CSS Fonts Module Level 4. They developed WPT tests for various font-synthesis properties, including weight, style, and small-caps. They also contributed to the implementation and testing of the font-variant-position property. Their work involved creating and modifying HTML and CSS files to ensure correct rendering and behavior of these font-related features.
Read-only Git mirror of the Mercurial gecko repositories at https://hg.mozilla.org. How to contribute: https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/contributing/contribution_quickref.html
Role in this project:
Front-end Developer
Contributions:17 commits in 1 year 4 months
Contributions summary:Munira primarily contributed to the web-platform-tests, focusing on implementing and testing the `attr()` CSS function. They implemented support for new syntax, invalidation of attr() on both regular and pseudo elements, and added tests for container style queries. Furthermore, the user addressed issues related to the use of the `attr()` function, including fixing parsing grammar, security concerns, and the handling of substitutions, including custom properties.
repositoriesfirefoxmercurialgit-mirrormozilla
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