Replying to
I mean, “the line of command” sound pretty awesome actually!
I mean, “the line of command” sound pretty awesome actually!
Your challenge—should you choose to accept it—is to rewrite the documentation in such a way that the phrase is only ever used as an adjective or only ever used as a noun. 🙂
If used as an adjective, a hyphen helps disambiguate where to split the three words: “command-line tool.”
But used as a noun, a hyphen isn’t needed: “tool for the command line.”
Same with “front-end developer” and “the front end.”
Waitaminute… did Google deliberately ship support for the HTTP 103 status code in Chrome version 103? Or is this a numeroligical coincidence?
Bar Casa Vallés in San Sebastian is where it was invented in the 1940s but it should be pretty much ubiquitous in most pintxo places.
Yes!!!
Have you been having gildas too?
Guindilla + olive + anchovy = yum!
Listening to a pre-release of the new @WildernessYet album and it’s wonderfully witchy stuff!
Try it now (I just gave the server a kick).
In practice I found it didn’t work too well—it was fine with the first build but then lumped subsequent builds into one slide.
I use the excellent abcjs library from @Rosen_Paul:
Same.
…
I blame you.
Giving @TheManInBlue a whistle-stop tour of Brighton.
I don’t know about doing it purely with CSS, but here’s good advice on what ARIA to consider:
https://www.w3.org/WAI/ARIA/apg/patterns/accordion/
Or for the simplest use case, perhaps you could use the details
element in HTML?
No, we’re like vampires—we have to be invited in.
Playing tunes at a house session.
Sorry, wrong link. This is where I wrote about it:
Yes, I wrote about that here:
https://adactio.com/journal/19106
I’ve updated the script but for some reason the alt
text doesn’t come through. I’m stumped!
Happy Valentina’s Day to all who celebrate!
Watching @CarolStran rock the stage.