377658
results for ""a""
-
I think if I did that, I'd have to create a Drupal module. Probably out of my league.
btrem
at
2025-06-04 23:15
-
Has anyone ever build a carddav server? My searches have mostly resulted in how to /use/ a carddav server, not how to /build/ one. I think it uses vCard. I have a Drupal database of users, and I can certainly output a list in that format. But maybe a project like this is beyond my amateur abilities. :/
btrem
at
2025-06-04 23:06
-
I use tailwind on my website (via @apply and BEM syntax with a build step). I’ve used it on a few projects too. I can see the pros and cons. I like the “design token” approach to config and some of the classes take difficulty out of things and group breakpoints. But you can run into issues and there are different ways to use it.
[Trevor_Morris]
at
2025-06-04 21:59
-
aaronpk I heard you can redeem a sticker if you pass the Webmention test suite?
capjamesg
at
2025-06-04 21:56
-
Also from HTML5Doctor from a while ago: https://html5doctor.com/history-api/#those-fking-hashbangs
[tantek]
at
2025-06-04 20:19
-
yeah, i’ve not heard a shebang called a hashbang before.
[mattl]
at
2025-06-04 20:03
-
A hashbang (or hash-bang fragment) is the character sequence #! inside a URL, typically at the start of the path, including in post permalinks (like Twitter did 2010-2012), and is an antipattern you should never use as part of your personal site URL design https://indieweb.org/hashbang
Loqi
at
2025-06-04 20:03
-
(I would work on a proposal to split hashbang (/!# URL routing) into a different page from shebang (the use in unix contexts) but don't have the energy to fight that particular Wikipedia nerd-battle rn)
[tantek]
at
2025-06-04 20:02
-
related, does anyone have a "definitive" or at least well reasoned resource on how "/#/" URLs for web app routing were obsoleted by "/#!" URL routing techniques which were then obsoleted by just use normal paths please and history API as needed techniques? Wikipedia and Google search seem useless for this
[tantek]
at
2025-06-04 20:01
-
might be worth a FreSH Q&A (since so many sites get this wrong) — what's a good way to implement fixed position headers that don't cause fragments to heading to scroll (and disappear) underneath those fixed position headers? (note precise use of header vs heading) e.g. Medium gets this wrong: https://prudhvikchirunomula.medium.com/migrating-from-hashlocationstrategy-to-pathlocationstrategy-in-angular-a-comprehensive-guide-867060f1483e#f3a0
[tantek]
at
2025-06-04 19:58
Sort by:
Filter results by:
Tag
Query took 0.04s.
Search tips
- Exclusion
- +foo -bar
- Logical OR
- foo OR bar
- Exact phrase
- "foo bar"
- Partial words
- foo*
- Particular fields only
- title:foo
- domain:example.org
- nick:somebody
- after:2016-11-23
- before:2016-11-23
- date:2016-11-23