trivial-with-current-source-form
browser-compat-data
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trivial-with-current-source-form | browser-compat-data | |
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1 | 45 | |
33 | 4,790 | |
- | 1.4% | |
2.5 | 10.0 | |
11 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Common Lisp | JSON | |
MIT License | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
trivial-with-current-source-form
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Why LISP Macros ?
If the macro system allows for executing arbitrary code, it would not be hard to check various preconditions on macro arguments. In tricky macros the main problem might be source tracking, but if failures can be attributed to particular code snippets, e.g. with-current-source-form, one can produce useful error messages.
browser-compat-data
- Here are the 10 projects I am contributing to over the next 6 months. Share yours
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Why Isn't the <HTML> Element 100% Supported on CanIUse.com?
> a lot of the data on the site actually comes from MDN
Eh... not really.
The feature support matrix (as linked on CanIUse) comes from the browser-compat-data repo. Here's the HTML element's source data: https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data/blob/main/html/el...
This doesn't contain the testing and usage info that CanIUse cites for support, though, just which browser versions included which features.
CanIUse also points to their own repo, which contains a lot of data: https://github.com/fyrd/caniuse
But I can't find an easy entry point to find where they're getting the numbers for a specific element. The data on there seems to be primarily for features.
So the more precise question is, where is CanIUse getting HTML element testing and usage numbers from? Because that seems to be the issue.
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Starting to write CSS in 2023 will be different
The key factor for web development to stop new CSS features is cross-platform compatibility. If you want to know the compatibility data of a new feature, you can get it through platforms such as Can I Use , Browser Compat Data and Time to Stable .
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A new home for the Project Fugu API Showcase
Yes, Mozzila’s browser-compat-data (https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data) is the authoritative source.
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New Patterns for Apps
Just noting that the browser support matrix is right here: https://web.dev/patterns/advanced-apps/contacts/#:~:text=con...
It's an Eleventy widget powered by MDN's browser-compat-data: https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data.
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includes() method
https://developer.mozilla.org Is your best friend, they even have an examples how to use it
- Aprender fazendo engenharia reversa nos projetos, buscando e lendo documentação, é uma boa ideia?
- front end utdannelse
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Browser Extension with Blazor WASM - Cross-Browser Compatibility
Visit any website on https://developer.chrome.com, https://developer.mozilla.org or https://docs.microsoft.com.
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how do i build an aesthetic website (with css) WITHOUT prior html experience?
W3Schools and MDN Web Docs are two great resources to learn about elements and all about HTML and CSS. Kevin Powell has a great YouTube channel which explains everything you search for. If you want to incline in your HTML and CSS skills pretty quickly, think of your objective, maybe even sketch it out, then search absolutely everything on Google and it will give you the answer. If not, this subreddit is always open. Bon voyage
What are some alternatives?
SwiftUIX - An exhaustive expansion of the standard SwiftUI library.
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Six
cppreference-doc - C++ standard library reference
let-over-lambda - Doug Hoyte's "Production" version of macros from Let Over Lambda, ready for ASDF and Quicklisp.
awesome-ada - A curated list of awesome resources related to the Ada and SPARK programming language
doesitarm - 🦾 A list of reported app support for Apple Silicon as well as Apple M2 and M1 Ultra Macs
curriculum - The open curriculum for learning web development
postman-app-support - Postman is an API platform for building and using APIs. Postman simplifies each step of the API lifecycle and streamlines collaboration so you can create better APIs—faster.
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
W3Schools - W3Schools Full Offline Version
vimium - The hacker's browser.