>I'd highly recommend using state machines for multi-step forms. It feels very natural and keeps you sane, I believe it should be a best practice. That's interesting. Can you elaborate on it, maybe with an example?
Did you mean "How do you monetize it?" (if you meant AdSense) or, did you mean "AdWords" if you really meant "market it"? AFAIK, AdSense is for making money from your content, while AdWords is for marketing your…
For those who want to learn how to write their own UNIX tools, and specifically, how to write tools that work well with other UNIX tools, such as the shell and friends, this article may help - Developing a Linux…
This is somewhat hairsplitting, but anyway: I think you're referring to commonly accepted _usage_, not "correctness", when you say "code is always singular". The phrase "I write codes" (as in, "I write programming codes…
Although, strictly speaking, "I write codes" may not be wrong, since, at root, it refers to "I write programming codes", i.e. the codes used to convert human-language statements of intent into stuff that computers can…
+1, ha ha. And I like that (sarcastic, I presume) use of "codes". Seen many people say/write that instead of "code".
>I'd highly recommend using state machines for multi-step forms. It feels very natural and keeps you sane, I believe it should be a best practice. That's interesting. Can you elaborate on it, maybe with an example?
Did you mean "How do you monetize it?" (if you meant AdSense) or, did you mean "AdWords" if you really meant "market it"? AFAIK, AdSense is for making money from your content, while AdWords is for marketing your…
For those who want to learn how to write their own UNIX tools, and specifically, how to write tools that work well with other UNIX tools, such as the shell and friends, this article may help - Developing a Linux…
This is somewhat hairsplitting, but anyway: I think you're referring to commonly accepted _usage_, not "correctness", when you say "code is always singular". The phrase "I write codes" (as in, "I write programming codes…
Although, strictly speaking, "I write codes" may not be wrong, since, at root, it refers to "I write programming codes", i.e. the codes used to convert human-language statements of intent into stuff that computers can…
+1, ha ha. And I like that (sarcastic, I presume) use of "codes". Seen many people say/write that instead of "code".