js_of_ocaml, fswatch to rebuild when source files change.
My practice is to build the DOM programmatically with jQuery, and add styles to the elements directly $("<div>") .css({width: 100, height: 20, color: 'red'}) .appendTo(container); Then, since these are just values in…
Writing your styles in javascript is a better option. You get variables, as well as functions and modules (e.g. with browserify), all with sane syntax and semantics (no "cascade"). Preprocessors are an inferior…
Why do you think the real wage of low-end workers would decrease by 10% if paid vacation were mandatory? If I try to reconstruct your reasoning, I guess it goes like this - correct me if I'm wrong: 1) Employers of these…
Startups aren't good in themselves, they're good if they bring about helpful innovations or good products etc. Skirting regulations to privatize a public resource and make money off of it harms society as a whole, so…
The author suggests that the enormous economic success of software suggests that the methods used are not "crap", but I don't think this is valid. In fact, it's somewhat the opposite - the strong economic growth in the…
js_of_ocaml, fswatch to rebuild when source files change.
My practice is to build the DOM programmatically with jQuery, and add styles to the elements directly $("<div>") .css({width: 100, height: 20, color: 'red'}) .appendTo(container); Then, since these are just values in…
Writing your styles in javascript is a better option. You get variables, as well as functions and modules (e.g. with browserify), all with sane syntax and semantics (no "cascade"). Preprocessors are an inferior…
Why do you think the real wage of low-end workers would decrease by 10% if paid vacation were mandatory? If I try to reconstruct your reasoning, I guess it goes like this - correct me if I'm wrong: 1) Employers of these…
Startups aren't good in themselves, they're good if they bring about helpful innovations or good products etc. Skirting regulations to privatize a public resource and make money off of it harms society as a whole, so…
The author suggests that the enormous economic success of software suggests that the methods used are not "crap", but I don't think this is valid. In fact, it's somewhat the opposite - the strong economic growth in the…