And the "let her speak please" happens just after 1:05: https://youtu.be/Er7qPv8jsZo?t=3928
David is his brother, rather than his friend.
Yep, latchkey, I think you might want to rethink the article. As others have pointed out, you're seeing JavaScript's behaviour, not jQuery's. And this: elem.data('foo', { 'a':1, 'b':2 }); elem.data('foo'); // Returns…
Wells also wrote Floor Games: A Companion Volume to 'Little Wars': http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3690/3690-h/3690-h.htm
See also BrikWars: http://www.brikwars.com/rules/2005/cover.htm
Just tried this out last week. The docs are pretty sparse, but it seems to mirror the jQuery interface fairly closely so if you're familiar with one, you'll have a fair idea of the other:…
If you like Lovecraftian horror then Anchorhead is highly recommended. A really well made game and the writing captures the mood perfectly.
And the "let her speak please" happens just after 1:05: https://youtu.be/Er7qPv8jsZo?t=3928
David is his brother, rather than his friend.
Yep, latchkey, I think you might want to rethink the article. As others have pointed out, you're seeing JavaScript's behaviour, not jQuery's. And this: elem.data('foo', { 'a':1, 'b':2 }); elem.data('foo'); // Returns…
Wells also wrote Floor Games: A Companion Volume to 'Little Wars': http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3690/3690-h/3690-h.htm
See also BrikWars: http://www.brikwars.com/rules/2005/cover.htm
Just tried this out last week. The docs are pretty sparse, but it seems to mirror the jQuery interface fairly closely so if you're familiar with one, you'll have a fair idea of the other:…
If you like Lovecraftian horror then Anchorhead is highly recommended. A really well made game and the writing captures the mood perfectly.