I use vim-fugitive now for most basic operations, and fall back to CLI.
I use vim-fugitive now for most basic operations, and fall back to CLI.
Yeah it’s a loading time optimisation thing. Still, usually you would have a click to full-size function if showing details is important
Screenshots are scaled based on your device, try ‘Desktop Site’ if you are using a phone.
Try not to look too much at what the default browser styles are, just think purpose.
<section>1...</section><section>2...</section><section>3...</section>
Maybe your coworker possibly suffers from list-itis, after tying too hard to prevent div-itis?
What do you mean about littered with css? Do you have a default reset style, or a simple util class to remove these? Or is your html littered with style=“” everywhere?
I would refer to MDN documents on whatever features you are attempting. eg:
The general term you are looking for is ‘Semantic HTML’ i.e. the tags convey their purpose/meaning.
bro…
deleted by creator
That’s a continuation of TA Spring? Neat, played that a looong time ago.
Haven’t done this type of optimizing in a long time, I had a quick look at the network graph for your front page (F12 dev tools in desktop browser), my understanding is it looks like you are getting blocked from loading additional resources (fonts + background) until your style sheets are fully read --pink line is document loaded i believe.
It may be worthwhile to experiment with adding some preload links to the html template? or output? like below and assessing if it makes things faster for you.
<link rel="preload" as="image" href="https://volcanolair.co/img/bg1-ultracompressed.webp" fetchpriority="high">
<link rel="preload" as="font" href="https://volcanolair.co/fonts/Inter-Regular.woff2">
<link rel="preload" as="font" href="https://volcanolair.co/fonts/Inter-Bold.woff2">
___
Why do you want to exit? Just :terminal
(Score:4, Funny)
While having a quick look through old news:
From June 2021 (v0.16) (https://gleam.run/news/v0.16-gleam-compiles-to-javascript/#how-does-it-work)
Much like the Erlang compiler backend this new JavaScript backend outputs human readable and pretty printed source code. It is now included with the compiler and does not require any extra components to be installed to use it.
Rather than attempting to replicate a subset of Erlang’s actor model Gleam uses the standard promise based concurrency model when targeting JavaScript. While this may be disappointing for some, it means that there is no additional runtime code added. This keeps bundle size small and makes it so code written in Gleam can be called like normal from languages such as JavaScript and TypeScript.
Jan 2024 v0.34 (https://gleam.run/news/v0.34-multi-target-projects/#multi-target-projects) mentions some additional work done to enable multi target projects such as Lustre
As a design/drafter – I design to ‘look right’ which is probably overkill. Hopefully that headroom helps with the 300lb ape factor.
I’m thinking you may have updated grub at some stage from Deb, and didn’t have the test OS mounted at the time, or os-prober not enabled :- therefore not detected when grub.cfg was regenerated.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GRUB#Detecting_other_operating_systems
https://wiki.debian.org/Grub#Dual_Boot
I ended up using rEFInd myself, as it does automatic OS detection/scans for bootable partitions.