Implementation of Jarke J. van Wijk and Wim A.A. Nuij's smooth and efficient zooming and panning for Polymaps.
Type a place name in the search box, top right, and hit "Go!" to fly there.
$('.splitter').draggable({ | |
axis: 'x', | |
containment: '#content', | |
distance: 0, | |
drag: function(event, ui) { | |
var width = $('#content').width(); | |
$('#content .leftpane').css({ width: ui.position.left + 'px' }); | |
$('#content .rightpane').css({ | |
left: ui.position.left + 1 + 'px', | |
width: (width - ui.position.left + 1) + 'px' |
Implementation of Jarke J. van Wijk and Wim A.A. Nuij's smooth and efficient zooming and panning for Polymaps.
Type a place name in the search box, top right, and hit "Go!" to fly there.
So you've cloned somebody's repo from github, but now you want to fork it and contribute back. Never fear! | |
Technically, when you fork "origin" should be your fork and "upstream" should be the project you forked; however, if you're willing to break this convention then it's easy. | |
* Off the top of my head * | |
1. Fork their repo on Github | |
2. In your local, add a new remote to your fork; then fetch it, and push your changes up to it | |
git remote add my-fork [email protected] |
public class Animal { | |
private String name; | |
private int age; | |
public Animal() { | |
name = "Name " + System.currentTimeMillis(); | |
age = (int) +System.currentTimeMillis(); | |
} |
<!-- | |
This page licensed CC0 http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ | |
Some of the javascript code based of examples at http://polymaps.org/ex/ | |
This is just a prototype/technology test. It probably isn't the cleanest solution... | |
TODO: | |
* Ctrl + click and drag should rotate the map just like the keys do | |
* add perspective option | |
--> |
Spring STOMP chat |