CSS Modules lets you write and use simple class names rather than remembering and maintaining long unique class names for every component. CSS Modules mutates all of your classnames from each partials into new, completely unique classnames that will not conflict when they are bundled together into your main CSS file. Then, a JSON file is generated that maps the happy classnames from each file to the unique classname in the combined file. You load this map in PHP, and begin using the easy-to-remember classnames as you wish.
.frame-file .editor-link { | |
color: #67B3FF; | |
text-decoration: underline; | |
} |
LOCAL_HOME=/Users/joeblough | |
SERVER_HOME=/home/vagrant | |
... | |
DB_CONNECTION=mysql | |
... |
<?php | |
... | |
if ($request->ajax() || $request->wantsJson()) { | |
$whoops->pushHandler(new JsonResponseHandler()); | |
} else { | |
$handler = new PrettyPageHandler(); | |
//$handler->setEditor('phpstorm'); | |
$handler->setEditor( | |
function ($file, $line) { |
<?php | |
... | |
if ($request->ajax()) { | |
$whoops->pushHandler(new \Whoops\Handler\JsonResponseHandler()); | |
} else { | |
$whoops->pushHandler(new \Whoops\Handler\PrettyPageHandler()); | |
} |
const I = x => x | |
const K = x => y => x | |
const A = f => x => f (x) | |
const T = x => f => f (x) | |
const W = f => x => f (x) (x) | |
const C = f => y => x => f (x) (y) | |
const B = f => g => x => f (g (x)) | |
const S = f => g => x => f (x) (g (x)) | |
const S_ = f => g => x => f (g (x)) (x) | |
const S2 = f => g => h => x => f (g (x)) (h (x)) |
I fell in love with CoffeeScript a couple of years ago. Javascript has always seemed something of an interesting curiosity to me and I was happy to see the meteoric rise of Node.js, but coming from a background of Python I really preferred a cleaner syntax.
In any fast moving community it is inevitable that things will change, and so today we see a big shift toward ES6, the new version of Javascript. It incorporates a handful of the nicer features from CoffeeScript and is usable today through tools like Babel. Here are some of my thoughts and issues on moving away from CoffeeScript in favor of ES6.
While reading I suggest keeping open a tab to Babel's learning ES6 page. The examples there are great.
Holy punctuation, Batman! Say goodbye to your whitespace and hello to parenthesis, curly braces, and semicolons again. Even with the advanced ES6 syntax you'll find yourself writing a lot more punctuatio
Exporting password + one-time code data from iCloud Keychain is now officially supported in macOS Monterey and Safari 15 (for Monterey, Big Sur, and Catalina). You can access it in the Password Manager’s “gear” icon (System Preferences > Passwords on Monterey, and Safari > Passwords everywhere else), or via the File > Export > Passwords... menu item). You shouldn't need to hack up your own exporter anymore.
After my dad died, I wanted to be able to have access any of his online accounts going forward. My dad was a Safari user and used iCloud Keychain to sync his credentials across his devices. I don’t want to have to keep an OS X user account around just to access his accounts, so I wanted to export his credentials to a portable file.