Created
June 11, 2015 22:41
-
-
Save pjaspers/accff59f5cd5a8f8023e to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
<div id="sha-stamp" class="sha-stamp"> | |
<span class="sha-stamp__what-do-I-call-this?"> | |
<small class="sha-stamp__content">#{content}</small> | |
</span> | |
</div> |
Figured there would be an odd use case
@IbeVanmeenen more on the ridiculous high z number: pjaspers/shack@4a87296
@pjaspers awesome :).
Also: "the div because that feels less hacky". Don't really get that :)
I meant, since I'm injecting my html into a running app, it feels less wrong to inject a div
. That way I'm always sure I'm containing my hackery into a single div. Probably just semantic nitpicking.
What's that you say? "But Piet, if you're so semantically inclined, what's up with the <small>
, isn't that conflicting style and markup?"
Well, you've got me there.
You sir, are a gentleman and a scholar.
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
@chrisrowe yes, but that will be hard to do, I'm "injecting" this html into a running app. So basically replacing
</ body>
with a<style>
block and the html on each request.I want whoever is running the app (and is using my little tool) to add snippets to her css (which is probably defined in
<head>
) that can override my style block which is defined at the end of the file.