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An EditText view has been used as base to get a blinking cursor. This has the drawback that the user could edit the text while it is animating. Minimum changes to the code are required to instead use a TextView as base if that is an issue.
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SSL/TLS connection from Eclipse Paho Java client to mosquitto MQTT broker
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I have been struggling to start a new project with Phoenix 1.3 and the new vue-cli 3 for Vue.js. There are tons of example already but none of them suited my needs, because:
I want to use the new Vue-cli to select the features that I want,
I do NOT want to setup Webpack (I know, what a shame!). The new Vue-cli includes the new vue-cli-service, which uses an instance of webpack-dev-server, so you don't have to import it manually in your project.
I do not want to use Brunch.
Create your Phoenix App
Assuming that you have Elixir and Phoenix 1.3 are both installed, let's build our new App.
twitter bootstrap typeahead modified to work with array of key-value objects.
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Why iframes are great for embeddable widget development
Why iframes are good for embeddable widget development
There are generally two ways to build embeddable widgets to be embeddable by an arbitrary widget consuming site, that isn't on the same domain as where the widget is hosted (think stripe checkout, olark chat, or zendesk support widgets as examples):
Render the widget into the embedding site's designated <div> or some other html container element
Render the widget into the embedding site's designated <iframe> element
To be sure, <iframe> is generally a pretty horrible way to go. But, as usual there are tradeoffs, and in one very specific use case, it's pretty great: building embeddable widgets. No, it's not because most other companies of any import that build widgets, with some very smart engineers, use the <iframe> method - I am not one for appeals to authority - and there are some notable exceptions, like olark, though they are probably hating the maintenance of the widget ui and associated css. Primarily, the core reasons why `<ifram