When making this website, i wanted a simple, reasonable way to make it look good on most displays. Not counting any minimization techniques, the following 58 bytes worked well for me:
main {
max-width: 38rem;
padding: 2rem;
margin: auto;
}
Seven different types of CSS attribute selectors | |
// This attribute exists on the element | |
[value] | |
// This attribute has a specific value of cool | |
[value='cool'] | |
// This attribute value contains the word cool somewhere in it | |
[value*='cool'] |
// Inspired by https://twitter.com/coderitual/status/1112297299307384833 and https://tapajyoti-bose.medium.com/7-killer-one-liners-in-javascript-33db6798f5bf | |
// Remove any duplicates from an array of primitives. | |
const unique = [...new Set(arr)] | |
// Sleep in async functions. Use: await sleep(2000). | |
const sleep = (ms) => (new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms))); | |
// or | |
const sleep = util.promisify(setTimeout); |
This content moved here: https://exploringjs.com/impatient-js/ch_arrays.html#quickref-arrays
rebase
vs merge
).rebase
vs merge
)reset
vs checkout
vs revert
)git rev-parse
)pull
vs fetch
)stash
vs branch
)reset
vs checkout
vs revert
)https://gist.github.com/ljharb/58faf1cfcb4e6808f74aae4ef7944cff
While attempting to explain JavaScript's reduce
method on arrays, conceptually, I came up with the following - hopefully it's helpful; happy to tweak it if anyone has suggestions.
JavaScript Arrays have lots of built in methods on their prototype. Some of them mutate - ie, they change the underlying array in-place. Luckily, most of them do not - they instead return an entirely distinct array. Since arrays are conceptually a contiguous list of items, it helps code clarity and maintainability a lot to be able to operate on them in a "functional" way. (I'll also insist on referring to an array as a "list" - although in some languages, List
is a native data type, in JS and this post, I'm referring to the concept. Everywhere I use the word "list" you can assume I'm talking about a JS Array) This means, to perform a single operation on the list as a whole ("atomically"), and to return a new list - thus making it mu
By: @BTroncone
Also check out my lesson @ngrx/store in 10 minutes on egghead.io!
Update: Non-middleware examples have been updated to ngrx/store v2. More coming soon!
Table of Contents
'use strict'; | |
import Singleton from 'Singleton'; | |
class ClassA extends Singleton { | |
constructor() { | |
super(); | |
} | |
singletonMethod1() { | |
// ... |