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@tdd
tdd / Learning and exploring ES6.md
Last active November 10, 2020 09:01
Good resources to learn, discover and explore ES6 in-depth

Learning

  • ES6 Katas - Small, byte-size exercises to discover most aspects of ES6 features by doing interactive, online exercises. Pretty awesome.
  • Learn ES2015 - A great part of Babel's website that takes you through examples of all supported ES6+ features
  • ES6-Features.org - Nice ES6 / ES5 comparisons of many ES6 language features
  • ES6 Features - A single-page tour of code examples for just about every ES6 feature, by Luke Hoban

Exploring in-depth

  • ES6 In Depth - A great series of articles on Mozilla Developer Network (MDN); also available in French through great translation efforts.
@davidhund
davidhund / pragmatic-touch-icons.md
Last active September 4, 2020 15:42
Pragmatic Touch Icons

NOTE I'm trying to find the most optimal fav/touch icon setup for my use-cases. Nothing new here. Read Mathias Bynens' articles on re-shortcut-icon and touch icons, a FAQ or a Cheat Sheet for all the details.

I'd like to hear how you approach this: @valuedstandards or comment on this gist.

The issue

You have to include a boatload of link elements pointing to many different images to provide (mobile) devices with a 'favicon' or 'touch icon':

![Touch Icon Links](https://o.twimg.com/2/proxy.jpg?t=HBj6AWh0dHBzOi8vcGhvdG9zLTYuZHJvcGJveC5jb20vdC8yL0FBRGFGY1VRN1dfSExnT3cwR1VhUmtaUWRFcWhxSDVGRjNMdXFfbHRJWG1GNFEvMTIvMjI3OTE2L3BuZy8xMDI0eDc2OC8yL18vMC80L1NjcmVlbnNob3QlMjAyMDE1LTA0LTE0JTIwMTYuNTYuMjYucG5nL0NNejBEU0FCSUFJZ0F5Z0JLQUkvNGR1eDZnMzZmYnlzYWI3

@paulirish
paulirish / bling.js
Last active May 1, 2024 19:56
bling dot js
/* bling.js */
window.$ = document.querySelectorAll.bind(document);
Node.prototype.on = window.on = function (name, fn) {
this.addEventListener(name, fn);
}
NodeList.prototype.__proto__ = Array.prototype;
@olivierlacan
olivierlacan / launch_sublime_from_terminal.markdown
Created September 5, 2011 15:50
Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Launch Sublime Text 2 from the Mac OS X Terminal

Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.

open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl

You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html

Installation