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@domenic
domenic / 0-github-actions.md
Last active May 26, 2024 07:43
Auto-deploying built products to gh-pages with Travis

Auto-deploying built products to gh-pages with GitHub Actions

This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.

A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:

  • It is much easier and requires less steps, because you are already authenticated with GitHub, so you don't need to share secret keys across services like you do when coordinate Travis CI and GitHub.
  • It is free, with no quotas.
  • Anecdotally, builds are much faster with GitHub Actions than with Travis CI, especially in terms of time spent waiting for a builder.
@manigandham
manigandham / rich-text-html-editors.md
Last active July 23, 2024 12:07
Rich text / HTML editors and frameworks

Strictly Frameworks

Abstracted Editors

These use separate document structures instead of HTML, some are more modular libraries than full editors

@lqd
lqd / gist:1c841dea193698bf50fefa19c6b3fb99
Last active December 10, 2023 19:17
Some of my favorite development streams and shows
Why coding streams/shows are interesting to me: in some livestreams, the experience is very similar to pair programming,
but those people are experts. In VODs, it's more about problem solving and learning skills and approaches. The devs are really good
at what they do and there is *always* a lot to learn.
In no particular order:
1) Handmade Hero
About the author: Casey Muratori. Worked at RAD.
Description and why I like it: It kinda started the whole thing for me. Casey is coding a complete game and engine on stream,
from scratch, one hour a day. He knows what he's doing on so many of the domains of game development and regular programing,

Mobile Safari's 100% Height Dilemma

Whether you're developing a web application with native-ish UI, or just a simple modal popup overlay that covers the viewport, when it comes to making things work on iDevices in Mobile Safari, you're in for a decent amount of pain and suffering. Making something "100% height" is not as easy as it seems.

This post is a collection of Mobile Safari's gotchas and quirks on that topic, some with solutions and fixes, some without, in good parts pulled from various sources across the internets, to have it all in one place. Things discussed here apply to iOS8, iOS9 and iOS10.

The Disappearing Browser Chrome

Screen real estate on smartphones is limited, so Mobile Safari collapses the browser chrome (address bar and optional tab bar at the top, and tool bar at the bottom) when the user scrolls down. When you want to make something span exactly the height of the viewport, or pin something to the bottom of the screen, this can get tricky because the viewport changes size (or

@cecilemuller
cecilemuller / 2019-https-localhost.md
Last active July 20, 2024 14:39
How to create an HTTPS certificate for localhost domains

How to create an HTTPS certificate for localhost domains

This focuses on generating the certificates for loading local virtual hosts hosted on your computer, for development only.

Do not use self-signed certificates in production ! For online certificates, use Let's Encrypt instead (tutorial).

@pravdomil
pravdomil / Main.elm
Last active September 3, 2020 11:15
Elm for Node.js
port module Main exposing (..)
type alias Input =
{ argv : List String, stdin : String }
type alias Output =
{ code : Int, stdout : String, stderr : String }