fittopage.org
My Bookings | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/events/my-bookings
Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Vertical reordering in CSS. En and Em dashes in KDE. Tabs, done right. Why I want to beat Java with a stick. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Tabs, done right. On Tabs, done right. Proudly powered by WordPress.
fittopage.org
June | 2010 | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/2010/06
Monthly Archives: June 2010. En and Em dashes in KDE. I’m a bit of typography geek, so hunting down in KCharSelect. For en dash or em dash . Feels like a lot of trouble. No more! Hyphen) = en dash. Alt Gr Shift -. Hyphen) = em dash. Not sure if the same happens in Gnome; let me know if it works for you. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. June 3, 2010. Vertical reordering in CSS. En and Em dashes in KDE. Tabs, done right. Why I want to beat Java with a stick. On Vertical reordering in CSS.
fittopage.org
Making sprites | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/2009/12/23/making-sprites
Fortunately, you know how to fix the problem with the use of the great technique of CSS Sprites. If you don’t, you should. Click the link and learn about it; I will assume that you know what CSS sprites are from here on… Yes, CSS sprites are great, but they are a. To create manually. Not only you need to stitch the images together but also there will be lots of CSS rules to position the background image correctly. Automation comes to the rescue in the form of the montage. Sudo apt-get install imagemagick.
fittopage.org
Categories | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/events/categories
Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Vertical reordering in CSS. En and Em dashes in KDE. Tabs, done right. Why I want to beat Java with a stick. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Tabs, done right. On Tabs, done right. Proudly powered by WordPress.
fittopage.org
Locations | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/events/locations
Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Vertical reordering in CSS. En and Em dashes in KDE. Tabs, done right. Why I want to beat Java with a stick. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Vertical reordering in CSS. On Tabs, done right. On Tabs, done right. Proudly powered by WordPress.
fittopage.org
Vertical reordering in CSS | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/2012/09/11/vertical-reordering-in-css
Vertical reordering in CSS. There are plenty of techniques for reordering content horizontally in CSS (by reordering content I mean. Laying out content in an order different than the one in the source code). Usually those rely on a combination of clever floats and negative margins. Has a few examples. That relies on the fact that most browsers tend to render. Table elements above the table contents, even if the. Itself is at the bottom of the table in the markup. Of course, you don’t need real. Of course...
fittopage.org
Getting the category ID in WordPress | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/2010/02/04/getting-the-category-id-in-wordpress
Getting the category ID in WordPress. There is quite a bit of documentation in the WordPress site about categories, specifically how to retrieve data about them. Unfortunately all the available methods seem to focus on getting category data from a post, but it’s nearly impossible to figure out the category you are looking at when viewing the category page itself (i.e. the special “archive page” that lists all posts in a category). The function is category(). So, the solution? February 4, 2010.
fittopage.org
Why I want to beat Java with a stick | Fit to Page
http://fittopage.org/2010/03/27/why-i-want-to-beat-java-with-a-stick
Why I want to beat Java with a stick. Int x = 100;. The method doStuff(String) in the type Stuff is not applicable for the arguments (int). Int x = 100;. StuffdoStuff(x.toString() ;. Cannot invoke toString() on the primitive type int. Int x = 100;. Cannot cast from int to String. Int x = 100;. StuffdoStuff(new Integer(x).toString() ; / OMGWTFGRRRBBQ! This entry was posted in Uncategorized. March 27, 2010. Tabs, done right →. 3 thoughts on “ Why I want to beat Java with a stick. April 19, 2010 at 10:53 pm.