Yea. I thought it was because we were forced to read the books that I rejected them. But when i tried on my own, it just did not interest me in the slightest. Reading code however is super engaging for me
Was harry potter, bad science, cant remember the name but it was some economics book, richard dawkins (Was the most interesting, But I skipped over a lot of parts because it just seemed stretched out with a lot of the concepts)
Come to think of it. I think the story is usually the least interesting part for me. Even in games, playing strategy games I always skip the cinematic part because I just want to play. Except for certain anime like death note or puella magi madoka. Those kinds of stories are amazing.
i.e. my website says that linkedin referred a user to my site. I want to know if there's a way someone clicked on a word document/pdf to get to my website. i.e. they clicked on the url in my resume
i literally got a book on beautiful soup from the library last night.. shame I haven't read it. Never really found their documentation to be all that grand
I'm trying to escape this (German) id CSS selector in jQuery (note the <b>):
$('[id="fa_form_row_<b>Wer ist der teilnehmer/in (Mehrfachantworten möglich)?</b> des Kurses:"]').toggleClass('inactive');
How can I do this?
I don't even know if it's worth answering the question because it's premised on a completely catastrophic situation in the first place. But the accepted answer doesn't seem correct
I'm sure there are legit situations in which someone might want to select by data-attribute values containing <>, right?
If I make a list item using ul > li > a tag it's working fine. If I make list Item using p > span > a is it have any issue in W3C validation.
HTML
<div class="footer-top">
<p class="social-link">
<span><a href="#"><i class="fa fa-instagram" aria-hidden="true"></i></a></span>
<span
you need someone like me in your class, my teachers always told me I asked 'why?' too much
if you think a 'why?' reason would heavily benefit the class you could feign semi-ignorance and say "Do we need to do that because of (the real reason why)?"
if an element with the position of static should appear as per the document flow, why does the element with the id of container in the following fiddle appear out of place? jsfiddle.net/binarytrance/o5dyoqrx/192
#container is right below the #top-block. as far as i understand about the position value static, the element with the static positon (or default) is positioned as specified by the order of its placement in the html document. in my html, i have #container after # headline. shouldnt #container come after #headline?
i have used flexbox in #container. i couldnt figure out how to postion #headline inside the #container the way it is now (ignore the disproportionate dimensions), so i created it outside the flexbox. how can i design the #headline if i were to create it inside #container (if its possible)?
@joshhunt like this codepen.io/binarytrance/pen/OXYGaa?editors=1100 . note: this was the original method i wanted to design my idea. i couldnt figure out how to stick the #bottom-block to the bottom so i chose the flex box method
@ZachSaucier Wow this is amazing. What I needed. "Box-Model". been coding HTML/CSS and I alway had a sizing problem. But now this give me a clear view. Thanks, Man.
@joshhunt yes this is the part where i am confused, can you take the #secondary-content div, stretch it to the bottom, adjacent to .footer and stick it there?