I started a "responsive design" course on Udacity, but I don't think it contains the content that will help here. It seems like it is more low-level html and js.
Don't get me wrong. The concepts are certainly what I need to learn, but I for the baseball card site I have in mind, I need more of the artsy side of design, not the technical part.
@AdamMc331 "I've taken a feature and implemented it in a very small and ideal test case and find no fault with using it at a production level despite never having done so"
> Please be attentive to the requirements for this role and accompany your resumé with a short motivation letter, detailing why you’re the right Monk for this internship.
I have this tendency to apply to places and get really excited because the company seems perfect for me and then get my hopes up. Aka what's happening right now.
You can annotate the default getter or setter without providing a body.
var bar: String by Delegates.observable("") { prop, old, new ->
notifyPropertyChanged(BR.bar)
}
@Bindable get
There is a shortcut annotation use-site target which does the same thing.
@get:Bindable var bar: String...
i was annotating the field itself, not annotating the getter
Despite being a niche app, there is a larger market out there for my baseball card app. A competitor has 10k-50k downloads. But then they are also an established company in the baseball card market in general. And a very well known name.
They didn't have an app when I first made mine. They caught up to me while I've been slacking off the last couple of years.