I'm not familiar with JS. I'm creating a bar chart, but the bars are displaying upside down (top-down). How can I "flip" them to the correct orientation?
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yo hi guys. im building a small websites. how do i make sure that the usernames fit in their desginated container. for example, if there is like a long username, how do i make sure it always fits and is responsive?
@YangK basically you can toggle settings in it to make it appear differently based on the size of the child elements. However, I would advise filtering extra long usernames and/or setting overflow-x to hidden as I think that would be best practice. You can learn more about flexbox here: css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox
You could probably get more accurate and precise info from mdn's docs, but I regularly used this page as a reference when I was learning flexbox. It's concise and descriptive
@littlepootis yeah, I don't know why I was forced to grow up on computers that didn't have a package manager lol. It's like they wanted me to be a walking virus finding machine.
there's a bunch of nice ones that would make my notes look similarly to how I'd see them on paper:
¬ NO
∧ AN
∨ OR
∀ FA
∃ TE
≡ =3
≅ ?=
≠ !=
… ,.
∞ 00
ⁿ nS
∫ In
√ RT
so, I'm currently taking my uni notes in vim, so they're already digitalized, easily reviewed/changed, and all. I'm trying to figure out if I want to use fancy symbols or not
for example, in logic the "and" operator has a symbol (∧), which can be written in vim via digraphs (<c-k>AN in insert mode)
(order of messages is probably wrong because this internet is shitty)
thing is, I have a faster way of expressing a lot of those (!, &&, ||, ===, ..., ^n, sqrt). Is it worth it? I'd probably still keep the ∀ and ∃, as I don't have a better concise way of using them
do I want to have a mix? Should I try to make them all more easily accessible? I'm asking for random opinions here, I don't think there's a right answer
the guy next to me was taking notes in emacs, and chose to use latex so he wouldn't have to worry about non-ascii chars, but it took him very long to take those notes. I think now he's going to take them in a more easy format, and write them up better later
there's other symbols I already decided to get rid of, for example using -> instead of →
just because → looks horrible with small fonts, which I plan to use fairly often
I have previously looked into similar questions but non of the solutions worked out for me which is why I am asking this question. I am simply trying to deploy my node.js application to heroku but I keep getting an application error.
the following are the logs:
2018-09-27T05:23:30.486799+00:00 ...
I want to show an image when hovering over a table row. I want to know how to pass an argument to the showCard function for building the link dynamically with link = "http..." + name. And why does the function get a this argument when there's nothing in the function declaration?
<!DOCTYPE html>
<...
@snek I'm really not sure how pushing express into core is anything similar - we're not adding more pleasant APIs - we're exposing functionality and setting a default.
I have previously asked a similar question and got an answer that didnt solve my problem, I tried look into other similar questions, tried different solutions and I still cant solve my problem.
I am trying to deploy my node.js app and I keep getting an application error...
this was the previous...
You need to configure your port on heroku as you cannot pass static port to the app when deploying to heroku, Heroku has built in method to bind designated port to app which is deployed on its environment. You need to use env var to assign port to the app.
In heroku app you can do this by going t...
Hello, sorry to jump in to ask this question. In webpack config file, module.exports = {
entry: {
app: ['babel-polyfill', './src/store/client/index.js'],
theme: ['theme']
}} What could ['theme'] be? It is not an entry file, could it be a folder? I looked at possible entries point of webpack, but could not figure out.