okay, so I need to verify the eeprom has written correctly. so I have two copies of the bin file and after writing the one I cat the other and hexdump both then compare?
Hi, is there a CSS selector to select an other element when they are not of the same level ? for example if there is a table (with tr/td) then a div, I want to act on the div when td is :hover
I use this function to animate my image:
$('img').show("slide", direction: "right",500);
Animate works but it changing my img position to top. Img has style="position:absolute; top:0; bottom:0; margin:auto; left:0;" so it's vertically centered. I noticed that while animation is going then img ...
I wasted about a half a day trying to dynamically create the svg in javascript and failed miserably because the library oversimplified and didn't do what I needed
I figured I could generate the svg and then copy the code and have an svg that I could use anywhere
the idea is solid, but perhaps I used the wrong library for the job
@easwee I checked out d3.js but I'm not sure if it would do what I need? If I merge my paths, wouldn't that just completely change the look of them? Maybe you could point me in the right direction
@DarkAshelin one thing you can add to that answer (I know op didn't ask for it) is event delegation and explain how that's the way to attach the click on dynamically added sections
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@redress: On the contrary, this answer in its sheer length doesn't even begin to scratch the surface of the convoluted complexity that is CSS floats. — BoltClock ♦5 secs ago
most of the time users want quick codes, so they visit your answer, copy paste the codes from code block and viola... he thinks he is a ninja in that lang
@BoltClock haha I was thinking that before you posted
In my opinion, this is a great answer. I don't care about how it "originates in SGML DTD syntax," or exactly how chrome parses tags; I just care about whether I should use it. — The Guy with The HatApr 3 at 1:23
I'm not sure why 66 people just took this answer's word for it. Even if the values did come from a standard, for which this answer provides no sources whatsoever, that standard would have long been obsolete anyway as this answer implies, and using it in new code would be meaningless. — BoltClock ♦May 4 '14 at 13:25
haha seriously wtf is wrong with the people.. nowadays most of them know shit about basics but they earn so good... they are the ones whom I call Google Programmers, a breed of people who just google and are able to make apps working .. SOME HOW
@Kitler bought origins bundle... dragon age 1, 2, mass effect 2, moh allied assault, peggle, dead space, command & conquers generals, bejeweled, plant vs zombies, sim city 2k and 3 more random games
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The question Firefox does not pick up css received this answer:
You have some mistakes in your css code that you need to fix. This
site is good for validating code: https://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/
- just type your website address in the address bar.
That seemed just a comment which...