also it's not supposed to be used. There's no requirement to use it over just vanilla web components
anyway I'm just saying that the Polymer website using polymer and having stuff be broken in browsers trying to implement stuff Polymer relies on is not the best practice
ok I see what you mean now. I'm assuming that's not the intended behavior, for example if FF implemented web components natively then the polyfill wouldn't be necessary. It's just an issue of being able to detect if the flag has been turned on
and even when it was done apparently it was still working behind the scenes because I couldn't play anything but starter worlds for the next hour or two
really bad way to design a game
@joshhunt sure, I'm positive it is a bug. I'm just saying, it's a huge bug
like your game not being playable on release day :-P
@cimmanon yeah I have a great reputation for making restaurant websites around here
@sdd why do you need scripts? just make it how you want it to look in Photoshop? If you need need a link to another pdf then you can just insert one with Adobe Acrobat Pro.
btw, you dont have to be a designer to have a color scheme that works well together. searching for "color scheme" should turn up hundreds of color scheme generators.
@joshhunt right person si senior, ember 2.0 is bringing a ton of goodness, glimmer is already in the 1.13 beta, routable components are in active development
@zan Well, it can give some extra targeting-options for CSS, but it wouldn't make that much sense when you can also just use ID, class and/or a combination of those
wat
The idea is quite good of this Humble Book Bundle (offering programming books), but I would like a bit more adult books, hehe! humblebundle.com/books
I have managed to implement Tumblr's lightbox for photo posts with only one image, using the script that was provided in this thread. However, the script overrides any click-through links.
I'm thinking it should be possible to solve this, if the script contained an exception rule for external cl...
> I'm thinking it should be possible to solve this, if the script contained an exception rule for external click-through links; but I have no experience with javascript.
@MuneemHabib "IF a user has "Print Background colours and images" turned off in their print settings, no CSS will override that, so always account for that. This is a default setting."
So, we have about 30 Android-scanners here at the company and to change the background, we have to open the device, open Chrome, browse to a link and then tap+hold to set the image as a background. Is there an easier way to do this? Like from your computer?
I know there's a Chrome to Phone extension, but you'll need to log in on a Google account and I don't know if it works with 30 devices
I've had to take over entire projects written (badly) by programmers gone before me that had long since left the company.. many of the things done inside were WTF moments, but I prevailed (kind of)
I'd rewrite the whole thing if I could, but at least I understand it
@Neil Even better, those scanners have their own distribution of Android and have removed all Google functions. So there's no way to log in system-wide with a Google account, so the app Phone to Chrome can't be logged into...