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user6820627
01:56
@joshhunt yes you need indicator: background-color: #fffbec
@LearnHowToBeTransparent uh.. what?
user6820627
02:21
@joshhunt what? you have problem?
user6820627
the color is stack overflow style at least it is better than stupid new gif
user6820627
05:00
Can someone suggest me websites to download svg backgrounds?
 
2 hours later…
07:02
0
Q: How to save bulk document in Cloudant using Java or Spark - Java?

CodeIdentiCloudant Client library available in Java that will store one document at a time, CloudantClient client = ClientBuilder.account("accounbt") .username("username").password("password") .disableSSLAuthentication().build();*/ Database db = client....

 
2 hours later…
08:57
posted on November 28, 2016

New Cyanide and Happiness Comic

 
3 hours later…
12:00
hi
is there any one who can help me with scss
12:22
@joshhunt what's your design look like?
13:05
 
8 hours later…
20:55
@Wes Did I commit a CSS sin? jsfiddle.net/03jsfha4 (in reference to the ol li > ol li, and so on)
Wes
Wes
my (relatively new) rule is avoid generalizations. "ol li" is one, i'd write "ol > li" instead @Tiffany
ol > li > ol > li?
Is there a more efficient way of writing that in plain CSS?
Wes
Wes
define "more efficient" ?
only #id is more efficient than the direct child combinator, i think
people (and myself in the past) think stuff like "i'll just use a class" in case i'll need to reuse the thing in future.... or use the descendant (non direct child) combinator, for the same reason. it's a bad idea imho. what you think it's shared between two or more cases might change in the future. then there's the fact that makes overriding rules harder, as if you use different styles for selectors, you will get their precedence compared on different levels
@Wes IIRC ">" doesn't increase specificity at all, example: jsfiddle.net/hysj22xe
Wes
Wes
yeah. i'm not referring to that, i'm referring to abusing classes, etc
21:04
what do you mean by efficient?
Wes
Wes
tag name alone should be enough to describe a structure
For some reason, writing ol > li, ol > li > ol > li, ol > li > ol > li > ol > li and so on, feels inefficient. Granted, I am setting the style type for each list item, and it's dependent on if it's part of a nested list, but I wonder if there's a better way to repeat ol > li without typing it repeatedly.
use less or sass
I can't
why?
21:05
I do not have control over the web server in this case, and the vendor does not have LESS or SASS installed.
Requesting them to install something to a server costs an arbitrary amount of money. It's a hosted web portal.
you don't "install" less or sass, they are precompilers. You just compile them to css on your own computer
Ah... then I misinterpreted the documentation for them. In which case, it's negligible since I already typed it, but good to know for future reference.
other option is to use classes, IMO classes are a lot easier to understand than long nests
I thought they had to be installed on the web server and then they would take the file created and interpret it into the CSS for the browser.
it is possible to do that but it isn't recommended for performance reasons (compiling to css each time would increase load time)
usually that way is just for development
21:10
makes sense
and even then for less you just attach a javascript file to the page. I think sass is different though but I don't use it so not sure
how would you suggest using classes? like each new nested <ol> would have a class like "nest-1", "nest-2", "nest-3"?
or I could just make them utility classes and go .upper-roman, .upper-alpha, .decimal and so on
I would do something like '.nav-level-1' '.nav-level-2' etc.
Just think, what is going to be easiest in the future for you (or some other developer) to understand? 'ol > li > ol > li'? or '.nav-level-2'?
I wouldn't recommend using utility classes. Ideally you want to structure your html so that if you need to make style changes you don't need to touch your html.
For example if you addd ".upper-roman" and later wanted to changed it to ".upper-alpha" you would have to add / remove the class from your html instead of just changing it in css
Does anyone have more music like this? youtu.be/zVaN1ewtzXg or this? youtu.be/lZRHO1nblHU
@Tiffany that's my css philosophy anyways, there are a lot of different opinions.
21:17
@joshhunt this
@Tiffany why not just ol > li? It selects all nestings of it
I think she (?) might have different stylings depending on how deep it is
why would it be in the same selector list then? :P
for that matter, it could just be li
Wes
Wes
21:31
For every use of the hashtag #TweetForShelter @BritishGas will donate £1 to Shelter - with the aim of raising £25,000. Tag your friends!
@ZachSaucier that's what I'm already doing in the jsfiddle. Because there are five levels, the back of my mind was nudging me that what I was doing was inefficient.
On an unrelated note, said vendor that hosts our web portal opens a ticket, pastes an email they received from AWS that says, "we're doing this maintenance at <time that is in one hour from now>." And then I receive a message from our account manager asking for permission to perform the maintenance.
so it's like, "can we do this? [ ] Yes [ ] Yes"
Additional info for context: AWS sent the email on Sunday. They opened the ticket 40 minutes ago.
TL;DR: I hate this fucking vendor.
sorry, had to let that out, and this was my nearest captive audience.
@joshhunt The HTML/CSS I'm writing this for is a tutorial guide on writing an outline for an English class. While, it's possible that a change in utility class in the HTML is possible, it's unlikely. But, for this purpose, it won't be a nav menu. I think I'll leave it the way it is, but I may change in the future.
@joshhunt The other consideration is that the person who would be making changes, or creating new content that utilizes the CSS, is not a developer, and will be using a WYSIWYG.

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