If they are a good citizen of the Fediverse
They haven't been a good citizen of the internet, why would you even give them a chance?
If they are a good citizen of the Fediverse
They haven't been a good citizen of the internet, why would you even give them a chance?
Time to break out the ol' do-while
.
Being a programmer doesn't make you drink less.
Or they're forced to by corporate. I can complain endlessly about Outlook but guess what? At the end of the day my ass has to use Outlook.
I taught my users markdown with StackEdit, a side-by-side WYSIWYG / Markdown generator. It opened some doors for us in terms of the tech we could use behind the scenes.
There are a few reasons this might be the case!
The instance's UI might not be declaring that a
or button
element as a resource meant to be downloaded.
The instance's web server might not have declared the downloadable file's mime type as a resource. (Apache, nginx.)
Your operating system might not recognize the file type as a thing to be downloaded, or your browser isn't telling it to download to a file.
It's probably 1 or 2 if you're seeing the same behavior across multiple browsers and OS.
Yes, in my experience, boilerplate typically comes into play when you're using two libraries that don't know about one another, or have no business touching each other's concerns. (Using Alpine's x-cloak
with Tailwind comes to mind.)
That and every single *-pipelines.yaml
CI/CD config I've ever written.
I keep my framework-specific reusable code in git repos that I install as git submodules in the repos of actual projects.
lol, lmao.
Not this guy.