I am maintaining this blog to document things that I have done and would like to remember or perhaps could help other people who are facing the same issues.
HTML JSON form submission W3C draft
Get link
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
I like the idea of JSON form submission as described in this draft.
I wonder if any browsers already support this? Maybe Chrome canary?
W3C draft of HTML JSON form submission
This blog post title is pretty confusing - but if you get to read this blog post by Google, it actually makes sense. It's actually pretty cool. Not that I don't like callbacks or promises, but I can see this being useful in more complex examples. async function fetchDogPics(url) { try { //this looks synchronous but it isn't... const response = await fetch(url); await response.text(); } catch (err) { console.log('failed', err); } }
### Use case: Working on 2 dev branches and merging one into the other and want to revert git checkout dev_branch git merge my_new_feature // merging my branch into develop Ooops, now I realized `my_new_feature` has something wrong git revert -m 1 <sha of merged commit> OR git revert HEAD -m 1 means we keep the parent side of merge ( dev_branch branch) ### Fetch their new commits and merge to your branch git fetch protected_repo Committed but not pushed to remote. Want to get rid of latest commit git reset --hard HEAD~1 Get a branch from a forked repo to your own repo (or to your own forked repo) git reset HEAD~1 Get a branch from a forked repo to your own repo (or to your own forked repo) git fetch git@github . com : theirusername / reponame . git theirbranch : ournameforbranch Associate your local copy to the upstream branch git remote add repo_name https://github.com/theirusername/their_repo.git Fetch their new commits and merge to your branch git
When I started working back in 2010, we used to support IE7. I still remember how much of a paint it was to debug javascript code. With IE8/IE9 debuggers, what I learned is patience, rather than figuring out how to fix all those weird bugs that *always show up *only in IE. The debuggers were so slow. Also back then, firebug was the norm. Chrome dev tools was relatively new and most people I knew did not use it. I liked Chrome so I sticked with it. Now, it's a tool that I use almost every day. In fact, I try to spend some time and follow what's new with the dev tools. I also spend some time experimenting with soon to be features/apis on Chrome Canary. This year, well last year... (2016), I've been pretty busy and haven't had much time to look at the new features. But today, I spent a few hours catching up on the last Google I/O and watch what's new with the dev tools. I wanted to share this link and give back some love to the chrome dev tools by writing this post.
Comments