- 2018 - The Year of Web Components, Dominik Kundel
- The Lonely and Dark Road to Styling in React, Sara Vieira
- Next Generation Forms with React Final Form, Erik Rasmussen
- The ABC of Coded Style Guides, Henning Muszynski
- Testing, Testing, 1, 2, NaN, Gant Laborde
- Lambdas, lambdas everywhere..., Flavio Corpa
// Sample Tracking Template | |
// {lpurl}?utm_medium=adwords&utm_campaign={_campaign}&utm_source={_adgroup}&utm_term={keyword} | |
// This script will set custom parameters {_campaign} and {_adgroup} at the campaign and adgroup level respectively. | |
function main() { | |
///// Update Campaigns | |
// get all campaigns | |
var campaignSelector = AdsApp | |
.campaigns() |
⇐ back to the gist-blog at jrw.fi
Or, 16 cool things you may not have known your stylesheets could do. I'd rather have kept it to a nice round number like 10, but they just kept coming. Sorry.
I've been using SCSS/SASS for most of my styling work since 2009, and I'm a huge fan of Compass (by the great @chriseppstein). It really helped many of us through the darkest cross-browser crap. Even though browsers are increasingly playing nice with CSS, another problem has become very topical: managing the complexity in stylesheets as our in-browser apps get larger and larger. SCSS is an indispensable tool for dealing with this.
This isn't an introduction to the language by a long shot; many things probably won't make sense unless you have some SCSS under your belt already. That said, if you're not yet comfy with the basics, check out the aweso