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allyphanta11yphant teaches web accessibility, one step at a time, broken down into manageable pieces. We call these challenges. You won't need to read large amounts of text to complete those. Instead, you will learn by applying the concepts in code. Get started with your first web accessibility challenge and improve your skills.
“It lets me write multi-headed programs that run on 16 cores and keep them readable, maintainable, and crash-free. It also lets me write low-level algorithms requiring control over memory layout and pull in a crate that makes HTTPS requests super simple. It’s the combination of these features that makes Rust so unique.”
And the feedback from Github on the language.
It spots files that does not follow the XDG specifications.
A first approach of ARIA with a toggle button
Because it is possible, someone mare a page with every HTML tags in it.
How an array was built before Ecmascript v1
Another one :D
Compilers are pipelines with a serie of step. Each step transform the input and provides data to the next.
Each step has then a contract with the input provided and its output 😃
The author goes in depth.
We can completely segment one component of the compiler from another by having the right form of data structure in between them. To build that data structure, you don’t need to know anything that happens to it afterwards, you just need to know what it means.
Writing about Rust, Elixir and programming stuff
you reminded me in this episode of the day that someone published a crate named "nul" which made it so no one on Windows could use any crates
"error: [20/-1] Cannot checkout to invalid path '3/n/nul'" LOL
To solve XDG misconfiguration, if wanted.
That would be awesome indeed: using @scope (.classname) to specify styles that only applies from this class.
Ok un générateur d'idées, cela arrive...
What would you do if you weren’t afraid?
When I asked myself that question I realized I should be working for myself, building things that help people, consulting with people to help them, and putting that content into the world somehow.
Daniel Miessler runs Unsupervised Learning, so he's building the platform. He's doing some consulting and advising related to customers for a service company. He also has the podcast and newsletter :)
The result from all of this is that the promise of going to school, getting a stable job at a company, and having some sort of future from that is—or at least feels—more tenuous than ever.
I believe that the time for being identified by—and tied to—corporate jobs is passing, and it’s time to transition to what comes next
Think about work like a relationship. It’s hard to be a good partner if you’re not first healthy and independent on your own.