There's another link to undraw but are there any more places to find stuff like this? Paid or free? I was recently looking for an svg shape library purely for decoration but couldn't find anything.
Do you store all UI state in redux as well as all 'resource state'? Phrased as an example... If you store a JSON object that can be edited in your store do you also store a Boolean value for whether the dialog is open that can be used for editing that JSON object?
I dont do this repeating class business but CSS Tricks 'css guidelines' web page says that when you do : '.collection li', it first searches through the page for all 'li's then wittles it down to the ones within the correct parent. Essentially that css selectors work from right to left. So I guess the idea is that classing up the li elements within a parent may be marginally quicker? I have never bothered though. Does anyone know more about this?
In my experience AJAX is used a lot to do the opposite of 'loading down' a site. Often used for staggering page load - preventing a huge download time at first page load and means one page sites can be possible, with many images even, and not take 2 minutes to download on mobile.
Why would your animosity be targeted at the language and the developers.
The market wants what the market wants. Surely most of the time, in most cases, it is the client that signs off a design and a developer follows the brief?
The post you had here before you edited was completely nonsensical.
A UX post, on how a site should prevent users from cancelling to benefit the website, at the expense of the user.
That is the opposite of a good UX.
Here is some 'User pseudo-psychology' for you... Having your blog titles take up more than half the vertical space of my browser (when it is full screen) stops me reading your writing.
Here's some UX for you - the user owes you nothing.
Sure have an optional form or field for cancellations but 5 minutes? How is this beneficial for anyone?
So, it's a free product - they will just never cancel their account and you will have inactive users sitting there. Who is this good for?
So it's a paid product - they will cancel their account and tell everyone about the ridiculously long winded process they had to go through to cancel it.
In the case of having such a large drag box how should I be ensuring the user can still interact with the content of the page. E.g make sure the hitbox isnt over the top of links and that users can still highlight text etc?
Recently implemented snap.js on a site with the ability to drag the menu from the left as well as press the 'hamburger' button. On iOS I found that dragging from the edge of the screen leads to a hit and miss situation where the user may sometimes open the nav drawer but may also sometimes go 'back' to the previous page. How are people 'doing' navigation right now? I always liked the sliding navs on mobile sites, but where should I have the drag box. The bottom of the screen?
How are you organising these feeds? Just interested because that is always my downfall. End up subscribing to loads of stuff and eventually stop reading
Will there be calendar functionality beyond google calendar? I would love to be able to use my caldav/fruux calendars with IFTTT. I saw a tweet from the folks over at fruux who mentioned willingness to help out wit that.
I think this is fantastic. Obviously stuff to be ironed out, tidied up and better organised but genuinely think this is a great idea, how does one go about developing something like the dependency graph? Would love to implement it in a site I am building while learning Rails.
Hi. This looks great. I'm new to rails and this looks like it will be fun to mess around with tomorrow and learn what the commons gems etc are. Seriously - Thanks very much for making this. Anything I should know as a noob or shall I just dive in and have a play around?
You seem to have a bad attitude going into it. If you have thoughts and feeling and you can explain your position when 'under attack' then you need not be worried about such things. If you think people discredit your opinions because of your penis then you are wrong. I am not saying that discrediting your opinions is a good thing or valid way of discussing things but the reason for it is not your genitalia, it is because male, female, trans etc all have very different experiences of how society reacts/treats their gender or sexuality. Some people may get agitated when they hear someone who is not in their situation, talking about their situation. But that is because of their past experiences and if you provide a comprehensive explanation of your beliefs, then there is no reason for you to worry about how people react to you, because you will know you have been understood. Some people are quick to throw opinions around without reason and it means people like you become afraid to voice yours. If you focus on what you are trying to say then it will contribute to a discussion and if it descends into something you did not expect (a twitter witch hunt?) then you know that you have articulated yourself in such a precise and intricate manner and you know your remarks cannot be taken incorrectly.