Interested in learning jQuery and JavaScript?
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The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Eric Dye
Interested in learning jQuery and JavaScript?
You can hardly beat this:
All for free.
by Eric Dye
I remember when you had to have multiple browsers open to view more than one webpage.
Tabs have been EPIC.
Can you imagine not having them anymore? How horrid would that be.
We are now using so many tabs, Firefox has built in a great new way to manage them, and I have several tabs in Chrome that I always keep pinned. With only a favicon viewable, using the favicon is a great way to gain a users attention for notifications and alerts.
This piece of JavaScript will do just that:
[Read more…] about How-To Create Favicon Notifications and Alerts
by Eric Dye
Interested in learning how to code?
We’ve previously provided some pretty cool resources, including:
Now here’s another tool to get you on your way to learning the basics.
by Eric Dye
When you’re playing around with code, there’s nothing quite like doing it in a browser based sandbox.
If you’ve used JSFiddle, you may want to give Tinkerbin a try.
Tinkerbin is the same, except it also supports Sass (with Compass), Less, Haml and CoffeeScript.
It looks good and is easy to use.
[Read more…] about Online Sandbox that Supports Sass, Less, Haml & CoffeeScript
by Eric Dye
Here is an easy way to aid in the conversion of JavaScript into CoffeeScript.
It’s like the opposite of CoffeeScript’s compiler. This could really streamline a migration to CoffeeScript.
Check this out:
[Read more…] about How-To Easily Convert JavaScript Code to CoffeeScript
by Eric Dye
How many times do you see awesome jQuery stuff that would be great on your blog or next website build?
It happens to me all the time. Plugins are great, but the jQuery jocks really know how to lay down some sweet stuff.
Early on in my WordPress days, I would admire jQuery, but never thought about using it, since it was “code” and seemed too difficult. After all, I would have to do something “special” to run jQuery on my WordPress site, right?
Wrong.
Here’s a nifty tip for those of you who never thought about running jQuery on your WordPress site, and a tip that might come in handy for those of you coding jQuery the “long” way.