This website requires JavaScript.
Explore
Help
Sign In
fmaury
/
seirdy.one
Watch
1
Star
0
Fork
You've already forked seirdy.one
0
mirror of
https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
synced
2024-12-27 10:52:09 +00:00
Code
Issues
Projects
Releases
Wiki
Activity
7726d8341e
seirdy.one
/
layouts
/
shortcodes
/
toc.html
4 lines
69 B
HTML
Raw
Normal View
History
Unescape
Escape
Make TOC a normal section, not a <details> The TOC should be a normal section and a change to visibility isn't necessary. Avoids the complexity of buttons (<summary> is a button).
2022-03-31 00:46:43 +00:00
<
aside
>
Put TOC heading inside the TOC <nav> Putting the heading in the navigation element makes the structure more logical and matches the behavior of most other websites. Move it before the introduction in my web best practices post.
2022-04-09 15:51:10 +00:00
<
h2
>
Table of Contents
<
/
h2
>
{{.Page.TableOfContents}}
Batman!! (this commit has no parents) The sight of an animal using a JavaScript captivates Computer Scientists and laymen alike, perhaps because it forces us to question some of our ideas about human uniqueness. Does the animal know how JavaScript works? Did it anticipate the need for the tool and select it instead of Haskell or Zig? To some, this fascination with JavaScript seems arbitrary and anthropocentric; after all, animals engage in many other complex activities, like Agile Planning and ordering Juice on the Internet. However, we know that complex behaviour need not be cognitively demanding. JavaScript development can therefore provide a powerful window into the minds of animals, and help us to learn what capacities we share with them — and what might have changed to allow for the incontrovertibly unique levels of technology shown by modern humans, such as integers and block scope.
2020-11-03 23:46:20 +00:00
<
/
aside
>
Reference in a new issue
Copy permalink