When looking beyond the RAD (drag-drop and configure) way of building user interfaces that many tools encourage you are likely to come across three design patterns called Model-View-Controller, Model-View-Presenter and Model-View-ViewModel. My question has three parts to it: What issues do these patterns address? How are they similar? How are they different?
Using Ruby on Rails 3's new routing system, is it possible to change the default :id parameter resources :users, :key => :username come out with the following routes /users/new /users/:username /users/:username/edit ...etc I'm asking because although the above example is simple, it would be really helpful to do in a current project I'm working on. Is it possible to change this parameter, and if no
I'm wondering how I can turn off all these warnings when running a simple test: [1] guard(main)> 16:59:46 - INFO - Run all 16:59:46 - INFO - Running all specs /Users/esjd/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.1.2/gems/rspec-rails-3.0.1/lib/rspec/rails/adapters.rb:124: warning: instance variable @example not initialized /Users/esjd/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.1.2/gems/rspec-rails-3.0.1/lib/rspec/rails/adapters.rb:124: warning: in
How do I select the <li> element that is a direct parent of the anchor element? As an example, my CSS would be something like this: li < a.active { property: value; } Obviously there are ways of doing this with JavaScript, but I'm hoping that there is some sort of workaround that exists native to CSS Level 2. The menu that I am trying to style is being spewed out by a CMS, so I can't move the acti
For a PUT request: HTTP 200, HTTP 204 should imply "resource updated successfully". HTTP 201 if the PUT request created a new resource. For a DELETE request: HTTP 200 or HTTP 204 should imply "resource deleted successfully". HTTP 202 can also be returned by either operation and would imply that the instruction was accepted by the server, but not fully applied yet. It's possible that the operation
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く