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Examples for progressive web apps. In this repo, we currently have: CycleTracker: A basic app for tracking menstrual cycles. The app's HTML includes a form to add a period cycle start and end dates. The JavaScript app functionality sorts the dates and saves thems to local storage. It also displays the dates retrieved from local storage below the form. The app includes a manifest file with three ic
A series of Web Components examples, related to the MDN Web Components documentation at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_components. Please refer to our contribution guidelines before contributing. The following examples are available: composed-composed-path. A very simple example that shows the behavior of the Event object composed and composedPath properties. See composed-com
https://github.com/mdn/webextensions-examples Maintained by Mozilla's Add-ons team. WebExtensions are a way to write browser extensions: that is, programs installed inside a web browser that modify the behavior of the browser or web pages loaded by the browser. WebExtensions are built on a set of cross-browser APIs, so WebExtensions written for Google Chrome, Opera, or Edge will, in most cases, ru
On the Yari platform that powers MDN, a legacy template/macro system called KumaScript automates certain aspects of content. We are hoping to stop using it some day, but until then MDN will still rely on it. This article provides basic information about KumaScript. KumaScript provides: A way to reuse and localize content that appears repeatedly between documents (e.g., compatibility labels, sectio
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