A simple program for parsing memes.atom. Below is an annotated version. -module(memes). -export([scan/0]). -include_lib("xmerl/include/xmerl.hrl"). Define a module named memes that exports a single function named scan which takes zero parameters. Include the headers for xmerl, a library for processing XML. memes_url() -> "http://planet.intertwingly.net/memes.atom". Define a simple function that
Wanting to learn more about Google Wave, I ported the Wave Robot Python Client library to Ruby, mainly because I wanted to understand the protocol. The current protocol is tightly coupled to the Java server implementation. >>> import waveapi.document >>> import waveapi.util >>> waveapi.util.Serialize([waveapi.document.Image('http://example.com/foo.jpg', width=100, height=100)]) {'javaClass': 'jav
At one level, Google Wave is clearly a bold statement that “this is the type of application that every browser should be able to run natively without needing to resort to a plugin”. At to give Google credit, they have been working relentlessly towards that vision, addressing everything from garbage collection issues, to enabling drag and drop of photos, to providing compelling content (e.g., Goog
Mark Nottingham: I think this sort of thing is going to happen more often, not less. Microsoft and Netscape unilaterally extended the Web with MARQUEE and BLINK, and it was ugly, but the impact wasn’t nearly as bad as countless Web developers all extending the Web in their own way could be. The onus is clearly upon organisations like the W3C and IETF to make themselves as transparent and approacha
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