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Susy was a responsive layout engine for Sass, before flexbox and CSS grid were available. Susy is now deprecated, and will not receive updates. If you need help moving off Susy, or learning the latest in web layout, we offer training and consulting to help bring you up-to-date. Contact us for details » Not everyone can play with the latest specs, and there will always be edge-cases that require ma
Ruby Object Mapper is an open-source persistence and mapping toolkit for Ruby built for speed and simplicity. Learn MoreSupport rom-rb SponsorsWe are looking for sustainable sponsorship. If your company is relying on rom-rb or simply want to see rom-rb evolve faster to meet your requirements, please consider backing the project through our campaign on opencollective.com/rom.
After generating a new padrino project, you will not find any Rakefile in your generated project folder structure; in fact it’s not strictly needed to build a new one because we can already use padrino rake: If you need custom tasks you can add those to: your_project/lib/tasks your_project/tasks your_project/test your_project/spec Padrino will look recursively for any *.rake file in any of these d
{"serverDuration": 17, "requestCorrelationId": "f12953c41087422ba55291f4cd3ff3b9"}
When Alec Rust asked the HTML5 Boilerplate project to switch to a HiDPI favicon, I realized how little I knew about favorite icons, touch icons, and tile icons. When I decided to dive in a little deeper, things got interesting. Since they were first introduced by Internet Explorer in 1999, almost nothing about favicons has changed. They have almost-always been ICO files, either nested in the root
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