The value–class pattern for datetimes was made to torture parser developers, right? #microformats
The value–class pattern for datetimes was made to torture parser developers, right? #microformats
@sandeepshetty yep. At the moment it’s a couple of functions, by tomorrow it’ll be a PHP5 namespaced composer package.
Just had a nice buzz from implementing generic #microformats-2 parsing and not having to redefine each different type
Aral Balkan just tell them you’ll pay the extra fee, provided you can deduct 20% inconvenience tax
Aral Balkan the other interesting effect I get is an increase in perceived productivity. Closing an app via multitouch instead of physical button seems a more fluid UI
My #microformats-2 parser will allow for generic parsing (i.e. won’t have to be updated for each new µf) and I’ll do my best to handle nested µf well
Increasingly, my #indieweb activities are moving from “Publishing my own content” to “Intelligently parsing other people’s content”. As such, I am writing a PHP #microformats-2 parser
This is what Pingback should have been, not crappy XMLRPC nonsense: http://activitypingback.org/
Got my Tintin and Asterix bookshelves into chronological order
Ben Ward I cross post, so added to my todo list. Would also be good if they followed http://indiewebcamp.com/syndication_formats
@cssquirrel I have no idea what’s going on :|
http://mydearkorea.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/korean-music-psys-gangnam-style-and.html is an amazing insight into the satirical meaning behind Gangnam Style
Drew McLellan and not even realtime. FEEL THE DYNAMICALITY
@evanpro very good point. (And “Gaia” for the UI? Please.) Firefox OS it is, then :)
The latest #squoose is good, but I’m getting a bit uncomfortable due to the creepily loud breathing :|
@kaelig Laura Kalbag woo. despite blatant visibility principle violation, that’s useful.
@briansuda I did start writing a complainey blog post about both of them, but decided to spend the time building something more webby instead.
“It was nice of him to wrap it up in newspaper” Joyce Walters
“It’s certainly a rat. I’ve seen squashed rats before” Oscar Walters