This page is not created by, affiliated with, or supported by Slack Technologies, Inc.
2018-08-11
Channels
- # announcements (8)
- # beginners (17)
- # boot (1)
- # cider (20)
- # cljdoc (7)
- # cljs-dev (14)
- # clojure (62)
- # clojure-dev (16)
- # clojure-hamburg (1)
- # clojure-russia (2)
- # clojure-spec (22)
- # clojure-uk (15)
- # clojurebridge (1)
- # clojurescript (23)
- # core-async (4)
- # core-logic (17)
- # cursive (2)
- # datomic (4)
- # duct (1)
- # figwheel-main (40)
- # fulcro (15)
- # leiningen (1)
- # off-topic (27)
- # re-frame (3)
- # shadow-cljs (9)
- # specter (3)
- # sql (59)
The most important factor for a lib or language name is searchability, in my opinion.
Look for conflicts with other libs/languages, and try to stay away from words identical to common concepts.
Dart
and Go
are two particularly bad examples of naming in my opinion.
@U82DUDVMH Skyr is cool. Maybe I can use it in the future.
I would wonder whether that word meant something in a language other than English 🙂
skir sounds better than the alternatives to me. just don't name it "skiar", it's a poorly-written way of saying "to ski" in spanish
a very simple server built with Node.js . Simple but enough when I want to use it as a tool for webapp development.
Hello! Is there anyone here experienced with frontend stuff that could give me advice on how to build a specific drag and drop interaction? I’m struggling with some part of it (will explain if this is the right channel for it)
@U61HA86AG you again, always you 😄 I’ll ask: I am drag and dropping entire DOM elements (think of draggable objects). I want to be able to drop them in some places, but the issue is that the object being dragged is capturing mouse events (i.e. ‘onMouseEnter’).
So my question is: how do I cleanly check which droppable target is under the cursor at any given point
I’d be happy to make stickers if anyone was interested