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So how does it work? There are three layers on top of each other - the top layer contains the colorful stars, the second layer contains the small dim stars and the third layer in the back holds a couple of very bright stars. As you scroll the map the layers are all moved differently hopefully giving you a sense of depth. The 2nd and 3rd layers are only static tiles. The colorful stars are the stars the player may actually colonize and fight over. They are stored in a database table and requested by the map script via an asynchronous call. The stars are returned as an array in JSON format. The client side is homebrew javascript goodness with the help of Prototype and the backend consists of a few PHP classes.
the first rule of 140byt.es is NO MORE THAN 140 BYTES. not characters, bytes. no points for shorter entries, the point is to pack as much whallop into 140 bytes as possible.
otherwise, entries should be valid javascript expressions that do not leak globals, and are licensed under the WTFPL or something similarly permissive.
Jen Jajac is honored for "For her willpower that's driving nz.js(con) to existence. She's awesome! 😀
Excellence in organising the NZ js Conference and overall community contributions."
Alex Gibson delivers a moving and thoughtprovoking final presentation on "Technology for Everyone" at nz.js(con);
After seeing a screenshot of autocomplete matches in Nucleus, I decided that Drupal's autocomplete should let themers style how any matching parts of the string are shown (in this case the default is to be underlined).
Our Sheridan Interactive Media grads show their work - imm.sheridanc.on.ca/openhouse/2018/ Web and Mobile apps in HTML, CSS, JavaScript - Physical Computing with Arduino, Connerct, VR, interactive coding with JavaScript and ZIMjs for the HTML Canvas