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deleted by creator
Moved to @Crul@lemm.ee
deleted by creator
Also on Webtoons:
https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/system32comics/list?title_no=235074
Which has RSS feed:
https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/system32comics/rss?title_no=235074
Yep, a bit of JS is another option.
I’m not sure what’s rendering your html though
Nothting really, I wanted to keep the project very simple (because there are non-devs contributing to it) and the HTML is static code.
(If the ideal solution is not possible) I think you are right.
Let me check I understood: the idea is to have a single changing-magic-number (the number of menu options) set in a variable --item-count
and then calculate all the other values from that. The --column-count
would be fixed for each resolution step, so that’s ok.
Thank you very much for the help!
If that’s the case, I think that doesn’t really help. The original issue is that I need to edit the CSS file every time a new chapter is added. Which would be the same if I have to hardcode the number of rows.
I mean, it’s a bit cleaner to hardcode the number of rows than the height in pixels, but I was looking for a solution that doesn’t require magic numbers in the CSS.
Thanks!
I also tried that but it just renders a single row. Probably because I’m missing something…
#menu ul {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr;
grid-auto-flow: column;
}
It’s hard to explain with words, I’m trying to adjust the number of columns depending on the available width. But (probably because I don’t know how to use display: grid
) the only way I found was to set a fixed height for each “step”.
In other words: I trying to achieve the exact behavior it has right now.
That’s what @RobotDrZaius@kbin.social suggested in a x-post.
I need to give that a try, thank you very much!
Agree, thanks for sharing!
Best part:
(…) Brecht’s team even taught the rodents to play hide and seek. At the beginning of the game, a rat was enclosed in a box while a researcher hid somewhere in the room. The researcher then opened the box using a remote control, allowing the animal to jump out and begin “seeking.” When the rat successfully found the hidden scientist, it was rewarded with—you guessed it—a tickle. The rats were also given the opportunity to hide while the researchers looked for them, and they proved to be especially good at coming up with creative hiding spots. Their ability to strategize was “almost spooky,” Brecht recalls.
(…) Brecht’s team first made sure the rats were comfortable with their new playground, aka a dimly lit plastic box, as well as their human playmates. The researchers then played games of “chase the hand” and tickled and the animals on their backs and bellies (see video (…) for an example from a previous experiment). In response to the tickling, the rats shimmied in delight and let out endless “giggles.”
Try this link: https://files.catbox.moe/xk1ywd.jpg
This only works for reading the content, but you cannot post or comment via RSS.
EDIT: Also, RSS feeds only contain the last N elements, so the apps would need to store all the data from Reddit… which is not practical.
The RSS Feed with the comments of a post is on [POST URL]/comments.rss
. Example:
https://www.reddit.com/r/RedditAlternatives/comments/152prch/reddit_app_sucks_so_bad/comments.rss
The first entry is the post with the content and the next ones are the comments (all). Of course there is no nesting structure in the RSS, you need to go to reddit for that.
EDIT: There most probably be a limit in the number of elements of a feed, so if you try that with a post that already has a lot of comments, you will probably see only the last N ones. But if you add the RSS Feed of the comments of new post to your RSS Reader, it will most probably store all the elements over time, so you will have all of them there (and not only the last N ones)… unless the comments are posted too fast and/or the updating frequency of your RSS Reader is too slow.
Oh, I also forgot:
Very useful for moderators (of not-very-large subs).
This works for (almost?) any reddit URL:
Note that in the last 3 URLs, the .rss
is added before the ?
, in all other cases it’s at the end.
Thanks for the work.
Is there any RSS Feed to keep up with Proxigram (to know if and when public IG RSS feeds are added)?
I have a slow connection, so privacy.partition.network_state = false
was a game changer. It prevents firefox to re-download an image (or video, or whatever) when you open it in a new tab (State Partitioning in Mozilla docs).
Warning: the main goal of State Partitioning is to prevent cross-site tracking, so this option will make that easier. In my case it’s worth it and I mitigate that by other means, but you should be aware of it.
~not the user who you were replying to~
if a whole nation would be moved onto my homeland, and from now on it wouldn’t be my homeland, but theirs. Is that how it worked?
The thing is… that describes the situation of multiple existing countries (USA, ahem) and, if you go back enough in history, probably almost every country in the world.
Awesome! Thank you very much for the heads up.
It seems to be working perfectly, even with videos. This is great!