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links for 2010-08-28

  • Like a lot of deve­lo­pers, we start every HTML pro­ject with the same set of HTML and CSS tem­pla­tes. We’ve been using these files for a long time and we’ve pro­gres­si­vely added bits and pie­ces to them as our own per­so­nal best prac­ti­ces have evolved.

    Now that modern bro­w­sers are star­ting to sup­port some of the really use­ful parts of HTML5 and CSS3, it’s time for an update, and we thought we’d put it out there for eve­ryone to use. By no means do we see this as the end-all and beat-all, but we think it’s a fairly good star­ting place that anyone can take and make their own.

  • HTML5 Boilerplate is the pro­fes­sio­nal badass’s base HTML/CSS/JS tem­plate for a fast, robust and future-proof site.
    After more than two years in ite­ra­tive deve­lo­p­ment, you get the best of the best prac­ti­ces baked in: cross-browser nor­ma­li­za­tion, per­for­mance opti­mi­za­tions, even optio­nal fea­tu­res like cross-domain ajax and flash. A star­ter apa­che .htac­cess con­fig file hooks you the eff up with caching rules and preps your site to serve HTML5 video, use @font-face, and get your gzip zip­ple on.
    Boilerplate is not a fra­mework, nor does it pre­scribe any phi­lo­so­phy of deve­lo­p­ment, it’s just got some tricks to get your pro­ject off the ground quic­kly and right-footed.
  • The most intel­li­gent auto-completion exten­sion for GNU Emacs

    Auto Complete Mode is the most intel­li­gent auto-completion exten­sion for GNU Emacs. Auto Complete Mode renews an old com­ple­tion inter­face and pro­vi­des an envi­ron­ment that makes users could be more con­cen­trate on their own works.

    (tags: emacs)

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