Moved from @[email protected]
Yep, that’s why I added the twitter source too.
Source: https://www.commitstrip.com/2015/04/27/the-eye-opener-commit/
Also on twitter:
Hover text: There are probably children out there holding down spacebar to stay warm in the winter! YOUR UPDATE MURDERS CHILDREN.
Generally you don’t need anything for child element,
Makes sense. in this case the margin was there from the “display: flex version” and I didn’t realize in the first tests.
Columns usually try to balance every columns to have same height, and last column have least items.
Which is exactly what I wanted… and was confused as to why there wasn’t an easy option. This is perfect.
Thank you very much!
(Different account, same user)
EDIT: I got it working, thank you very much!
Original message:
This is really promising, thank you very much!!
I did a quick test and the only issue is that “extra elements” are not placed from left to right, but from center to the sides. See image below.
If that’s not how it works by default, I will take a deeper look to see if that’s caused by other CSS properties I have.
For some reason, adding a left/right margin to ul li
made it behave like the previous lnked image, I don’t understand why, but removing the margin fixes it.
For those out of the loop, like me, from Wikipedia:
Captology is the study of computers as persuasive technologies.[1] This area of inquiry explores the overlapping space between persuasion in general (influence, motivation, behavior change, etc.) and computing technology.[2] This includes the design, research, and program analysis of interactive computing products (such as the Web, desktop software, specialized devices, etc.) created for the purpose of changing people’s attitudes or behaviors.[3]
B. J. Fogg in 1996 derived the term captology from an acronym: Computers As Persuasive Technologies. In 2003, he published the first book on captology, entitled Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do.[4]
Captology is not the same thing as Behavior Design, according to BJ Fogg who is the person who coined both terms and created the foundation for both areas.
Source: Help – The Jenkins
RSS Feed: https://thejenkinscomic.wordpress.com/feed/