play

Playing for money, or, The boy trader of Wall Street




play

Playing a lone hand, or, The boy who got the gold




play

Young Wild West's cowboy band, or, The tune they played in Deadwood




play

Marriage record of Player, Henry and Lawrence, Lydia P.




play

Lake Park playground




play

Lake Park playground and signage




play

Young Wild West's cowboy band, or, The tune they played in Deadwood




play

Young Wild West's silver spurs, or, Fun at Fairplay Fair




play

Bat severe acute respiratory syndrome-like coronavirus ORF3b homologues display different interferon antagonist activities




play

Continental Can Company Display




play

Prizes and promotional material on display




play

Dick Merriwell's dash, or, Playing fast and fair




play

King Tut dream book, policy player, and fortune teller




play

Avian frugivory and displays of aggression on güitite (Acnistus arborescens) in Monteverde, Costa Rica




play

The Liberty Boys' cave camp, or, Playing a great war game




play

Giant damselfish display more nest aggression towards Acapulco damselfish than conspecifics






play

Playing to Win Released in Paperback

‘A bona fide football man…Whelan should be celebrated’ The Independent

Few figures in British business or sport have enjoyed Dave Whelan’s success. As a footballer he played in all four divisions. As a businessman he created one the country’s leading high street brands. And as chairman of Wigan Athletic he’s taken his club all the way from the Third Division to the Premiership.

Dave’s story is one of ambition, enterprise and tenacity – but also of a fierce loyalty. It begins in wartime Wigan with the Whelans’ desperate struggle to survive. Dave describes the terrifying wasp-like hum of the Luftwaffe; he remembers the deathly winter of 1942, peeing on his hands to stop his fingers from freezing; admits how hunger drove ordinary families to lie, cheat and steal; and relives a remarkable reunion with the father he’d never known – a returning soldier.

In peacetime a boyhood love affair with football leads him to sign with Blackburn Rovers and when national service calls he joins the Army football team, becoming close friends with ‘Busby Babes’ Bobby Charlton and Duncan Edwards.

Then, a vicious tackle in the 1960 FA Cup final spells the twilight of his playing career – but a new dawn in business. Starting as a market trader, he breaks the mould from day one: taking on Boots single-handedly in the Appeal Court; negotiating the sale of his supermarket chain to Ken Morrison – whilst stood at a urinal; and transforming a single tackle shop in Wigan into JJB Sports, the UK’s biggest sports retailer and a £1 billion PLC.

In 1995 he used his personal fortune to buy struggling, hometown Wigan Athletic, vowing to take the Latics all the way to the Premier League. At the time he was ridiculed, but ten years later, on the final day of the Championship, Dave watched, ecstatic, as his club beat Reading 3-1 to finally secure their place.

Sometimes tragic, frequently controversial and always heartfelt, Playing to Win lifts the lid on a life lived on the pitch and in the boardroom and tells how a hungry kid from Wigan’s backstreets became a national success and a local hero. Whelan's story was a great success in hardback, turning him into a local hero and now with the new release in paperback, Playing to Win offers football fans and general readers another chance to catch this engaging read.

Dave Whelan was the founder of retailer JJB Sports and is the chairman of Wigan Athletic Football Club. All the author’s profits will go to the new Wigan Boys and Girls Club

Playing to Win is available to buy in paperback now in local bookstores and online via the following link: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dave-Whelan-Playing-Win-Autobiography/dp/1845135792/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1284559060&sr=8-2





play

Playing with CSS Grid

I’ve been working on this site, Fifty, to track a list of restaurants that I’ve been to. Each new restaurant was a list item. The list will eventually reach 50 items and a long list is long and visually uninteresting.

The first attempt was to use CSS columns. I threw on a column-width and bam. Slightly more visually interesting—at least, on larger screens. It’s still just an ordered list on smaller screens.

Lately, I’ve been wanting to play with layout that had more of a magazine feel. (I’ve also been wanting to do an actual magazine but that’s a story for another day.) I even picked up a stack of magazines from the local bookstore to get some inspiration and ideas.

One thing that I noticed is that they’ll play with grids to create visual interest or to move your eye through a more dense page.

Magazines have the advantage of a fixed size. For the web, we need to consider everything from watches to wide screens. CSS Grid seemed like a great way to play around with different options.

Repeat

Grid’s repeat function is one of my favourite tools. It’s like a built-in responsive design tool that instantly creates a flexible design. I tell it the minimum column size and then it will create the number of columns that’ll fit into the space allotted.

grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(250px, 1fr))

This, in and of itself, isn’t much over what I had before. I beefed up the style with some numbers in boxes.

Spanning Columns and Rows

To make things more interesting, I wanted to have items pop out, both in size and colour. If everything popped out, it would be overwhelming and I didn’t think it’d make the list any easier to parse.

I decided to create a pattern that would work when I had a few items and would continue to work as I completed restaurants on the adventure.

The first idea I had to make certain items stand out was to have some restaurants take up two columns and two rows and include a photo.

I specified the row and column span:

grid-row: span 2;
grid-column: span 2;

A problem reared its ugly head when the page scaled down to a single column. Why is this a problem? By spanning an item over 2 columns, there will always be 2 columns, even if I only want 1.

I’d love a way to say: grid-column: span minmax(1,2). It’d take two columns if there’s two columns; otherwise, it only takes one column.

Instead, I had to define a media query for when there was a single column and adjust the spans for that.

@media (max-width: 674px) {
    .restaurants li {
      grid-column: span 1 !important;
    }  
}

(I probably should’ve done this mobile first and defined the default as span 1 and then did a min-width for anything that wasn’t mobile. But it’s a personal site and whatevs.)

I played around with what would create the best look at all viewports and with various items. I wish I could say I had a magical formula but it was really just trial and error. I’d put something together and then resize to see how it’d look. Then play around with the numbers until I had something I liked.

The next problem was to make it looks semi-random. Or provided some alternation with where the spanned items would be placed. If I just use :nth-child then weird patterns can emerge at different viewport widths.

To solve this problem, I’d use multiple :nth-child declarations with alternating offsets. This provided the best results over all viewports.

Random colours

I was okay with that but I wanted more. I decided to use the alternate colours, green and brown, on random boxes. CSS doesn’t have a random function, which would’ve been really handy here. Instead, I tried to figure out what offset would create a pleasing pattern. Again, this was a lot of trial and error figuring out offsets that worked well.

.restaurants-devoured li:nth-child(17n-16):before { … }
.restaurants-devoured li:nth-child(11n+12):before { … }

And again, I used a similar solution to how I placed the large boxes. Offsetting numbers with multiple patterns helps create the illusion of randomness.

The Result

I’m really happy with the way the grid turned out. Probably the biggest problem is that people look for meaning in patterns. “Why are these restaurants a different size or colour? Are these the ones you like best or stood out to you for some reason?” The answer is no, there’s no significance. I thought it would look nice. Unsure how I’d tweak the design to make the insignificance more obvious.

I look forward to going to more restaurants and seeing the grid continue to fill in.





play

Three-dimensional imaging, visualization, and display 2016: 18-20 April 2016, Baltimore, Maryland, United States / Bahram Javidi, Jung-Young Son, editors ; sponsored by SPIE ; co-sponsored by NHK-ES, published by SPIE

Online Resource




play

TFT/LCD: liquid-crystal displays addressed by thin-film transistors / Toshihisa Tsukada

Online Resource




play

Music in the role-playing game: heroes & harmonies / edited by William Gibbons and Steven Reale

Lewis Library - ML3540.7.M876 2020




play

Thought and play in musical rhythm: Asian, African, and Euro-American perspectives / edited by Richard K. Wolf, Stephen Blum, and Christopher Hasty

Lewis Library - ML3850.T55 2019




play

Wuhan market had a role to play in coronavirus outbreak, more research required: WHO

The World Health Organization on Friday said that a wholesale market in Wuhan, China had played a role in the outbreak of the novel coronavirus in 201




play

India has to play its cards well in post-coronavirus world

A new war of invisible type is now going on against mankind. Each country will have to select its side. But more importantly, develop its one offense and defensive frameworks




play

Punjab: ASI shoots dead Kabaddi player, sacked

A Punjab Police assistant sub-inspector (ASI) on Thursday night shot dead a prominent Kabaddi player Arvinder Jeet Singh Padda in Lakhan Ke Padde village and injured another youth. Following arrest of the accused ASI and his associate on Friday, Kapurthala SSP Satinder Singh dismissed the former from service.




play

We’re not playing around: Board games medical and morbid




play

U.K. will pay to play in EU science research

Prime minister wants to maintain full participation in Horizon Europe




play

Biennials/triennials: conversations on the geography of itinerant display / by Léa-Catherine Szacka

Rotch Library - NA2500.S97 2019




play

Creative arts and play therapy for attachment problems / edited by Cathy A. Malchiodi, David A. Crenshaw

Malchiodi, Cathy A




play

Learning through play: Summer workshops for kids in Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkata and Bengaluru




play

Lewis Hamilton would have hit Charles Leclerc had F1 title not been in play




play

Those politicising NDTV ban issue are playing with national security: Shiv Sena




play

Congress playing politics over national security, martyrs: Venkaiah Naidu




play

The bookshop in London that lets you play bookseller for a day




play

How Kolkata’s iconic cabin restaurants played a part in the freedom struggle




play

Award-winning poet and playwright Lemn Sissay on his lost childhood and a life unmoored




play

Why young Marathi director Suraj Parasnis’ plays are drawing the young to the theatre




play

Indian table tennis player stranded in Spain




play

All Blacks coach to take pay cut, players to follow suit




play

Australian pro soccer player tests positive for coronavirus




play

India’s highest-ranked Tekken 7 athlete says lockdown has affected his gameplay




play

You have an important role to play in fight against coronavirus, PM Modi tells sportspersons




play

India fights coronavirus: Viswanathan Anand to play online exhibition chess tournament




play

Ben Stokes plays virtual Vietnam GP, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc wins on F1 esports debut




play

Tokyo Olympic flame taken off display; next stop unclear




play

Step 1 in roadmap to restart sports: Test all players, support staff, officials