4 Nattfiolen / Jordsjø By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 22 Dec 2019 07:18:54 EST MEDIA PhonCD P J767 nat Full Article
4 Speak, be silent / Chaya Czernowin, Anna Thorvaldsdóttir, Mirela Ivičević, Liza Lim, Rebecca Saunders By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 2 Feb 2020 07:58:42 EST MEDIA PhonCD R479 spe Full Article
4 The bad-tempered electronic keyboard: 24 preludes and fugues / Anthony Burgess ; Stephane Ginsburgh, keyboard By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 23 Feb 2020 07:46:19 EST MEDIA PhonCD B912 bad Full Article
4 Black composers series, 1974-1978. By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 23 Feb 2020 07:46:19 EST MEDIA PhonCD F877 bla Full Article
4 Messe C-Moll KV 427 mit Werkeinführung / Mozart By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 23 Feb 2020 07:46:19 EST MEDIA PhonCD M877 ma427 e Full Article
4 Web Tools #346 - JS Quiz, Code Editors, React, Testing Tools By mailchi.mp Published On :: Thu, 05 Mar 2020 14:00:00 +0000 Web Tools Weekly WEB VERSION Issue #346 • March 5, 2020 Advertisement Be in the Know on Emerging New Trends Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reports on the latest trends in products, markets, companies, and styles. We constantly analyze over 300,000 blogs, forums, portals and social media accounts to keep track of the emergence of new trends at the earliest stages. Try it now! If you love little JavaScript coding challenges that teach you about the basics of the language, you'll enjoy TypeOfNaN JavaScript Quizzes, a project by Nick Scialli and a number of other contributors. TypeOfNan JavaScript Quizzes Even after writing JavaScript for many years, I still find it hard to believe how many of such questions I get wrong. Ultimately, I don't think that matters unless I'm live coding in front of an audience or something. Debugging is part of the workflow so even if we get something subtle wrong initially, we can usually figure out the problem and fix it. What we are aiming for in most cases is an end result, not necessarily a process. But a little quiz like this can definitely enhance your understanding, and that can't hurt! And if you like interesting little JavaScript tidbits like I often share in this newsletter, don't forget that I've compiled all my previous tutorials with updated demos and code samples in an e-book bundle you can grab from Leanpub. Now on to this week's tools! Text Editors, IDEs, etc. Be in the Know on Emerging New Trends Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reports on the latest trends in products, markets, companies, and styles. We constantly analyze over 300,000 blogs, forums, portals and social media accounts to keep track of the emergence of new trends at the earliest stages. sponsored Debug Visualizer A VS Code extension for visualizing data structures while debugging. Works best with JavaScript/TypeScript. Also tested with C#, Java, and PHP. Works with any language that you can debug in VS Code. Lens.vim An automatic window resizing plugin for Vim. Automatically resizes windows when their content exceeds their window dimensions, but does so respecting some minimum and maximum resize bounds. guijs A multi-purpose native Windows and Mac app to help you manage your development projects. Has features for projects, package installation, script management, and more. OpenChakra Full-featured visual editor and code generator for React using Chakra UI (the React component library). Autocode An online IDE for connecting APIs together, for makers and developers alike. Codecov A code coverage solution to improve your code review workflow and quality. Provides highly integrated tools to group, merge, archive, and compare coverage reports. CodeinCloud Provides managed and dedicated cloud IDEs, hosted private cloud solutions and DevOp pipelines. Users can access on-demand IDEs for development. Markdown App Online or native WYSIWYG editor for Markdown for Mac, Windows, and Linux. iHateRegex Interactive regex cheatsheet for searching for common or complex regular expression solutions. Peacock VS Code plugin to subtly change the color of your workspace. Ideal when you have multiple VS Code instances and you want to quickly identify which is which. Courses by Wes Bos (Master Packages!) on Sale for $97: Advanced React (68 HD Videos) ES6+ for Everyone (77 HD Videos) Beginner JavaScript (88 HD Videos) React for Beginners (29 HD Videos) Testing and Debugging Tools >&campaign_id=f4daed5baf&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="padding-bottom: 12px;max-width: 568px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="568"> Haxor Helps you support and learn from developers as they build with your products. See how developers use your product by watching their screens, code changes, and open applications. Kasaya A "WYSIWYG" (kind of) scripting language and run-time for browser automation. Blisk Now at version 12+. A developer-oriented browser that provides businesses with a development workspace for teams and freelancers to develop and test modern web applications twice as fast. Hexometer All-in-one website maintenance and performance monitoring tool that continuously monitors and reports 2800+ data points. Beautify.log A Node.js library to beautify console.logs with colors, making them easier to read and more useful. virtual-module Evaluate a module in a sandbox with in-memory module resolution. findead Dead React components finder to find components no longer in use. ci-detect Detect what kind of CI environment the program is in (e.g. Jenkins, GitLab, Netflify, Travis-CI, etc). Zoya A highly composable logging library written in TypeScript, used for both client and server applications. React Tools >&campaign_id=f4daed5baf&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="padding-bottom: 12px;max-width: 568px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="568"> >&campaign_id=f4daed5baf&device=mobile&v=0.14" style="width: 100%;max-width: 386px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="386"> Edtr.io A customizable edit-in-place WYSIWYG component for enabling user-editable pages in React. resourcerer Declarative data-fetching and caching framework for REST APIs with React. react-typical React typing animation in ~400 bytes of JavaScript. React Tiny Fab A tiny (~700 byte gzip'd) WAI-ARIA compliant floating action button for React. The home page has the button working in the bottom right corner if you want to see what this does. react-roughviz a thin React wrapper around roughViz, the library for creating sketchy/hand-drawn styled charts in the browser. react-ga A JavaScript module that can be used to include Google Analytics tracking code in a website or app that uses React for its front-end codebase. React Awesome Slider React content transition slider. A 60fps, lightweight, performant component that renders an animated set of production-ready general purpose sliders. React Tippy A lightweight tooltip library for React based on Tippy.js and powered by Popper.js. react-adal Azure Active Directory Library (ADAL) support for React. iframe-resizer-react The official React interface for iFrame Resizer, a library that auto-resizes height and width of same- and cross-domain iframes to fit their contained content. React Puzzle Confirm This is kind of odd. It's a modal to "confirm" (kind of like a captcha) by fitting a puzzle piece using a slider. A Tweet for Thought According to reports, Corona beer sales are not down due to confusion with Coronavirus (despite some false claims). But I did like this tweet by Kelly Vaughn on that subject. Got a Tool Suggestion? Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email. Before I Go... Speaking of code editors, Codewerks is a new project that is running a Kickstarter for "software using a streamlined iPad interface that gives you all the flexibility of a Linux machine." Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading! Keep tooling, Louis webtoolsweekly.com @WebToolsWeekly PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly WTW on YouTube Full Article
4 Web Tools #347 - JS Testing, Media Tools, Git/CLI Tools, Uncats By mailchi.mp Published On :: Thu, 12 Mar 2020 13:00:00 +0000 Web Tools Weekly WEB VERSION Issue #347 • March 12, 2020 The following intro is a paid product review for Wallaby, a developer productivity tool that runs your JavaScript and TypeScript tests immediately as you type. Code testing is a huge part of the current JavaScript landscape, so if it's crucial that you run tests on your code base regularly, you'll love Wallaby. Wallaby is available as an extension for VS Code, JetBrains Editors, Visual Studio, Sublime Text, and Atom. I'll demonstrate here how powerful Wallaby is by showing you how it works within VS Code. Once you've installed and configured Wallaby, you can open any project and run it via its Command Palette, shown here: Wallaby's Command Palette in VS Code When you choose the Start command, you can open any JavaScript or TypeScript file and you'll see something like the following: Wallaby's code coverage and logs Notice a few things: The colored squares on the left indicate code coverage. These squares can be grey, yellow, green, pink, or red, indicating various levels of coverage from your tests. The lines that contain console.logs have their outputs displayed to the right. These get updated in real time as you write or edit your code (similar to Quokka.js, another tool by the same developers that I've reviewed previously) As you can see, if you're accustomed to using a lot of console.logs and adding breakpoints to your code, Wallaby is going to dramatically increase your productivity. You get that feedback immediately within the code, without actually executing it in a browser or other environment. In other words, your code editor is the console, with the bonus of everything displaying in its immediate code context. When it's running, Wallaby displays the number of failed and passed tests in the status bar: Wallaby displays passed/failed tests in the status bar Clicking on the failed and passed tests in the status bar will open Wallaby's Output Channel, with a little more detail on what's happening with your tests: Wallaby's Output Panel One of the features that has caught the attention of many developers is Wallaby's Time Travel Debugger, which was added to Wallaby in December. This feature allows you to move forward or backwards through your code to understand what led to a specific bug. Wallaby's Debugger View You can start the debugger on a line of code where your test begins, or on any line executed by one of your tests. Once begun, you can run a number of different commands to get to the root of a particular issue. This is helped out by the Debugger View that opens in the left panel. Pretty powerful! And again, part of the power is that this is all available right inside your code base – no need to open up a separate environment like the developer tools in your browser. There's a lot more to Wallaby that I haven't mentioned here, but this should be enough to give you a taste of some of the primary features of the tool, which is free to try. Check out the docs for more on what I've only briefly touched on here. Now on to this week's tools! Media Tools (SVG, Video, etc) Iconset Free, cross-platform SVG icon organizer app for designers, developers or product teams. Works on both Mac and Windows. Open Peeps A hand-drawn illustration library to create scenes of people, each drawing available in PNG or SVG format. Cosha JavaScript utility to add colored shadows to your images. Use via defaults or customize via the API. Filmage Screen Screen recorder and video editor for Mac. All-in-one video toolbox that lets you record HD video, edit video, make animated GIFs, convert video, and more. Biteable Video making platform with ready templates for creating marketing videos for different social platforms, industries, etc. Unscreen Online tool that uses AI to remove the background from an uploaded video. SequenceDiagram.org Online tool to build sequence diagrams using a drag-and-drop interface, useful for presentations. Faux Code Generator Input real code via a Gist URL and this tool will produce an SVG version of the code in a mock format, for possible use in slides, etc. Smithsonian Open Access Download, share, and reuse millions of the Smithsonian’s images. Use in commercial projects without attribution or written permission (although you should read the FAQ for copyright considerations). Panolens.js Flexible, event-driven, WebGL-based JavaScript panorama viewer built on Three.js. Fontice.com Fastest browser-based WebP converter. Free JPG/PNG to WebP conversion without uploading to any other servers. Heroicons A set of free MIT-licensed high-quality SVG icons for UI development Git, GitHub, and CLI Tools React Chat Tutorial Quickly build chat leveraging Stream's Chat API. Our comprehensive React components will get you up and running fast. sponsored CLUI A collection of JavaScript libraries for building command-line interfaces with context-aware autocomplete. actions-comment-run GitHub action to execute any script in an issue or pull request comment. tickgit Allows you to do project management in your codebase with TODO comments. grep.app Search across a half million Git repos, with options for case sensitivity, regex, and whole words only. GitHub Data Populate data from GitHub into Figma mockups. GitHub CLI In case you missed it, this is GitHub's official command line tool. Octomments GitHub issues as a comment plugin. Gitpod Launches ready-to-code dev environments for your GitHub or GitLab project with a single click. GistPad VS Code extension for managing and sharing code snippets, notes and interactive samples using GitHub Gists. paint-github This is kind of humourous. It's a Chrome or Firefox extension that adds a feature to GitHub comments that lets you "draw" your comment. The Uncategorizables React Chat Tutorial Quickly build chat leveraging Stream's Chat API. Our comprehensive React components will get you up and running fast. sponsored Outgrow Platform to build interactive content like calculators, quizzes, chatbots, surveys, and more, for marketing purposes. unavatar API that searches common social media platforms to get a user's avatar image by means of a username. Voiceflow Design, prototype and build voice apps. Collaboratively design, prototype, and build Alexa Skills and Google Actions, without coding. Limio Sell subscriptions and recurring products, build landing pages, checkouts, self-service portals, and more, with no code. ResponseVault Alpha. Create a database application with a drag and drop form builder. Import your own JavaScript UI widgets. Awesome JS A visual tool to look for popular JavaScript packages, categorized. Advanced App Development Cost Calculator Seems to be mainly for large corporate apps because the estimated prices are fairly high. Nots.io Documentation tool for development teams. Access docs from your code and always know if something is obsolete. Opensource Buiders Find open-source alternatives for your favorite apps. damnshort Short dot-com names, suitable for branding, available for sale for $195 each. A Tweet for Thought I think it's safe to say many of us are punk rock programmers. Send Me Your Tools! Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email. Before I Go... If you love numbers and Math, you'll adore MetaNumbers. It's an encyclopedia providing all sorts of super-boring info on any positive integer you enter. To me this is kind of like Brian Regan's comedy bit on refrigerators, but I know a lot of you might find it interesting. Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading! Keep tooling, Louis webtoolsweekly.com @WebToolsWeekly PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly Full Article
4 Web Tools #348 - Remote Work, CSS Tools, React, Build Tools By mailchi.mp Published On :: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 13:30:00 +0000 Web Tools Weekly WEB VERSION Issue #348 • March 19, 2020 Advertisement via Syndicate Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use. Try Team.video for FREE! What's happening around the world right now is unprecedented, but I don't think I have to tell you that. Wherever you are, I hope you and our family members are healthy and I hope you've been able to continue some semblance of work, assuming you're able to do your job remotely, as most developers probably are. I think most of us that didn't previously work remotely will be looking for or recommending new tools for our remote teams, and even the occasional article on remote work life and work culture will be greatly beneficial. Productivity is essential during the current pandemic Over the past year, I've been curating a second newsletter that you might enjoy if you've been newly converted to remote work. It's called Tech Productivity, and it's always a brief newsletter with about 10-12 links that include productivity-related tools (like video conferencing, Slack plugins, note taking apps, etc.) as well as productivity-related articles. Some of the articles cover things like brain science while others are just simple tip-based posts on freelancing and working on side projects. Basically, any kind of content that can help tech workers be more productive. And if you're missing the "productivity tools" category that I used to include in this newsletter, well those tools are now in Tech Productivity, so this one can stay focused on developer-related tools. Now on to this week's tools! CSS and HTML Tools Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use. via Syndicate Remake A framework to build web apps and prototypes using nothing but HTML. Editable areas, sortable items, sign-up/log in functionality, and more. Aeon A lightweight date time picker built with web components that can be used anywhere. Selectors Explained Interactive online tool to translate CSS selectors into plain English. Utopia A one-stop resource for implementing fluid responsive designs, allowing you to elegantly scale type and space without breakpoints. Neumorphism.io Generate CSS for elements that have 'soft UI' (i.e. 3D box shadows and lighting). PurgeCSS Now at version 2+. Too to remove unused CSS as part of your development workflow. Leonardo Generate colors based on a desired contrast ratio. Tailwind Colors Color configuration tool for Tailwind CSS, the popular CSS utility framework. FasterChrome A Chrome extension that implements instant.page, the popular link pre-loading library, to make page loads and navigation feel faster. Generate Color Simple online tool to generate a graduated color palette from one or two predefined color. React Tools Tech Productivity Newsletter A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive. promoted usePlaceCage A React hook for placecage.com, the image placeholder service that inserts images of, you guessed it, Nicolas Cage. React Query Devtools Debugging tool for React Query, the library of React hooks for fetching, caching, and updating asynchronous data in React. Venti A global state solution for React. React Nice Dates A responsive, touch-friendly, and modular date picker library. React Google Static Maps A React wrapper for Google's Static Maps API. Craft.js In Beta. A React framework for building powerful and feature-rich drag-n-drop page editors. react-suspense-fetch A primitive library for React Suspense Render-as-You-Fetch. Drab A React CLI that makes it easier to do monotonous tasks like creating a component or page with styles, creating a service, or creating a hook. use-axios-client Make requests with Axios (the promise-based HTTP client for the browser and node) using React hooks. use-tensorflow A React hook for TensorFlow.js (the JavaScript library for machine learning to detect objects and poses easily. Build Tools, Bundlers, etc. Tech Productivity Newsletter A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive. promoted esbuild An extremely fast JavaScript bundler and minifier. Built with Go, but I don't believe that is a barrier to entry for those who don't use Go. Create Next App The easiest way to create a React app with server-side rendering via Next.js. Yarn The popular package manager alternative to npm is now at version 2+. why-npm-i-so-long A small utility to help troubleshoot when installing npm dependencies takes a long time. vue-loader A webpack loader for Vue single-file components. svelvet A CLI Svelte compiler and watcher that works with Snowpack, the popular build tool. one-click.js One click, offline, CommonJS modules in the browser. Gasket Framework maker for JavaScript applications, building and scaffolding boilerplate as well as essential elements for libraries and layers of apps to integrate together during runtime. antd-dayjs-webpack-plugin A webpack plugin for Day.js, the immutable date library alternative to Moment.js. shoulders Quickly view a list of open issues for the open-source packages that your project depends on. A Tweet for Thought As Kelly Vaughn points out, the current pandemic might lead to some interesting new changes to the work force, even after things have improved and things start running normally again. Send Me Your Tools! Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email. Before I Go... With some extra home time nowadays, you might enjoy Radiooooo, the musical time machine. Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading! Keep tooling, Louis webtoolsweekly.com @WebToolsWeekly PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly Full Article
4 Web Tools #349 - DOM Snippets, Front-end Frameworks, Media, Uncats By mailchi.mp Published On :: Thu, 26 Mar 2020 14:00:00 +0000 Web Tools Weekly WEB VERSION Issue #349 • March 26, 2020 Advertisement via Syndicate Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use. Try Team.video for FREE! Although I often include quick DOM scripting tips in the intro of this newsletter, for this week, I'm just going to point you to a great little resource that was sent to me by reader Phuoc Nguyen: HTML DOM It's more or less a repository of basic, intermediate, and advanced native DOM scripting snippets. HTML DOM: A resource of native DOM snippets Here are some of the advanced and intermediate examples: Make a draggable element Resize columns of a table Sort a table by clicking its headers Calculate the size of the scrollbar Communicate between an iframe and parent window There are more than 80 tips currently listed and I'm sure he'll add more later. Even if you don't necessarily use any of the snippets in a real project right away, there are plenty of little coding tidbits you can glean form the example code, which is all just vanilla JavaScript with no library or framework involved. So check out HTML DOM, I'm sure you'll have lots to investigate! Now on to this week's tools! Front-end Frameworks Have Happier, More Productive Video Meetings Team.video makes it easier and faster for remote teams to work together by offering user friendly video meetings with agendas, collaborative notes, and emoji responses. No download required and it’s free to use. via Syndicate chakra-ui-vue A set of accessible and composable Vue components that you can use to build your favourite applications and sites. Pixel Lite A beautifully crafted, responsive UI kit based on Bootstrap 4 that includes 100 components, 3 plugins, and 3 example pages. next-typescript-materialui-jest-starter Very opinionated starter boilerplate for projects based on Next.js, setup with Typescript, Material-UI, and Jest. React SaaS Template Template for building a SaaS app or admin website using React + Material-UI. web3-react A simple, extensible, dependency-minimized framework for building modern Ethereum decentralized apps. Tailwind UI A UI components library, crafted by the creators of Tailwind CSS. neo.mjs A Web Workers-driven UI framework. LitElement A simple base class for creating fast, lightweight web components. Makes it easy to define web components – ideal for building a UI design system. Ionic React React version of Ionic Framework. 100+ mobile optimized React UI components. Standard React tooling with react-dom. Accessible Components Scott O'Hara's repo that lists all the accessible widgets and components he's built. StarAdmin A free responsive admin template built with Bootstrap 4. Media Tools Tech Productivity Newsletter A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive. promoted Croppola Upload a photo and this tool will use AI to crop the photo for you automatically, or you can crop it manually and download the result. Image to Colors Online tool that extracts colors from any photo on upload. Nuxt Optimized Images Automatically optimizes images used in Nuxt.js projects (JPEG, PNG, SVG, WebP and GIF). Twilio Video React App Demonstrates a multi-party video application built with twilio-video.js and Create React App. react-particle-image React component to render images as interactive particles. There's an interactive demo using the React logo that's pretty cool. CoreUI Icons Premium designed free icon for web and mobile, available in SVG, webfont, and raster formats. DotMatrix.js A small, performant class-based, dot matrix library with animated movements that respond to mouse/touch events. react-calendar-heatmap A calendar heatmap component built on SVG, inspired by GitHub’s commit calendar graph. Chessboard Image Modify chess pieces on a virtual chess board, to create chess positions, then download the image for use wherever you want. Might be cool for a chess tutorial website or blog. Video Language A language for making movies. Combines the power of a traditional video editor with the capabilities of a full programming language. The Uncategorizables Tech Productivity Newsletter A brief newsletter featuring tools and articles for remote work, work culture, learning science, and more – all to help you be more productive. promoted Mailcoach A self-hosted email list manager. It integrates with services like Amazon SES, Mailgun, Postmark, or Sendgrid to send out mailings affordably. Backstage Open-source developer portal that puts the developer experience first by means of a a unified front end for all your infrastructure tooling. dstack.ai Collaborative data exploration. Enables individual data scientists and their teams to publish, share, and track data visualizations. TAGX Allows you to create video highlights and annotate the interesting parts of a video. Enter a YouTube, Vimeo, or direct video link to start annotating. cs.opensource.google A search engine to search Google's open source projects (Angular, Dart, Flutter, Go, etc). Cotter One-click secure phone number login for your apps. Phrase Automate localization processes. Edit language files online with your team of translators or order translations into more than 60 languages. It's a Live Lets you mimic a live coding presentation by prerecording the presentation, which gets triggered by random keystrokes as if you were really coding. EasyCSV Import spreadsheets into your App, Zapier, Google Sheets, Salesforce, or any public API in minutes. Pico Platform to create paywalled content, subscriptions, newsletters, etc. A Tweet for Thought This underappreciated Tweet by Adam Greenough should be the dev-related Tweet of the year. Send Me Your Tools! Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email. Before I Go... If you've got a lot of extra time at home (and you should!) you might like Codepip. There you'll find a number of different interactive online games that teach you various aspects of front-end development. Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading! Keep tooling, Louis webtoolsweekly.com @WebToolsWeekly PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly Full Article
4 Web Tools #354 - React Tools, Image/Video Tools, Uncats By mailchi.mp Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 14:00:00 +0000 Web Tools Weekly WEB VERSION Issue #354 • April 30, 2020 >&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="width: 100%;max-width: 600px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="600"> >&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=mobile&v=0.14" style="width: 100%;max-width: 414px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="414"> In previous tips I introduced a basic HTML Drag and Drop API example along with some things you can do with the dataTransfer() object. This tip will focus on the different events you can listen for during a drag operation. There are 7 drag events that are supported across all modern browsers. They are: dragstart - A dragging operation begins (on dragged item) drag - A drag operation is in process (on dragged item) dragenter - A dragged item enters a valid drop target (on drop target) dragover - A valid drop target is dragged over (on drop target) dragleave - A dragged item leaves a valid drop target (on drop target) drop - A dragged item is dropped on a valid drop target (on drop target) dragend - A drag operation ends (on dragged item) The notes in parentheses next to each bullet point indicate where the event listener would be placed when listening for the event. As usual, this is always more interesting with an interactive example, so here's a CodePen demo that illustrates all 7 drag events by printing each one on the page as the event occurs. Some events, of course, occur simultaneously. Also, in order to see the dragleave event, you have to 'leave' the drop target before entering it again to complete the drop. The demo displays each message once but it should be noted that the drag and dragover events fire continuously while the item is dragged or while the drop target is being dragged over. The rest of the events occur one time each then won't occur again until another drag operation is initiated, ended, or another drop target is accessed, etc. It should also be noted that MDN's article that lists the different events also lists a dragexit event that has some browser support. But it's recommended to use the dragleave event (which is apparently the equivalent) instead. Now on to this week's tools! React Tools >&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=desktop&v=0.14" style="padding-bottom: 12px;max-width: 568px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="568"> >&campaign_id=02f2bef915&device=mobile&v=0.14" style="width: 100%;max-width: 386px;border: 0;height: auto;line-height: 100%;outline: none;text-decoration: none;-ms-interpolation-mode: bicubic;" width="386"> Enform Handle React forms with joy. Helps you manage form validation, dirty form submission and reset, field values and changes, and error messages. react-letter A React component that allows for an easy display of HTML e-mail content with automatic sanitization. Support for features should match what is supported by Gmail. useCustomHook A starter template for creating a new React Hook. react-easy-state Simple React state management made with ES6 Proxies. Crank.js Write JSX-driven components with functions, promises, and generators. uses the same JSX syntax and diffing algorithm popularized by React, allowing you to write HTML-like code directly in your JavaScript. use-scroll-to-bottom React Hook that uses IntersectionObserver to detect when the user has scrolled to the bottom of the page. React Cool Portal A React hook for Portals that helps you render children (e.g. modals, dropdowns, tooltips, etc) into a DOM node that exists outside the DOM hierarchy of the parent component. React State Selector Performant, type safe and easy to use React global state manager. React Table Now at version 7+. Hooks for building lightweight, fast and extendable data grids for React. react-curved-arrow Use nice curvy arrows in your React project. Great for interactive tutorials and product tours. react-enroute Now at version 4+. React router with a small footprint for modern browsers. codelift A "No Code" GUI for your React app. 50% Off Courses by Wes Bos (Master Packages!): Beginner JavaScript (88 HD Videos) React for Beginners (29 HD Videos) ES6+ for Everyone (77 HD Videos) Advanced React (68 HD Videos) Media Tools (SVG, Audio, Video, etc.) British Museum Collection The British Museum has released 1.9 million images, most with a CC 4.0 license. Rickshaw A JavaScript toolkit for creating interactive time series graphs. Trianglify Algorithmically generated triangle art that you can render in a project using a simple API, or generate and download using the online tool. Plotly.js Built on top of D3.js and stack.gl, a high-level, declarative charting library with over 40 chart types, including scientific charts, 3D graphs, statistical charts, SVG maps, financial charts, and more. Image Cropper A quick and easy way to resize any image (PNG, JPG, SVG, GIF, and WEBP supported). PicsArt Photo Editor More than a dozen online photo editing tools including duotone effects, overlays, filters, background editing, and more. BlurHash A compact representation of a placeholder for an image. Replace boring grey boxes with beautiful states for your placeholders. Image Compare Viewer A vanilla JavaScript, dependency-free component that adds an interactive image diff viewer to any page. The on page demos are pretty cool! OpenJSCAD.org A set of modular, browser and command line tools for creating parametric 2D & 3D designs with JavaScript code. Vime Open source video player library focused on giving users and developers the best possible media player experience. Supports HTML5, Dash, YouTube, Vimeo, and Dailymotion. Mixkit Music Free stock music clips that are royalty-free for commercial projects. The Uncategorizables Exchange Rates API A simple and lightweight free service for current and historical foreign exchange rates. Amazon AppFlow A fully managed integration service that enables you to securely transfer data between SaaS apps like Salesforce, Marketo, Slack, and ServiceNow, and AWS services like Amazon S3, in just a few clicks. Digital Brain Auto-generates your basic documentation and then provides a beautiful, fast, and collaborative interface for your team to complete your documentation process. Permanent.org A new non-profit, secure cloud storage service with a focus on privacy that offers a free gigabyte to start. Flow A fast, secure, and developer-friendly blockchain built to support the next generation of games, apps, and the digital assets that power them. Phelia A reactive Slack application framework. Build interactive Slack apps without webhooks or JSON headache. If you know React, you know how to make a Slack app. hCaptcha A drop-in replacement for reCAPTCHA (you can switch within minutes) that protects user privacy, rewards websites, and helps companies get their data labeled. markmap-lib Visualize your Markdown with mindmaps. Plausible Simple and privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. A lightweight and open-source site analytics tool that doesn’t use cookies and is fully compliant with GDPR, CCPA, and PECR. Public APIs A collection of free public APIs for software developers, categorized. A Tweet for Thought Technology has changed the way we behave, as this thread demonstrates. Got a Tool Suggestion? Made something? Send links via Direct Message on Twitter @WebToolsWeekly (details here). No tutorials or articles, please. If you have any suggestions for improvement or corrections, feel free to reply to this email. Before I Go... If you're a big Seinfeld fan like I am, you'll love this: Seinfeld Adventure. Right now it's just a pitch for a game. I seriously doubt Jerry and his producers will approve this, but it's pretty cool to see what it would be like to play "a game about nothing". Thanks to everyone for subscribing and reading! Keep tooling, Louis webtoolsweekly.com @WebToolsWeekly PayPal.me/WebToolsWeekly WTW on YouTube Full Article
4 [ASAP] Efficient Synthesis of 1,4-Thiazepanones and 1,4-Thiazepanes as 3D Fragments for Screening Libraries By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 04:00:00 GMT Organic LettersDOI: 10.1021/acs.orglett.0c01230 Full Article
4 HCL Tech Q4 net up 24.3% to Rs 3,154 cr, sees short-term impact of COVID-19 By Published On :: Thursday, May 07, 2020, 18:29 +0530 Shares of the company were trading at Rs 517.80, marginally lower than the previous close on BSE. Full Article
4 The desert and its seed / Jorge Barón Biza ; translated from the Spanish by Camilo Ramirez ; afterword by Nora Avaro By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 4 Aug 2019 07:38:14 EDT Browsery PQ7798.12.A678 D4713 2018 Full Article
4 The dog: a natural history / Ádám Miklósi with Tamás Faragó [and five others] By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 20 Oct 2019 06:52:00 EDT Browsery SF422.5.M545 2018a Full Article
4 Linkbait 43 By www.quirksmode.org Published On :: Tue, 25 Jun 2019 14:39:49 +0100 Back from hiatus. I’m starting up serious planning and writing of “CSS for JavaScripters” so this is a CSS-heavy linkbait, mostly filled with reminders to myself. Every-layout.dev is easily the most important CSS resource to be unveiled in recent months. (In fact, it was unveiled at CSS Day, which was a nice touch.) Serious, in-depth, algorithmic discussion of several popular CSS layouts and how to construct them with care. The 2019 State of CSS survey results. Contains several interesting gems. The figure that really surprised me is that 85% of the respondents is male. I thought CSS had a slightly higher ratio of women. Then again, maybe it’s the marketing of the survey that caused the disparity. (I never heard of it until I saw the results.) Or my gender guesstimate is just wrong. The CSS mindset: [...] the declarative nature of CSS makes it particularly difficult to grasp, especially if you think about it in terms of a “traditional” programming language. Other programming languages often work in controlled environments, like servers. They expect certain conditions to be true at all times [...] CSS on the other hand works in a place that can never be fully controlled, so it has to be flexible by default. It’s less about “programming the appearance” and more about translating a design into a set of rules that communicate the intent behind it. Leave enough room, and the browser will do the heavy lifting for you. Interesting turn of phrase that echoes my own thoughts on the subject. Expect to find this in The Book. Excellent overview of render blocking in CSS and how to avoid it. It’s simple, really, but there will be countless CSS programmers who need this sort of tutorials. Will also go in The Book. An older article, but Harry Roberts’s Cyclomatic Complexity: Logic in CSS remains one cornerstone of CSS understanding, and teaching. This one is mostly meant to remind myself of its existence; you probably already read it. Facebook lost 20% of its usage (likes, shares, and such) since the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke. This sounds great in theory, but what if the people who are harder to dupe are the ones who stop using Facebook, while the more gullible people remain? The average Facebook user would become more stupid, and Facebook would become even better at influencing its users. Also, Facebook should be regulated. Not as a media company, but as a drug. We all know third-party scripts are among the worst offenders when it comes to website performance. But how bad is it actually, and who are the worst culprits? Third-party Web provides useful answers and treeviews. Excellent overview of WebViews, their purpose, their tricky bits, and their diversity. Required reading for all five people who care about the browser market. [In Dutch] List of websites closed on Sundays. In an ultimate meta-move this list is only available on Sundays. (And why are these websites closed? Because their proprietors subscribe to the strict Dutch Reformed view that Sundays are not for media enjoyment. See this article about the SGP political party for more background information.) You shouldn’t do thing with tool, you should do other thing Have a tip for the next Linkbait? Or a comment on this one? Let me know (or here or here). Full Article Linkbait
4 CSS4 is here! By www.quirksmode.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Jan 2020 16:38:04 +0100 I think that CSS would be greatly helped if we solemnly state that “CSS4 is here!” In this post I’ll try to convince you of my viewpoint. I am proposing that we web developers, supported by the W3C CSS WG, start saying “CSS4 is here!” and excitedly chatter about how it will hit the market any moment now and transform the practice of CSS. Of course “CSS4” has no technical meaning whatsoever. All current CSS specifications have their own specific versions ranging from 1 to 4, but CSS as a whole does not have a version, and it doesn’t need one, either. Regardless of what we say or do, CSS 4 will not hit the market and will not transform anything. It also does not describe any technical reality. Then why do it? For the marketing effect. I think that announcing a new CSS version will bring desperately-needed attention to CSS, and will help the people evangelising CSS in the field make an impression on web developers who are otherwise not very interested in it. Web developers are profoundly influenced by the cult of the new. The best way of getting their attention is announcing a new version of something, and that’s exactly what we would be doing here. I have been given to understand that the CSS WG might be willing to support this narrative and confirm the existence of CSS4 — if we web developers can make a strong enough case that it will be beneficial to CSS. Today I am starting to build such a case. Head, torso, long tail Influenced by Ilya Grigorik’s excellent performance.now() presentation, I segment web developers into a head, a torso, and a long tail. CSS4 would help the latter two groups. The head consists of clued-in web developers who closely follow what’s going on in our field The torso consists of those that have some clue what they’re doing and read up on their craft from time to time The long tail covers a wide range of web developers, from those who are fairly close to the torso to those that churn out interminable sites without understanding why using 7.8M of JavaScript per site is a really bad idea. (These segments form by self-selection. Any web developer can become part of the head, but it takes more effort than being part of the long tail. Not everyone feels the need to put in that extra effort, and thus the three segments come into being.) CSS is, and has always been, part of the head’s world. The head does not need CSS4 because it already follows CSS closely, goes to conferences, reads blogposts and articles about upcoming features, and knows what’s happening. The torso does this to a much lesser extent, and the long tail doesn’t care one way or the other — they found all the answers when they selected their current toolchain. It’s them that we seek to influence by announcing CSS4. In practice, all current outreach efforts such as conference presentations and blog posts or articles are aimed at the head. Not that the torso or long tail wouldn’t understand them, but they generally don’t seek them out. I would like to give them an incentive to do so. In my opinion, “CSS4 is here!” would provide that incentive. What do you think? If you read this blog post you likely belong to the head. Based on your own experience you might not see the point of CSS4 because it doesn’t solve your problems. But CSS4 is not aimed at you; it’s aimed at the torso and the long tail. When considering the pros and cons of CSS4, don’t reason from your own experience. Please put yourself in the shoes of someone whose time is limited, or who has never learned to pay a lot of attention to technical evangelisation. Will they be helped? On the other hand, if your job, or your passion, includes evangelising CSS, you should definitely reason from your own experience. Will slapping on a “CSS4 compatible” tag help you? So these are today’s questions. Will the announcement of CSS4 — new! shiny! cool! — spur on the torso and long tail to learn more about CSS? Will it help those who are already putting a lot of time and sweat into technical articles and presentations to reach a wider audience? Will it make a difference? I think it will. What do you think? And if you agree with me, would you be willing to write something about it? That would show the CSS WG that there is developer support for this idea. Full Article CSS4
4 What is CSS4? By www.quirksmode.org Published On :: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 12:27:00 +0100 If we want CSS4 to be a thing it is necessary to define it a little more. However, that does not mean it’s necessary to divide all existing CSS modules into CSS3 and CSS4 buckets. This article discusses these issues, and goes through some of the feedback to my original article. Responses My article led to a few responses. Louis Lazaris disagrees with me, and thinks we should stick to the individual modules, as we do today. I leave it to Dan Q to summarise my disagreement: Nobody’s going to buy a book that promises to teach them “CSS3 Selectors Level 3, Fonts Level 3, Writing Modes Level 3, and Containment Level 1”: that title’s not even going to fit on the cover. But if we wrapped up a snapshot of what’s current and called it CSS4… now that’s going to sell. In a comment, Ilya Streltsin points out that there are too many CSS modules, which makes them less suitable for high-level teaching and marketing. A list of twelve modules is inherently more boring than “CSS4.” Still, Louis isn’t entirely wrong. We need to say something about what CSS4 is. Chris Coyier and Timothy Miller have some ideas that I’ll get back to below. I think we should pick two or so modules that would become poster children for “CSS4,” mostly to raise awareness and enthusiasm among web developers who don’t follow CSS too closely. CSS4 is undefined Picking two or so modules is not the same as going through all of CSS and deciding which parts are CSS3 and which are CSS4. Therefore Johan Ronsse’s fears are unfounded: As a teacher of sorts, I for one don’t want to explain the difference between CSS3 and CSS4 to junior web devs. There is simply no point. CSS is just CSS. We should be happy that it’s stable. We should be happy that we dropped the 3. CSS modules are not CSS3 or CSS4; they’re just CSS. The term “CSS4” is meant to draw people to your teaching, but once you have their attenton you largely drop the term and just teach them what they need to know. Instead of attempting to define it, we should airily refer to CSS4 but be rather vague about what it means exactly. That allows people to project their own feelings and ideas onto it. CSS4 is here, and it means whatever you want it to mean. Now come and learn. It’s cool! Remember: this is a marketing exercise; not a technical description of CSS. Setting minds at ease Nonetheless, in order to prove that CSS4 is cool we need a few example modules. “Learn CSS4! It allows you to do X and Y!” Which modules should we pick? When I was a history teacher, long ago, I learned one valuable trick: when writing tests for students, always start with a simple question that all of them know the answer to. The purpose is to put the students’ minds at ease and make them feel they know at least something about the topic. For instance, if they have to learn the chapter on the French Revolution, start the test by asking “In which year did the French Revolution take place?” The chapter prominently states the answer, 1789, in the first two paragraphs, so you can be reasonably certain that almost all students have actually learned this by heart. So they’ll sigh a breath of relief, give the correct answer, and gain more confidence for the rest of the test. I feel we should do something similar f0r CSS4. One of the modules we tout as “CSS4” should be one that even people who’re not all that good in CSS have used and know a little bit. That’ll make them feel that they already know something about the subject, so the rest shouldn’t be too hard. It will draw them in. CSS4 — the known parts Chris Coyier created a draft list, and Timothy Miller added a few ideas. The first module Chris mentions is Flexbox, but he notes it may be too old. Sadly, I must concur. Flexbox would have been a brilliant “set-your-mind-at-ease-CSS4-is-not-as-hard-as-you-think” module, because almost everyone has heard of it, and plenty of people who are otherwise not terribly into CSS have used it. Unfortunately it’s really too old: if we’d use it as our poster child people might lose the suspension of disbelief that’s necessary for the CSS4 trick to work. “Huh? Flexbox? But that’s been around for ages!” Grid is the obvious next option. It’s not too old, and some people have heard of it and use it. On the other hand, I learned doing research for the book that there are some web developers who feel they don’t have to learn Grid because they already know Flexbox. And both are for layout, right? So why learn two? As an argument this does not make any sense, but the fact that this ideas is floating out there means using Grid as a poster child might backfire. (I’m not sure; I’m just guessing here. But my gut feeling says that Grid is the wrong module.) Update: I changed my mind: grid should definitely be part of CSS4. For now I settled on CSS custom properties (or variables) as my choice. They are in use, but they’re not yet old news. More importantly, custom properties allow local scope in CSS, and that is quite important to JavaScripters and might draw them to the right articles and teachings. I’m not quite sure yet if this is the best module — I’m open to arguments. But I have to say something, and this is where I stand right now. CSS4 — the unknown parts In addition to the well-known set-your-mind-at-ease module we should also have soemthing that’s really, really new. The idea would be to tout two modules as “CSS4.” People would lose their fear after recognizing custom properties, while the other module would intrigue them, and they’d be excited to learn about it. But which module? I’m not sure. Chris mentions Houdini, CSS nesting, variable fonts, and offset paths as possibilities. Timothy adds media queries level 4 to the list. Chris also says: Lemme just say I will personally spearhead this thing if container queries can get done and we make that a part of it. Container queries would be suitable. Developers who predominantly use JavaScript would like to have them. Unfortunately they’re not there yet. So although they’re an excellent choice for a future module (“CSS4 will eventually include container queries”), they won’t help us right now. So ... does anyone have a useful suggestion for a new CSS module that is not well known yet, applies to more than just a subset of CSS, and that we can start teaching right now? (Lack of general applicability is my problem with variable fonts and offset paths.) Houdini? I’m afraid its complexity will detract from learning simple CSS, so I’m not sold. Level 4 media queries? I feel there’s too little difference with level 3. So I don’t know right now. I’ll continue to think about this, and meanwhile I’d appreciate hints and ideas. Full Article CSS4
4 Linkbait 44 By www.quirksmode.org Published On :: Mon, 16 Mar 2020 13:36:31 +0100 Links in times of chaos. Laura Schenck, whose thoughts on programming CSS are very interesting anyway, discusses a project where she had to battle specificity. Key thought: Specificity breeds, much like conditionals breed in imperative languages [...]. Adding specificity is adding conditional logic. Once you start adding that logic, the code-base snowballs and it becomes difficult to understand, and thus difficult to maintain. She also asks if anyone who writes CSS should understand specificity to this degree. My answer is a firm Yes, just like you're expected to understand if- and for-loops when programming in any other language. Rachel Andrew ponders the pros and cons of CSS4. She is afraid that people will get confused by “CSS4” because several articles said there will never be a CSS4, and the version number 4 does not align with the version numbers of existing modules. Although both are true, I seriously doubt whether the people that “CSS4” is aimed at (those I call the torso and long tail of the CSS world) are aware or care. To me, this argument is overly legalistic, in the sense that it doesn’t matter in the real world. A much more important argument is that the announcement of “CSS4” will make people expect a list of new features that work in all browsers. In itself that’s great, and I think it would be really helpful, but the problem is that someone will have to decide what goes on the list and what does not — and the CSS WG is already stretched thin and cannot spare the time to do this. Maybe we need a community effort to help them? Worth thinking about. Interesting Twitter thread on why CSS is perceived as simultaneously very simple and very complicated. Because we think it's a simple language, we don't dive deep into it like we do with "real" programming languages. background: blue; makes the background turn blue, why should we bother diving in? But then it's time to build a layout and suddenly the combination of user agent styles and a lack of understanding in the fundamentals of CSS makes things break, or not behave how we expect them to. Yup. Mostly for myself: the difference between defer and async on script tags. Or, as Nicholas Zakas puts it: Do it now: <script src> Do it later: <script defer src> I don’t care when you do it, just not now: <script async src> Coil, the web monetization company, offers some interesting but too-much-under-the-radar thoughts on probabilistc revenue sharing. The idea is simple: if A, B, and C cooperate on a to-be-monetized article, and A is allotted 60% of the revenue, B 25% and C 15%, you simply add those probabilities to your payment pointers. Eventually a tool will draw a random and assign a specific payment to a specific author, but for now you can use a script to emulate that behaviour. Google proposes to sunset the User Agent string by freezing its version number and removing device information. The purpose here is to make fingerprinting (combining UA string, IP address, TCP/IP settings, device information and a host of other bits and pieces to accuratenly identify a web user) more difficult. The UA string will be replaced by client hints that give web developers some information about the browser, device, and platform. These hints will likely be more generic than the UA string, and thus hamper fingerprinting. The second problem with UA strings is the eternal arms race between clueless web developers and browser vendors, where web devs start using a certain badly-written browser detect, which forces browsers who want to end up on the good side of it to adjust their UA string, so that it gathers more and more cruft. (This is the reason every single browser string out there still starts with Mozilla.) I do not see this arms race go away. For instance, if the new Flow browser wants to defeat new browser detects written with client hints by clueless web developers, it will most likely be forced to announce itself as Chrome. Worse: we lose the ability to accurately identify it as Flow. As a result, new browser stats will make it appear as if Chrome is even more dominant than it actually is. Maybe we need another field Sec-CH-RealUA or something, where the browser can use its true name. On the other hand, that will be more fodder for clueless web developers and will perpetuate the arms race. In any case, to me it seems that more-or-less-accurate browser statistics will be the most important casualty of this switch. Related links (mostly for myself): client hints as currently implemented; discussion on a previous Safari attempt to do something similar; Blink intent to ship Mozilla and KaiOS Technologies are going to cooperate on future versions of KaiOS, the operating system for “smart feature phones” (read: cheap phones) that’s based on Firefox OS. Included in the article is a whole list of features Mozilla will work on, but they essentially boil down to keeping KaiOS updated for the ever-evolving web. Broadly speaking, these updates will mean many first-time internet users gain access to more of the web’s advanced digital services on devices that are affordable, reliable, and secure. Remember: KaiOS is aimed at not-so-rich people from emerging markets. As of May 2019 there were about 100 million devices out there. That’s piss poor compared to iOS and especially Android, but let’s see if their use explodes or not. Have a tip for the next Linkbait? Or a comment on this one? Let me know (or here or here). Full Article Linkbait
4 Encyclopedia of continuum mechanics / edited by Holm Altenbach, Andreas Öchsner By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 1 Mar 2020 07:37:39 EST Online Resource Full Article
4 Mathematical topics on representations of ordered structures and utility theory: essays in honor of Professor Ghanshyam B. Mehta / Gianni Bosi, María J. Campión, Juan C. Candeal, Esteban Indurain, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 1 Mar 2020 07:37:39 EST Online Resource Full Article
4 Singularities of mappings: the local behaviour of smooth and complex analytic mappings / David Mond, Juan J. Nuño-Ballesteros By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 1 Mar 2020 07:37:39 EST Online Resource Full Article
4 Model management and analytics for large scale systems / edited by Bedir Tekinerdogan, Önder Babur, Loek Cleophas, Mark van den Brand, Mehmet Aksit By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 8 Mar 2020 07:47:17 EDT Online Resource Full Article
4 Where do numbers come from? / T.W. Körner (University of Cambridge) By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 07:45:28 EDT Dewey Library - QA241.K6697 2020 Full Article
4 Building Bridges II: mathematics of László Lovász / Imre Bárány, Gyula O.H. Katona, Attila Sali, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 07:45:28 EDT Online Resource Full Article
4 Inverse Problems and Related Topics: Shanghai, China, October 12-14 2018 / Jin Cheng, Shuai Lu, Masahiro Yamamoto, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 15 Mar 2020 07:45:28 EDT Online Resource Full Article
4 Approximation and modeling with B-splines / Klaus Höllig, Jörg Hörner By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 07:24:15 EDT Online Resource Full Article
4 Modulation spaces: with applications to pseudodifferential operators and nonlinear Schrödinger equations / Árpád Bényi, Kasso A. Okoudjou By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Mar 2020 07:25:05 EDT Online Resource Full Article
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4 Applied English Phonology, 4th Edition By www.wiley.com Published On :: 2020-05-05T04:00:00Z The new edition of the leading textbook for English applied phonetics and phonologyA leading textbook for English Phonetics and Phonology, the fourth edition of Applied English Phonology is an accessible, authoritative introduction to the English sound system. Providing clear explanations and numerous illustrative examples, this new edition has been fully updated with the latest research and references. Detailed discussions of fundamental concepts Read More... Full Article
4 Xiaomi launches Mi Box 4K streaming device in India, here's are the fe... By Published On :: Xiaomi launches Mi Box 4K streaming device in India, here's are the fe... Full Article
4 Quenching control and distortion: proceedings of the 6th International Quenching and Control of Distortion Conference, including the 4th International Distortion Engineering Conference, September 9-13, 2012, Radisson Blu Aqua Hotel, Chicago, IL, USA / edi By library.mit.edu Published On :: Thu, 19 Dec 2013 15:20:36 EST Hayden Library - TN672.I527 2012 Full Article
4 Structural and chemical characterization of metals, alloys and compounds, 2011: symposium held August 14-19, 2011, Cancún, Mexico / editors, Ramiro Pérez Campos, Antonio Contreras Cuevas, Rodrigo A. Esparza Muñoz By library.mit.edu Published On :: Wed, 9 Jul 2014 12:57:04 EDT Hayden Library - TA459.S967 2011 Full Article
4 5th International Symposium on High-Temperature Metallurgical Processing: proceedings of a symposium sponsored by The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS), held during TMS2014, 143rd Annual Meeting & Exhibition, February 16-20, 2014, San Die By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 17 Aug 2014 06:00:01 EDT Hayden Library - TN690.I675 2014 Full Article
4 Annual Meeting supplemental proceedings / TMS 2014, 143rd Annual Meeting & Exhibition By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 17 Aug 2014 06:00:01 EDT Hayden Library - TN605.M56 2014 Full Article
4 Magnesium technology 2014: proceedings of a symposium sponsored by the Magnesium Committee of the Light Metals Division of the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS) held during TMS2014, 143rd Annual Meeting & Exhibition, February 16-20, 2014, By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 17 Aug 2014 06:00:01 EDT Hayden Library - TN799.M2 M258 2014 Full Article
4 Rare metal technology 2014: proceedings of a symposium sponsored by The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS) held during TMS 2014, 143rd Annual Meeting & Exhibition, February 16-20, 2014, San Diego Convention Center, San Diego, California, U By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 28 Sep 2014 06:00:02 EDT Hayden Library - TN758.M56x 2014 Full Article
4 Structural and chemical characterization of metals, alloys and compounds - 2012 / editors, Ramiro Pérez Campos, Antonio Contreras Cuevas, Rodrigo A. Esparza Muñoz By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 28 Sep 2014 06:00:02 EDT Hayden Library - TN605.S77 2013 Full Article
4 Gmelin handbook of inorganic chemistry.: Geochemistry: hydrosphere, atmosphere. Cosmo- and geochemical cycles / authors: Bärbel Sarbas, Wolfgang Töpper ; editors: Wolfgang Töpper By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 9 Nov 2014 06:00:02 EST Online Resource Full Article
4 Gold in early Southeast Asia: selected papers from the symposium gold in Southeast Asia: Yale University Art Gallery, 13-14 May 2011/ Ruth Barnes, Emma Natalya Stein, and Benjamin Diebold, editors By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 13 Sep 2015 06:05:37 EDT Dewey Library - TN760.G653 2015 Full Article
4 Structural and chemical characterization of metals, alloys and compounds, 2014: symposium held August 17-21, 2014, Cancún, Mexico / editors, Dr. Ramiro Pérez Campos, Dr. Antonio Contreras Cuevas, Dr. Rodrigo A. Esparza Muñoz By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 31 Jan 2016 06:10:57 EST Hayden Library - TA459.S765 2014 Full Article
4 Star Trek: World-Building Over Generations—Pretty Much Pop: A Culture Podcast #42 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 07:01:59 +0000 The world-wide Tribble infestation and Star Trek: Picard dropping make this an apt time to address our most philosophical sci-fi franchise. 44 years of thought experiments (with photon torpedoes!) about what it is to be human should have taught us something, and Brian Hirt, Erica Spyres, and Mark Linsenmayer along with Drew Jackson (Erica's husband) […] Star Trek: World-Building Over Generations—Pretty Much Pop: A Culture Podcast #42 is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs. Full Article Podcasts Pretty Much Pop Sci Fi Television Star Trek
4 Building Your Resilience: Finding Meaning in Adversity–A Free 24-Lecture Course By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 04:10:17 +0000 The Great Courses has made available a free and rather timely course--Building Your Resilience: Finding Meaning in Adversity. Divided into 24 lectures and taught by Molly Birkholm, the course gets introduced with the following text: Recent research shows that we grow into our best and most joyful selves not when we avoid our problems […] <i>Building Your Resilience: Finding Meaning in Adversity</i>–A Free 24-Lecture Course is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs. Full Article Health Online Courses Psychology
4 Bruce Lee: 40 years later By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sat, 20 Jul 2013 11:00:40 +0530 A documentary on his life I Am Bruce Lee will be telecast on his 40th birth anniversary on July 20. Full Article Bruce Lee RTL Bruce Leersquo Inbsp Bruce Leenbsp Bruce Lee Watchnbsp RTL Jeet Kune Do
4 Shah Rukh Khan: I am 47. I don't feel my age at all By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sat, 03 Aug 2013 18:00:23 +0530 Shah Rukh Khan gets candid in an interview with People magazine. Full Article Shah Rukh Khan People magazine Chennai Express Deepika Padukone SRK Shah Rukh
4 Like Koffee With Karan 4 promo? VOTE! By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sat, 02 Nov 2013 17:09:41 +0530 Watch the video and vote! Full Article Karan Johar Koffee VOTE Koffee With Karan VOTE
4 Like the trailer of Keanu Reeves' 47 Ronin? VOTE! By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sat, 07 Dec 2013 17:00:19 +0530 Watch the trailer and vote! Full Article Ronin Keanu Reeves VOTE Kai Japan American Ronin VOTE Carl Erik Rinsch Keanu Reeves Universal Studios London Japan Budapest
4 Oscar 2014: Meet the Best Actress nominees By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 26 Feb 2014 16:55:24 +0530 The Academy awards are scheduled to be held on March 3. Full Article Best Actress Amy Adams American Hustle Sandra Bullock Academy Philomena YOU Best Actress
4 Oscar 2014: The Best Picture nominees By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 28 Feb 2014 16:33:10 +0530 The 86th Academy awards are set to be held on March 3. Full Article Best Picture David O Russell Steve McQueen Martin Scorsese Alexander Payne American Hustle Best Actress th Academy Wall Street Nebraska YOU Best Picture
4 'Forget 50, I don't feel like 40! I have still not reached 22' By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Mar 2015 19:43:52 +0530 'When I see someone I think of them as aunty and uncle. I forget I am the same age, because in my mind I am still 18.' Aamir Khan gets ready for his milestone birthday. Full Article Aamir Khan Azad Censor Board Central Board of Film Certification Dil Chahta Hai Rang De Basanti Mansoor Khan Jackie Shroff Pradeep Bandekar Ghajini Dangal Kiran Fanna Dhoom YouTube Haryanvi
4 'Priyanka probably has 48 hours in her day!' By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 03 Mar 2016 18:44:24 +0530 'We have trained Priyanka well for the role of IPS officer Abha Mathur. She learnt all the mannerisms of the Indian police. The Quantico people are taking the real advantage of it. It's okay, I am happy that America knows what we can do.' Jai Gangaajal director Prakash Jha raves about his heroine. Full Article Jai GangaaJal Priyanka Chopra Prakash Jha IPS Abha Mathur Bihar Tejaswi Yadav Amruta Fadnavis FBI Quantico Kunal Kohli Devendra Fadnavis Rajul Hegde Afsar Dayatar Salim Merchant IMAGE Indian