
"A few months back, I traded in my Windows laptop (it was having horrible hardware issues) and moved back to Mac. I've gone back and forth over the years, and even when I was on Windows for my personal machine, my work laptop was usually a Mac, but I've decided to go back to Mac for my personal machine ... at least for a while."
"This post by Cassidy Williams demonstrates a simple example of this, rebuilding the touch command for PowerShell. On the offhand chance you don't know what touch does, it simply creates a new blank file with the name you specify, so touch cats.txt will create the file cats.txt in your current directory. Apparently, Windows has a command like this already, ni, but Cassidy wanted to use the same function in multiple OSes."
"Next up is a look at invoker commands by Pawel Grzybak. Invoker commands let you bind HTML elements to actions without needing JavaScript, and are available across all modern browsers (even IE Safari). You can extend the built-in invoker support with JavaScript as well. Last up are the results from the annual State of JavaScript survey. This is a wide ranging survey of the JavaScript, and greater web, ecosystem. It's quite a bit of data and worth your time checking out."
Happy Superb Owl Day is noted and support is expressed for the Seahawks despite the team missing the playoffs. I will travel to Las Vegas for a Webflow offsite, the first in-person company event I have attended since Auth0 almost a decade ago, and I look forward to meeting teammates. I switched from a problematic Windows laptop back to a Mac and want to explore PowerShell scripting after relying on WSL. A PowerShell recreation of the touch command is highlighted; Windows has ni but a cross-OS touch function was preferred. Invoker commands enable binding HTML elements to actions without JavaScript across modern browsers. The State of JavaScript survey results provide extensive ecosystem data.
Read at Raymondcamden
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