If you’re not using html-validate, you should. Kitten* has is integrated by default so you get your markup validated on every save and you can see validation errors in the browser (you can even have it highlight the invalid elements visually on the page) :)
#TheMetalDogArticleList #Loudwire
Not Metal Enough - A Psychological Perspective on Gatekeeping
Psychologist Steve Byrne goes deep on the culture of gatekeeping in metal.
🎉 Recap of our R Validation Community Meeting! With 50+ attendees, we dived into what "validation" means across the board - for users, devs, and admins. It's about creating a common understanding and pushing forward together.
Missed it? Check out the slides and join us for the next session on May 21. Let's keep building a robust R community together! 💻🔍
Dear lazyverse: is there an XML validation tool using RelaxNG compact schemas that I can install on Fedora and that doesn't depend on Java? Assume I know about jing and rnv
Advent blogging day 9: in which I reflect on 17 years developing form libraries, mistakes made along the way, and my most recent contribution to the genre.
Diese WebDevs, deren Formular auf der Webseite des Online-Shops .email als TLD nicht anerkennen und eine gültige Mailadresse wollen: Weiß man da schon genaueres oder ist denen Umsatz einfach egal?
Forms that filter and auto detect non compliant input that don't auto correct for you (e.g. phone number fields that limit total characters, say "no dashes or spaces" but let you enter them any way).
This results in spectacularly annoying cut-n-paste fails for the most obvious use case, and is completely avoidable.
I've got this data-complex astronomy project I'm working on (pro-bono).
I have a number of different backends I pull from (NASA, Unis,. etc) all who use diff field names for the same thing resulting in lots of tedious (and future error-prone) data parsing and checking code.
Was hoping to use something like pydantic as an in-between translator/mapper of thediff fields to the same schema(s).
I haven't looked for a PyPI module to do this, specifically. In the past, I've done simple functions with dict lookups to map keys from one source to a canonical value, or with Pydantic, use alternate constructors that you call depending on which source you're dealing with.
If you’re using HTML Validate (you should; it’s ace), update to 7.15.2. It no longer flags multiple buttons with the same name used in forms as a validation error (this is a valid pattern that lets you interpret a form differently on the server based on which button it was submitted with).
You're at #CHI23, a big fan of #SelfEfficacy, love a proper #validation and fear nothing more than #Adhocscales? I figured as much! Definitely visit Nele Borgert's talk in the "Metrics & Methods" session where she will be presenting our (with Larina Hillemann, Luisa Jansen, @maltoesermalte and @ianhussey) paper "Home is Where the Smart is: Development and Validation of the Cybersecurity Self-Efficacy in Smart Homes (CySESH) Scale". I am looking forward to it, so why shouldn't you?