I didn’t realise 12ft.io has gone down but I believe their original slogan was along the lines of, “for every 10ft wall, there’s a 12ft ladder”, hence the name.
I didn’t realise 12ft.io has gone down but I believe their original slogan was along the lines of, “for every 10ft wall, there’s a 12ft ladder”, hence the name.
This policy was last updated in March, 2023.
You’ll want to create a new firebase project, install the firebase CLI on your computer and then use the CLI to: login to firebase, select the project you created, and then using the CLI run firebase deploy
wherever your code is. That should use firebase “hosting” to serve your static files.
I find Google Cloud’s documentation extremely confusing (including firebase), so you’re not alone on that front. Took a lot of searching & troubleshooting to finally get my setup working as I intended.
Can’t comment on square space, but you could maybe try firebase (google), github pages, or netlify as alternatives?
My recommendation would be to go down the web dev route to start because it’s very easy to create things that you can share easily (everyone has a browser, but not everyone has python installed on their machine, or wants to open an executable). That can be a great motivator.
I still think App Academy’s free bootcamp is one of the most comprehensive resources to go from zero to making small web apps. It’s very hands-on and they have over 200hrs of material, discord community, and it was updated about a year ago. However, it can be quite daunting and you need to have good discipline to keep going.
https://www.appacademy.io/course/app-academy-open
Otherwise, as someone else mentioned, freecodeacademy is a good beginner resource.
Just chiming to say I feel the same sometimes. But at the same time I’m also amazed and excited by the different possibilities. There’s usually never a black or white solution, although there are some best-practices that have established over time.
As you mentioned already, I think it helps to think of all the technologies, languages, frameworks etc. as tools to solve a problem.
I quite like Obsidian too. Markdown note app that has desktop & mobile versions. You can create templates and have it so that a new note using a template is opened automatically when you open the app (e.g. for daily notes). It also supports a lot of different community created plugins.
I sync across android & linux via google drive for free, otherwise Obsidian also has a paid sync feature.
Lol, who turned the lights out?
Same. I hadn’t even thought of the other angle originally tbh. Kinda sad that we always have to be so alert to the nefarious things that a change in legislation could lead to.
This course really helped it click for me. Available for free and taught by the Primeagen.
Thank you!
Edit: back on infinity with this change :)
Q on infinity, is it possible to hide/collapse comments? When I click on a comment, it just shows/hides the toolbar. That’s what’s stopping me from using at the moment.
Same. I like this so I don’t need to open a second app. Only used PostMan and ThunderClient, so can’t comment on others.
How do you do the ingredients for a recipe? Does it understand “1tbsp” and things like that?