

Doesn’t sound very secret.
Doesn’t sound very secret.
We’ve tried nothing and we’re all out of ideas!
My first is due in a couple of months and I’m pleased to report that parking is free at our local hospital!
UK perspective: they weren’t already?
Tell that to my tattoo.
I honestly just find the extra layers to make it harder for me to know what my code is doing. I’d rather set proper CSS margin-bottom than mb-1. Having to learn the Bootstrap way of doing things when I already know the traditional way mostly feels like a waste of my time. It’s not, but it’s hard to stay engaged when I can already do a thing in a more standardised way.
Kind of like a site I’ve been stripping the jQuery out of. You don’t need that to show/hide a couple of form fields, FFS. Or the special JS library for doing pop overs. Come on, there’s three fields on the entire website that use them, just use HTML5 popovers.
I imagine Bootstrap is probably more useful for stuff where more complex layouts are needed, or when a site needs to be more responsive to different browser shapes (as in desktop vs. various mobile form factors).
I had to look it up myself - so I learned about it too!
details and summary?
I can use Bootstrap, much like I can write CSS, I just don’t think it’s a good use of my time.
There’s a lot of things I detest - bananas, generic medieval fantasy settings, reality TV. My life isn’t better for disliking them, it’s just the unfortunate reality of my character.
I wouldn’t buy at the current price, raise it as much as you like.
There’s just not enough USPs to justify the cost to me, regardless of how shiny the graphics might be.
I want to want it, but it’s going to have to do a lot more than it currently is as a platform.
Get those HPV vaccines, by the sound of it. What a naff article.
I’m glad someone does! I don’t like disliking it.
Mainly because I already understand CSS and HTML and having to learn their way of doing things is extra work and overhead.
I have to use Bootstrap at work and I’m really not a fan. It’s somehow more work than writing CSS from scratch.
“Returning to the office” is such a gross phrase. Get fucked.
I messed around trying to get Redhat 7.2 or 7.3 working but gave up (Q1 or Q2 2002). I later experimented with SuSe (or however it was stylised in Q1 2005), messed about with Knoppix and a few other distros, before properly going all-in on Ubuntu 5.04 when I was 18.
On the one hand, I love customisation, on the other I detest Discord. Argh.
looks at radiator dubiously
The joke doesn’t really work if you look too closely.