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Ultimately we have reached the last part of this “responsive web design tools” series. Previously, we have discussed about a lot about the essential and important tools that almost every designer needs to make their responsive web design process successful.
We have presented before you a lot of responsive grid systems and frameworks, JavaScript and jQuery tools, wireframing and sketching tools and also some essential testing and preview tools. In this last part, we would continue our discussion on the Testing and Preview tools that we had started in the previous part.
Before ending this series, we would present some special tools in the bonus section. I hope all the tools that we have mentioned in this series will prove to help you a lot in your design project by saving a lot of precious time and increase productivity.
(Continued)
Respondr, is a very simple yet a very helpful website for testing responsive web designs. With a clean design and UI, Repondr can be used to test responsiveness of any website with ease by selecting the preset devices like iPhone, iPad, Mac, etc.
One of the best, most advanced and flexible tool for testing responsive websites where you can define custom viewport sizes by simply dragging the sliders.
Now this tool works in a bit different way as a bookmarklet. You can click on the button and can enter the URL of choice and can test websites in seconds.
It is a simple and elegant looking tool which does its work perfectly, just the way it was meant to be done. Simply enter the URL and hit the GO button.
Another simple responsive web design testing tool with which you can use to check your design’s responsiveness in seconds.
JetStrap is a visual interface building tool for the Bootstrap framework which gives a way for the designers to quickly create designs by dragging and dropping UI components into the canvas.
MQTest is a nifty tool created by Viljami Salminen, which keeps track and tells you about the media queries that your browser have responded to.
Icomon is an awesome webtool which lets you create and deploy high-resolution icon fonts for retina and high-resolution displays.
ForeSight.js detects the devices display size and resolution and also checks its network connectivity to decide whether to load a high-resolution image or not.
A really simple yet powerful tool to create beautiful, pixel-perfect responsive websites without even touching a line of code, thanks to its amazing drag-and-drop builder.
Finally, we have come to end of this series. We have tried to cover almost all sections of tools that you may need for your responsive web design project. We recommend you to bookmark the pages of this series so that you can refer to them later and find the tools of your choice with ease.
I hope this series have proved to be resourceful to you, and if so then it would be great if you can share it with your friends via various social networking sites you use. Share knowledge with the world, help others and let others help you.
Read more https://www.corephp.com/blog/ultimate-responsive-web-design-tools-designers-part-v/
The Joomla! Project is pleased to announce the availability of Joomla! 3.3 Beta 3. Community members are asked to download and install the package in order to provide quality assurance for the forthcoming 3.3 release, which is scheduled for release on or around April 30th, 2014.
A big thank you goes out to everyone that contributed to the 3.3 release! Joomla! 3.3 will be our most stable release ever. Right now we're at about 380 commits since 3.2.3's release with 41 different people contributing to those commits (not including testers and other non-coding activities). Best of all is that the new features are awesome!
The 3.x release series is the latest major release of the Joomla! CMS, with 3.3 the fourth standard-term support release in this series. Please note that going from 3.2 to 3.3 is a one-click upgrade and is NOT a migration. The same is true is for any subsequent versions in the 3.x series. That being said, please do not upgrade any of your production sites to the beta version as beta is ONLY intended for testing and there is no upgrade path from Beta....
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaAnnouncements/~3/qOt8K9qehzI/5543-joomla-3-3-beta-3-released.html
Read more https://groups.google.com/d/msg/frameworkonframework/wqcGne0eeus/jwzefWK9t7wJ
Today we are proud to announce the immediate availability of JCal Pro® 3.2.11 (build 3667), which is fully compatible with Joomla! 2.5 and 3.2!
This is a maintenance and feature release.
This release includes fixes for various reported issues.
Most notably this release introduces several enhancements in the date filters, and fixes for the editor buttons in Joomla 3 and registation export file.
Changelog Updates:
[chg] Defensive coding in module/plugin controller methods
[bug] Locations module infinte loop with no locations
[chg] Changed "Next x units" filters to start from today
[bug] Editor buttons in Joomla! 3.x
[bug] Registration row duplication in CSV export (#28)
.... plus numerous additional fixes, changes and features.
The full JCal Pro® changelog[1] for JCal Pro® is also available.
Read more https://anything-digital.com/jcal-pro/news/releases/jcal-pro-3_2_11_3667-released.html
The Chrome Store itself is a pile of rubbish apps with very few exceptions.
Working with Chrome extensions and apps is pleasant enough in some ways – the JavaScript APIs are generally intuitive, and you can make native-feeling UIs without too much effort. However, the development experience feels a little bit dated and painful in places.
Konstantin Raev sent in Live Reloading Chrome Apps, an article about using Gulp with Chrome apps. It shows how live reloading isn’t as easy as it could be, and how to fix it. There’s also a full example on GitHub: bestander / clock-chrome-app-livereload-example.
Brandon Tilley sent in Creating Chrome Extensions with React:
If you’re into client-side web development to any extent, you’ve probably heard of Facebook’s React library. I was working on a Chrome extension, and decided to see how well React fit in to the development I was doing.
He also uses Browserify as well, which I’m interested in because I tried using RequireJS for sharing code between Chrome extensions and Firefox add-ons, and I struggled to get it to work in Firefox. My Firefox add-ons are using the Jetpack SDK rather than the old XUL way.
Passing data around in Chrome extensions by Erica Salvaneschi is an introduction to using chrome.runtime.sendMessage
and addListener
:
We wanted to get data from the current web page and then use it to populate a form that appears in a new window. It was easy to create a context menu item that triggered an event, but sending data based on the current page to the new window wasn’t obvious.
You might find this useful if you’re just getting into Chrome extensions and want more concrete examples than what Google provides.
Read more https://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailyjs/~3/TyXj7TQtMwk/chrome-extensions
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