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Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaExtensionsUpdated/~3/PDwnkudrxxc/20001
With the exponential growth in the adoption of mobile devices like smartphones and tablets for viewing websites, the need for responsive web design is gaining more ground. If you do not know anything about “responsive web design”, then it is better to learn a bit about it and then check out the tools and resources available for it.
But I will try to give you a short overview of what “responsive web design” actually is. It is a web design approach in which the website layout is flexible enough to adjust to the visitor’s device screen size and resolution automatically. It really doesn’t matter if you are viewing a particular website in a mobile phone, or tablet or laptop or a large high-resolution monitor, as the website will automatically adjust to various screen sizes and change its layout accordingly to give the visitor the cutting edge experience they desire.
In this series, we are trying to present before you some of the most valuable and important tools you will ever need in your responsive web design process. It will be a large list comprising of over 50 tools from a variety of categories all belonging to the same responsive web design genre.
So, we have decided to cut down the boredom of reading a long list by dividing it into small parts each dealing with dedicated tools and resource categories. First, we are starting out with the grid systems and frameworks.
But before we start, if you are planning to get your next project done on Joomla, WordPress or Drupal, then you’re lucky enough to arrive at the right place. It’s really worth checking out some of the most outstanding services provided here at corePHP, by some of the most skilled and experienced experts.[1]
It is one of the most popular and feature-packed framework which can give you almost everything you need for your responsive web development process.
Skeleton is a simple yet powerful CSS grid system which offers a lot of basic features to deal with common web layout tasks.
As the name suggests, it is a clean, simple and light-weight semantic grid framework making full use of Saas and Bourbon. Check out the docs here[5].
If you love minimalistic designs, then Simple Grid is something that you need to check out right now. It also works great on high resolution monitors like 1140px, giving you a cutting edge experience.
HTML5 Kickstart is the new kid in town which is very lean (about 300KB) in size but packed with its rich set of features it promises to save hours of your development time.
One of the best things I like about Profound Grid is the preciseness with which it renders fluid grid layouts in all the browsers it supports.
The Foundation framework by ZURB, is yet another very powerful and popular responsive front-end framework you can use.
If you want a bit more control and flexibility on the number of columns you need, which other grid systems do not offer, then Responsive Grid System is the suitable choice for you.
It is yet another very popular grid system based on the 960grid. So if you are well-familiar with the 960 grid, then you must give it a try.
It is one of the first and most popular framework which enables you to get your HTML5 websites and web apps running in almost no time.
This almost completes our discussion on the essential and popular grid systems and frameworks you can use. In the next part of the series, we will continue with some more really useful grid systems and frameworks and will also jump into the very important JavaScript and jQuery tools.
So, stay tuned for the next part of the series.
Read more https://www.corephp.com/blog/ultimate-responsive-web-design-tools-designers-part/
We are back with another list in the PHP Heaven series to help you in building the perfect website you want.
Let’s have a look at the scripts in this list. Shall we?
Create a micro-blogging platform just like Twitter with the help of this advanced script.
View Demo | Buy Social Networking Platform[1][2]
Create your very own entertainment portal with this amazing script.
View Demo | Buy Viral Media Portal[3][4]
Create your own ticketing system for providing support to your clients easily with this script.
Create a complete SEO analyzing suite with more than 30 tools with the help of this script.
View Demo | Buy SEO Studio[7][8]
Create a beautiful online file sharing system with ShareIt.
View Demo | Buy ShareIt 2.0[9][10]
Create a weather forecasting website with advanced weather stats with this cool script.
View Demo | Buy Weather Script[11][12]
Create a beautiful online school management system with the help of this script.
View Demo | Buy Ekkator School Management System[13][14]
Create your very own meme generator website and engage your visitors with funny memes with this script.
View Demo | Buy Advanced Meme Maker[15][16]
Create an online database of music and allow your visitors to listen to their favourite tracks easily.
View Demo | Buy Music Database 2[17][18]
Create an online collection of your favourite vines and allow your visitors to enjoy them using this script.
View Demo | Buy VineScript[19][20]
That’s it guys, we reach the end of this list. Don’t worry, we will be bringing some more scripts in our next list to build your dream website[21], stay tuned.
Read more https://www.corephp.com/blog/php-heaven-tools-build-dream-website-part-two/
npm’s search results are now ranked by popularity:
Packages are now scored by a nifty new algorithm that takes into account the package’s popularity (i.e. number of stars and average weekly downloads over a month). The algorithm also does some proper word parsing (so you can actually find “socket.io” with the search “socket io”) and gives higher weight to things that match the search query in the package name and details.
The interface has been tweaked as well, so you can easily see how many downloads and starts a project has.
I was sceptical about the quality of the results, but I’ve recently been researching material for my book so I’ve been searching npm a lot, and generic searches now seem to get more useful results.
Shortest-route (GitHub: tarun29061990 / shortest-route, License: ISC, npm: shortest-route) by Tarun Chaudhary is a travelling salesman problem solver that you can install with npm.
It calculates the distance between cities using the Google Distance Matrix API, and accepts city descriptions as a pipe-separated list:
var shortestRoute = require('shortest-route');
shortestRoute.getShortPath('A|B|C', function(json) {
console.log('data='+json);
});
Although you probably won’t need this for a project any time soon, I like the fact a hard problem is installable with npm. For more details, see Tarun’s blog post.
I like tape by Substack – it’s easy to read and produces flexible test output. Azer also likes it, so he wrote prova (GitHub: azer / prova, License: GPL, npm: prova), a Node and browser test runner based on tape and browserify.
It has a built-in web application that uses watchify to automatically run tests when files change. That means you can edit code and see live results in a browser.
Read more https://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailyjs/~3/-2ZwYzhfW5k/node-roundup
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