Technically flawless, but not captivating. I suggest putting less stuff on each slide, showing the appearance of all the code and giving this guy an injection of enthusiasm.
Err, it might be smarter to refer to the '#' as a hash, not pound since the word hash is used throughout the web community to refer to that symbol already...
@DrRickkenstein Hi, thanx. I figured that out. I just thought for those coming to watch this stuff on youtube if they were marked with their numbered order it would be helpful.
Pixels aren't always the same size. A pixel on a high resolution monitor is much smaller than a pixel on a low resolution monitor. I’d say, they are relatively absolute units.
@isellsoap They're always the same size on a given device. They aren't calculated relative to anything, such that the size of a unit can vary wildly within your page; 1 pixel is always 1 pixel.
But it was a little misleading to say "on any screen". Perhaps "for any particular screen, a pixel is always the same size" would have been better (of course, even that's not true if you change your resolution to non-native or use a CRT, but it's closer).
Thumbs up if you are in Mr Alveys class and is bring forced to watch this =P
cavalierCOD 6 days ago
Cool Story Bro tell it again!! =)
cavalierCOD 6 days ago
This has been flagged as spam show
You can see the full tutorial at:
code[dot]google[dot]com/edu/submissions/html-css-javascript/
michaeldwhelchel 1 week ago
Comment removed
michaeldwhelchel 1 week ago
Excellent tutorial
Mertt03 1 month ago in playlist Meer video's van GoogleVideos
One person works for Microsoft.
Halgirwn 2 months ago
Technically flawless, but not captivating. I suggest putting less stuff on each slide, showing the appearance of all the code and giving this guy an injection of enthusiasm.
sbugiardo 4 months ago
To get the presentations in order, go here: code.google.com/edu/submissions/html-css-javascript/
cobrausn 5 months ago
Err, it might be smarter to refer to the '#' as a hash, not pound since the word hash is used throughout the web community to refer to that symbol already...
bnjibee 6 months ago
very very good work ! ... it's make more sense now .. 10x thk !
danielpirciu 7 months ago
It would be cool if you numbered these tuts so we could know if we are doing them in the intended order.
dogdutyascetic 7 months ago 7
@dogdutyascetic Google "Google: HTML, CSS, and Javascript from the Ground Up" and there you go. ;)
DrRickkenstein 7 months ago
@DrRickkenstein Hi, thanx. I figured that out. I just thought for those coming to watch this stuff on youtube if they were marked with their numbered order it would be helpful.
dogdutyascetic 7 months ago
Thanks, great tutorials!
jandrocamus 10 months ago
Didn't know about "clockwise". I did it wrong... Thanks!
daGrevis 11 months ago
don't read your slides. instead, put less information on them and say it so people pay attention to you, not the presentation.
menezes23 1 year ago
@menezes23 shut up
floatingify 6 months ago
Pixels aren't always the same size. A pixel on a high resolution monitor is much smaller than a pixel on a low resolution monitor. I’d say, they are relatively absolute units.
isellsoap 1 year ago
@isellsoap They're always the same size on a given device. They aren't calculated relative to anything, such that the size of a unit can vary wildly within your page; 1 pixel is always 1 pixel.
But it was a little misleading to say "on any screen". Perhaps "for any particular screen, a pixel is always the same size" would have been better (of course, even that's not true if you change your resolution to non-native or use a CRT, but it's closer).
ReductioAdAbsurdum 1 year ago 2