To begin, thank you for taking the time/interest to share your insights, they're always much appreciated, and community is everything! But for the sake of newer programmers, and programming etiquette - you fail to use ';' to terminate a line - might be worth enforcing? Or at the very least being consistent? Either way, peace, love and good on ya ;) Work on your audio feeds, they're horrible...
If you're familiar with d3, I would not recommend the e-book AngularJS & D3 Ari and Victor at this stage. Almost 70% of the book just covers d3! I'm not sure if this book is still a work in progress. Two paragraphs at the end of the book were devoted to services, a very important topic that allows one to share data between controllers. No example is provided at all. I feel completely ripped off frankly.
because nowadays, document structure is mainly done with divs and layering in css. Then the choice of a table layout or any other layout is decided in the style, not in the view itself.
I'm confused about the personal introduction and its importance in terms of paying attention and listening. You created a few visualizations (nothing very interesting) and then a statement that you teach at a hacker school, that you like explaining things and that you're planning on writing a book. Not an accredited teacher or somebody with an engineering or visual arts degree, or any sort of professionally or academically recognized achievements. That could be the resume of half the high school dropouts in this country, and not very compelling in terms of why anybody would want to listen to you other than perhaps an introduction to D3 from a basic user's perspective. Sadly, listened anyway and frankly it's just a basic introduction to Angular we can add to the discarded pile of presentations.
+Cogitaria As a new user of d3 I found this introduction very informative. In my experience, having formal qualifications isn't a necessary prerequisite for teaching. Many of the best teachers are simply excellent communicators and may not be masters of the subject. In fact, professional educators often lack insight because their practical experience is outdated. We should thank the people who go to such effort to prepare this content for us rather than criticise them. Thank you Victor Powell.
Marcos Iglesias Valle Agreed! He's all over the place, not explaining anything that requires explaining, live debugging his idea... completely unfollowable in thought and I've been programming for 20 years.
Go to 20:00 and speed 1.5x
@24:48 to start making the directive in ang
To begin, thank you for taking the time/interest to share your insights, they're always much appreciated, and community is everything! But for the sake of newer programmers, and programming etiquette - you fail to use ';' to terminate a line - might be worth enforcing? Or at the very least being consistent? Either way, peace, love and good on ya ;)
Work on your audio feeds, they're horrible...
"Whoa". This was super awesome. Great talk, great teaching and very inspiring. Hope to apply this to my work. Will definitely be picking up your book.
Fantastic demo. Thanks for putting this together.
Checkout NVD3 and NVD3 directive for AngularJS. They are my favorite libraries. ;)
If you're familiar with d3, I would not recommend the e-book AngularJS & D3 Ari and Victor at this stage. Almost 70% of the book just covers d3! I'm not sure if this book is still a work in progress.
Two paragraphs at the end of the book were devoted to services, a very important topic that allows one to share data between controllers. No example is provided at all. I feel completely ripped off frankly.
Jij bent de beste
Still saving life in 2018
Great demo
Excellent
Why the hell is the table a div with class table and not an actual table?
because nowadays, document structure is mainly done with divs and layering in css. Then the choice of a table layout or any other layout is decided in the style, not in the view itself.
And again, endless calculations of client width and height =(
I'm confused about the personal introduction and its importance in terms of paying attention and listening. You created a few visualizations (nothing very interesting) and then a statement that you teach at a hacker school, that you like explaining things and that you're planning on writing a book. Not an accredited teacher or somebody with an engineering or visual arts degree, or any sort of professionally or academically recognized achievements. That could be the resume of half the high school dropouts in this country, and not very compelling in terms of why anybody would want to listen to you other than perhaps an introduction to D3 from a basic user's perspective. Sadly, listened anyway and frankly it's just a basic introduction to Angular we can add to the discarded pile of presentations.
Cogitaria Tell em how u really feel
+Cogitaria As a new user of d3 I found this introduction very informative. In my experience, having formal qualifications isn't a necessary prerequisite for teaching. Many of the best teachers are simply excellent communicators and may not be masters of the subject. In fact, professional educators often lack insight because their practical experience is outdated. We should thank the people who go to such effort to prepare this content for us rather than criticise them. Thank you Victor Powell.
VOLUME UP
yo dawg! (y)
No semicolons and keynote not prepared enough.
I am sorry but this deserves an unlike.
Marcos Iglesias Valle Agreed! He's all over the place, not explaining anything that requires explaining, live debugging his idea... completely unfollowable in thought and I've been programming for 20 years.