eupolicy.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
This Mastodon server is a friendly and respectful discussion space for people working in areas related to EU policy. When you request to create an account, please tell us something about you.

Server stats:

201
active users

#joomla

0 posts0 participants0 posts today

Joomla will celebrate its 20th birthday next month, on August 17 to be precise. 20 years of working together to make every new version the best Joomla ever, 20 years of enabling people to learn, contribute and rise up above themselves, 20 years of community, friendship and freedom. That calls for a celebration. But actually, the Joomla Community Magazine is doing that every month.
magazine.joomla.org/all-issues
#Joomla #OpenSource #20yearsJoomla #JCM

The May issue of Joomla Magazine is online.
There are many great articles waiting for reading: about blind spots in accessibility testing, magic tricks in CSS, using utility classes from frameworks, two amazing case studies, the conclusion of a long series on component development, three interesting interviews, the presentation of this year's Google Summer of Code Contributors, reports from JDayUSA, about GitHubs maintainer month, tips on how to set up a Joomla podcast and last but not least a short prehistoric essay by Brian about discovering footprints.
Click the link to read it now: magazine.joomla.org
#Joomla #JoomlaMagazine #JCM #OpenSource

#Joomla #Webdesign
Harte Nuss: Kunde möchte generell Blocksatz in der Website haben. Das führt bei den responsive Anpassungen teilweise zu sehr unschönen Lücken in den Zeilen, da keine automatische Silbentrennung erfolgt. Es gibt wohl Plugins, die das regeln könnten, aber da die Seite zukünftig mehrsprachig wird, habe ich Sorge, dass es irgendwann unüberschaubar wird.
Hat hier jemand Erfahrungen?
Sollte man auf Blocksatz in Webseiten eher gänzlich verzichten? Oder gibt es doch gute Lösungen?🤔

Continued thread

But we ran out of cash and steam early in 2002. However the goal wasn't accomplished, & after our book sold well & I learnt how a free #Mailman mailing list with 8,000 emails can become a paid-for email newsletter with 40,000 emails of which a quarter pay for at ShootingPeople.org (the only other UK filmmaker site to survive the dotcom crash the same time as us), in 2006 Netribution returned after a year's attempts, first trying to build our own CMS, then using Mambo, finally using #Joomla.