Moments ago we introduced the Google Font API and Google Font Directory . In addition to Google’s support of web fonts, we’re excited to announce a second launch...
I am creating an application from legacy code using AngularJS.
I wonder what parts of my code should be moved into a directive.
For example, i had thought of moving a table which is used multiple times across the application into a directive. The tables alter from headings and size.
Is it worth the effort or even a good practice to turn such things into their own directives or should i create each table in a unique way?
Greetings! Just a quick reminder for everyone. Nominations for the OpenSocial Board of Directors community seats are underway and will close on Tuesday, June 1, 2010. Please use...
As many of you know, App Engine’s Datastore performance has been seriously degraded over the last few weeks. In addition to May 25th’s 45 minute Datastore outage...
YouTube is an extremely team-oriented, creative workplace where every single employee has a voice in the choices we make and the features we implement. We work together in...
Often you want to display a DataGrid, but you don’t want to simply display it as is, you want to be able to enhance it and add functionality to it, such as adding an image to the start of each row or adding a button on each row.
It's been a while since the last community update post, and you've probably been wondering what the App Engine community has been up to over the holiday period...
Allocating memory from the system heap can be an expensive operation due to a lock used by system runtime libraries to synchronize access to the heap. Contention on this lock can limit the performance benefits from multithreading. Learn how to solve this problem.
Many Chrome extensions use browser actions as a notification area. Notifications can be very valuable to users, but there’s only so much a developer can do with an...
‘Indix’ is an open source component written in C for Indian font rendering. Indix is a de facto implementation of the rules of Indian languages by CDAC.