Numbers Guessing Game
Your Numbers Game
Get
clueYour
answerYour
ScoreClue? Score 0/0
-
Recent Posts
- WordPress Blog Comments URL Right Click Popup Check Tutorial
- USB Based Tethering of MacBook Air to iPhone Tutorial
- Bluetooth Based Tethering of iPad to iPhone Tutorial
- YouTube Video API Event Playlist Generations Tutorial
- WebGL Google Chrome Configuration Issue Tutorial
- YouTube Video API Event Playlist User Settings Tutorial
- Javascript Object New Method Creator Primer Tutorial
- YouTube Video API Event Playlist Background Image Tutorial
Categories
- Ajax
- Android
- Animation
- Anything You Like
- Code::Blocks
- Coding
- Colour Matching
- Data Integration
- Database
- Delphi
- Eclipse
- eLearning
- ESL
- Event-Driven Programming
- Games
- GIMP
- GUI
- Hardware
- Installers
- iOS
- Land Surveying
- Moodle
- Music Poll
- NetBeans
- Networking
- News
- Not Categorised
- OOP
- Operating System
- Photography
- Projects
- Signage Poll
- Software
- SpectroPhotometer
- Tiki Wiki
- Trips
- Tutorials
- Uncategorized
- Visual Studio
- Xcode
Meta
Tags
Ajax animation background button canvas command line CSS Did you know div DOM dropdown email emoji event form game games Google Google chart HTML IFRAME image iOS iPad Javascript MAMP map mobile navigation onclick overlay PHP programming select share sharing SMS SVG table textarea tutorial url video web browser webpageYour Background Image
OnTopList
Tag Archives: share
Canvas Drag and Drop Even Less Ephemeral Tutorial
In yesterday’s Canvas Drag and Drop Less Ephemeral Tutorial … image slides … could go into … data URI list … could be hashtagged … along with a … delay argument … then, via user button click, sent via “a” … Continue reading →
Posted in Animation, eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged animated gif, animation, annotation, background, button, canvas, click, collaboration, communication, data uri, data url, div, drag, drag and drop, drop, email, emoji, emoji button, file, graphics, hashtag, hashtagging, HTML, HTML5, Javascript, link, mailto, media, media file, onclick, ondragover, ondragstart, ondrop, output, popup, popup window, presentation, programming, prompt, proof of concept, share, sharing, slide, stop press, text, textarea, tutorial, webpage, window
|
Leave a comment
Canvas Drag and Drop Less Ephemeral Tutorial
We’re bucking the trend, today, “offering less” but “producing more”, we’re hoping, on top of the progress of yesterday’s Canvas Drag and Drop Ephemeral Tutorial …. adding totaking from an “internal use only” level of ephemeralness which only offered an … Continue reading →
Posted in Animation, eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged animated gif, animation, annotation, background, button, canvas, click, collaboration, communication, data uri, data url, div, drag, drag and drop, drop, email, emoji, emoji button, graphics, hashtag, hashtagging, HTML, HTML5, Javascript, link, mailto, onclick, ondragover, ondragstart, ondrop, popup, popup window, presentation, programming, prompt, proof of concept, share, sharing, slide, stop press, text, textarea, tutorial, webpage, window
|
Leave a comment
Find English Word Game Collaboration Tutorial
Collaboration, regarding games, is synonymous with “level playing field”, and that is a principle upheld with today’s introduction of sharing and collaboration functionality into our Find the Word game, and further to yesterday’s Find English Mobile Clicked Word Ends Game … Continue reading →
Posted in Ajax, eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Games, Tutorials
|
Tagged argument, cell, click, collaboration, connective, CSS, dictionary, email, emoji, English, event, first name, game, genericization, highlight, HTML, Javascript, Linux, listenerdictionary, mobile, mode, mode of use, name, onclick, overlay, parameterization, programming, regional indicator, selection, selectionchange, share, sharing, SMS, styling, table, table cell, text shadow, textarea, timer, tutorial, word, word game
|
Leave a comment
Canvas Sharing via Email Hashtagging Tutorial
We’re regular “tweakers” (for example, with Canvas via Image Web Share API Photo Postcard Tutorial) of what we call the … canvas … based … signatures … possible … scribble … or … discrete click … creating … annotation … … Continue reading →
Posted in eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged annotate, annotating, annotation, canvas, collaboration, communication, conduit, digital signature, discrete click, drawImage, email, external Javascript, graphics, hashtag, hashtagging, HTML, image, Javascript, PHP, programming, scribble, share, sharing, signature, SMS, toDataURL, tutorial, url
|
Leave a comment
Linked Sentence Story Sharing Tutorial
Today’s work, adding some sharing functionality, onto yesterday’s Linked Sentence Story Primer Tutorial‘s “proof of concept” work with our new “Linked Sentence Creator” web application was made that much easier now that … “mailto:” emailing “a” links … and … … Continue reading →
Posted in eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged append, collaboration, createElement, document.createElement, DOM, email, emoji, innerHTML, Javascript, link, linked, list, modify, outerHTML, part, phrase, prepend, primer, programming, proof of concept, sentence, share, sharing, SMS, story, tutorial, window.open.popup, word, words
|
Leave a comment
Google Geo Chart and Map Chart Hashtag SMS Tutorial
We’ve reached limits! Yes, researching for SMS sharing conduits within the macOS arrangement here, we believe for iMessage SMS messages there may be a length limit that kicks in around the 18k mark. Anyway, along the line, with SMS messaging … Continue reading →
Posted in eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged $_POST, click, clientside, collaboration, communication, conduit, data, email, emeil client, emoji, form, geo chart, Google chart, hash, hashtag, hashtagging, href, huge, image chart, iPhone, Javascript, large, link, list, mail server, map chart, method, navigate, onclick, PHP, programming, share, sharing, SMS, tutorial, url, webpage, Wikipedia
|
Leave a comment
Earth Scanner Google Chrome Speech to Text Tutorial
We’re interested in methodologies, even if they are not fully cross-browser and/or cross platform ones, if only to reassure that a concept is possible, and that applies to today’s … Google Chrome … only … non-mobile … only … https:// … Continue reading →
Posted in eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged absolute URL, address bar, Ajax, animation, annotate, annotating, annotation, antarctic circle, API, arctic circle, array, audio, autoplay, background image, background-position, base64, blog post, browse, browsing, clip-path, code, collaboration, collage, comma, comma separated list, CSS, curl, decode, delimitation, delimiter, delimiters, detail, device, Did you know, document.title, DOM, Earth, email, emoji, emoji flag, equator, external CSS, external Javascript, file, FileReader, filereader api, focus, geodata, geographicals, geography, geojson, Google, Google Chrome, Google Directions, greenwich meridian, hash, hashtag, hashtagging, horizontal rule, hotlink, HTML, IFRAME, image, img, interactive map, intranet, itinerary, Javascript, karaoke, keyframes, kinear-gradient, kludge, land, landscape, latitude, leg, legs, lengthy, line, linear gradient, lines, link, local web server, localStorage, longitude, making of, MAMP, mantissa, map, Mapping, margin, margin-left, margin-top, media, Mercator, meridian, microphone, mixed content, mobile, navigator.canShare, North Pole, onclick, one image website, operating system, order, orientation, overlay, Page Visibility API, Patsy Gallant, place, placement, placename, play, plot, pole, popup, portrait, programming, realtime, reference, Safari, screen height, screen width, screen.orientation, script, scroll, scrolling, sea, share, sharing, SMS, south pole, speech, speech to text, stop press, style, styling, syntax, tab, terrestrial, textarea, timestamp, timezone, timing, trip, trip leg, trip planning, trips, tropic of cancer, tropic of capricorn, tutorial, url, video, web browser, web browser tab.title, web share api, Web Speech, Web Speech API, when, where, Wikipedia, window, window.atob, window.open, wrapper, YouTube
|
Leave a comment
Earth Scanner User Emoji Entities Tutorial
Recently we’ve been trying to add to the flexibility and power of the user using our recent Earth Scanner web application to tailor what it looks like and how it works via settings the user can control. Adding to this … Continue reading →
Posted in eLearning, Event-Driven Programming, Tutorials
|
Tagged absolute URL, address bar, Ajax, animation, annotate, annotating, annotation, antarctic circle, API, arctic circle, array, audio, autoplay, background image, background-position, base64, blog post, browse, browsing, clip-path, code, collaboration, collage, comma, comma separated list, CSS, curl, decode, delimitation, delimiter, delimiters, detail, device, Did you know, document.title, DOM, Earth, email, emoji, emoji flag, equator, external CSS, external Javascript, file, FileReader, filereader api, focus, geodata, geographicals, geography, geojson, Google Chrome, Google Directions, greenwich meridian, hash, hashtag, hashtagging, horizontal rule, hotlink, HTML, IFRAME, image, img, interactive map, intranet, itinerary, Javascript, karaoke, keyframes, kinear-gradient, kludge, land, landscape, latitude, leg, legs, lengthy, line, linear gradient, lines, link, local web server, localStorage, longitude, making of, MAMP, mantissa, map, Mapping, margin, margin-left, margin-top, media, Mercator, meridian, mixed content, mobile, navigator.canShare, North Pole, onclick, one image website, operating system, order, orientation, overlay, Page Visibility API, Patsy Gallant, place, placement, placename, play, plot, pole, popup, portrait, programming, realtime, reference, Safari, screen height, screen width, screen.orientation, script, scroll, scrolling, sea, share, sharing, SMS, south pole, stop press, style, styling, syntax, tab, terrestrial, textarea, timestamp, timezone, timing, trip, trip leg, trip planning, trips, tropic of cancer, tropic of capricorn, tutorial, url, video, web browser, web browser tab.title, web share api, when, where, Wikipedia, window, window.atob, window.open, wrapper, YouTube
|
Leave a comment