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Brick 2.0 creates customizable Web UI elements via fea <a href=www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley becher</a> tures in HTML5 Mozilla has launched the latest version of a reusable UI element library designed to take advantage of HTML5rsquo ability to create custom HTML tags.The Brick library has been under development since August 2013, though it first appeared in a somewhat different incarnation. Now itrsquo advanced to version 2.0, which builds more directly on HTML5 standards available in the majority of late-model browsers.The idea behind Brick is to create a library of UI components for Web applications, each with distinct HTML elements. A menu, for instance, wouldnrsquo;t be a div element with a class designation, but rather its <a href=www.stanley-cups.es>stanley cups</a> own brick-menu element enclosing other brick-item elements. The resulting HTML is intended to be easier to read and less convoluted. An earlier version of Brick used the X-Tag polyfill library to create custom elements for browsers that didnrsquo;t yet support HTML5rsquo custom elements API. Now that the API has been widely adopted, the current version of Brick makes direct use of it.Brick invites comparison with Googlersquo Polymer, the Web library designed to allow the creation of custom HTML elements for browsers without inherent support for such features. However, Brick doesnrsquo;t provide bidirectional data binding or templating, except in extremely limited w <a href=www.stanley-cup.it>stanley italia</a> ays.Brick also seems to parallel the Material Design framework, another Google production and an outgrowth of Polymer. Previ Qyzp Polymer in your pocket
Wednesday 02 December 2015 1:24 pmSir Charlie Bean blasts UKrsquo outdated Office for National StatisticsB <a href=www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley shop</a> y: Chris PapadopoullosShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailThe UKrsquo Office for National Statistics has failed to keep up with the times, a new independent report has said today.The ONS needs to make better use of technology, utilise different private and public sector data sources, and reinvest in a London presence, according to the interim review led by Sir Charlie Bean <a href=www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley thermobecher</a> .The former Bank of England deputy governor said:Itrsquo nonsensical that different bits of the government donrsquo;t speak to each other, so that businesses and households have to provide the same information twice. Unlocking the data hoard already held by the public sector will not only save businesses money but also produce more timely and accurate statistics.Bean also called for a culture change, arguing that ONS staff need to be more intellectually curious, open and self-critical, as well as better at engaging in customers.A culture shift at the ONS is also key to producing economic statistics for a modern economy, Bean said.The report said the relocation of the ONS headquarters to Newport from London led to a significant loss of expertise, but added thatNewport should remain its base.B <a href=www.stanleyus.us>stanley cup usa</a> ean was commissioned by chancellor George Osborne in this yearrsquo Summer Budget