
I finally resolved my issues with hashing twts... with REGEX!
Dates in JavaScript are truly strange creatures.
A geek, coder, gamer, tinkerer, husband, father, server admin, web developer, and American cyborg, though not necessarily in that order.
I finally resolved my issues with hashing twts... with REGEX!
Dates in JavaScript are truly strange creatures.
Apologies if I've been spamming anyone out there in twtxt-land today.
I've been working on a couple of twtxt-related projects, and one of them is a reader (tentatively called twtstrm
) written in JS. I used dummy data for the first few stages of development, but now I'm at the point where I need some real data, and that meant hitting up my actual following list.
Of course, it didn't help that I had a typo in my If-Modified-Since
headers, but all that has since been resolved.
Anyways, if I accidentally spammed you with requests today, I am sorry, and it shouldn't happen anymore.
We thank you for your patience, and apologize for the inconvenience.
Yesterday, I published my first package on JSR: https://jsr.io/@itsericwoodward/fluent-dom-esm.
Then today, I pushed an update to my site to show my twts (including a schnazzy little animation to add them): https://itsericwoodward.com/
Overall, a most productive weekend.
👓 "How to Make an Apostrophe in HTML: The Complete 2500 Word Guide" https://thelinuxcode.com/how-can-i-make-an-apostrophe-in-html/
I had some trouble with my nginx reverse proxy, but after much tweaking and fiddling, I now have the prototype version of my node-based twtxt editor up and running on my site! 😎 #twtgoals
I finally have my new (top-secret) twtxt client in a working state. Next comes the deployment, which I hope to finish tonight. Release date: TBD. Stay tuned!