| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 2 months |
| seen | Mar 28 at 18:21 | |
| stats | profile views | 7 |
Hobbyist web designer since 1998, hobbyist web programmer since 2002.
Proficiencies:
- HTML
- CSS
- PHP
- SQL (PostgreSQL)
Other technologies I'm familiar with:
- JavaScript
- Scala
- Haskell
- Sass/LESS
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Mar 28 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Mar 28 |
accepted | A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” |
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Mar 28 |
answered | A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” |
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Mar 13 |
awarded | Analytical |
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Mar 12 |
revised |
A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” added 384 characters in body |
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Mar 12 |
awarded | Editor |
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Mar 12 |
revised |
A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” Clarified/added additional information to the question |
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Mar 11 |
comment |
A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” Proofs in terms of printing is a test of how a document looks when printed, the last thing that might be done before sending into production. desktoppub.about.com/cs/basic/g/proofs.htm |
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Mar 9 |
comment |
A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” I do like the word primed, but I think the designers using the application might do a bit of head scratching when they see it. |
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Mar 9 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Mar 8 |
comment |
A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” I have considered using this set of labels. Do you think Incomplete still makes sense when that label encompasses elements that depend on things that haven't happened yet (eg. an interview that will take place next week)? |
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Mar 8 |
awarded | Student |
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Mar 8 |
asked | A word to describe “work that is ready to be done” |

