Haml takes your gross, ugly templates and replaces them with veritable Haiku. Haml is the next step in generating views in your Rails application. Haml is a refreshing take that is meant to free us from the shitty templating languages we have gotten used to. Haml is based on one primary principal. Markup should be beautiful. Haml is a real solution to a real problem. Stop using the slow, repetitive, and annoying templates that you don’t even know how much you hate yet
This application is an end-to-end sample application for .NET Enterprise Application Server technologies. It is a service-oriented application based on Windows Communication Foundation (.NET 3.0) and ASP.NET, and illustrates many of the .NET enterprise development technologies for building highly scalable, rich "enterprise-connected" applications. It is designed as a benchmark kit to illustrate alternative technologies within .NET and their relative performance. The application offers full interoperability with Java Enterprise, including IBM WebSphere's Trade 6.1 sample application, and newly provided implementations on Oracle Application Server 10G (OC4J) and Oracle WebLogic Server 10.3 (Oracle implementations included with the download below). As such, the application offers an excellent opportunity for developers to learn about .NET and building interoperable, service-oriented applications.
But this one I'm liking so far: based on wmii's wmiimenu+wmiipsel tools, and built on top of ruby-wmii, it features: * mouse-less interaction * search as you type (extended autocompletion) for both title and URLs: the set of bookmarks matching what I'm typing at any position in the title or the URL is updated instantaneously * del.icio.us integration: * tagging (it will import your del.icio.us tags if you let it try) * powerful search expressions o all bookmarks in the last week: ~d <7d o all bookmarks whose description matches a regexp: ~t regexp o all bookmarks with "redhanded" on the description or the URL, defined/last used in the last month: redhanded ~d <1m o all bookmarks with "ruby" on the URL, defined/last used in 2006: ~d 2006 ~u ruby * progressive refining: I can enter successive expressions and each one further restricts the possible choices,