This is an awesome resource.
For something I love and want to use all the time, like Python, I'll make my own cheat sheet. For something like MySql, where I have to kick myself to pay attention every thirty seconds, there's no way I'm doing my own cheat sheet. I can barely bring myself to do the actual work.
So I take it you must be used to reading documentation and picking up new languages pretty quickly? If you must keep going to the documentation to remember a function, copy it out. I don't see how needing to dig through out of order lists is any more useful than digging through long winded documentation. The point of a cheat sheet is not just remembering the thing, but finding it quickly.
Slightly off topic, but my rule of thumb: If your project is too big for Sqlite, it's big enough for Postgres. If it's too small for Postgres, it's small enough for Sqlite.
MySQL doesn't absolutely need to fit anywhere in the picture, but of course, this is precluding any host complications for existing projects.
CSS -> http://www.csssports.com/
The website seems useful, however.
[1]: http://untergunter.deviantart.com/art/Leaf-Mimes-Icons-20393...
Now the dzone links requiring registration can take a hike
No but seriously this is useful. Bookmarked and pinned, extra points for making it pretty with nice UI. Certainly loads better than sifting through pages of monochrome documentation for a simple, quick answer to small problems.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/keyboard-shortcuts!/id489432...
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.greenlife....
The traction has been low till now, highlighting the fact that we need to seek a lot of feedback and iterate on it.
(edited for formatting; first time poster)
Would love to see more listings of keyboard shortcuts. Overall this is really cool. I'm working on a printed cheat sheet/shortcut product so I'll definitely use this ...
Repo is here: https://github.com/overthecs/overthecs.github.com
The example I spotted immediately is the extremely useful document.querySelectorAll()[1] which works very much like $('.someSelector') in jquery, but completely native and supported by pretty much everything.
[1]https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/DOM/Document.queryS...
1. Edit
2. Propose File Change
3. Profit
Although I would rather not see the list of API's be cluttered with items like "Icons", "Logic", "Physics", etc. They are just general concepts and besides they have no actual contents beside a wikipedia and Wolfram Alpha link.
Looks cool! will have to use at some point.
At least as far as ruby goes it seems of limited use.
I don't mind the ads. If its a useful tool, he can feel free to monetize on it.