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| author | mjfernez <mjf@mjfer.net> | 2023-11-22 13:55:19 -0500 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | mjfernez <mjf@mjfer.net> | 2023-11-22 13:55:19 -0500 | 
| commit | 1c5025d54c3a8244fcbe818f96dea49e51054ba6 (patch) | |
| tree | 22615506663bd546e430feea1c2ca3c4a58513b4 /.md/tutorials | |
| parent | f602bb95e0b1160274bed0f125b8cfdedff3af96 (diff) | |
| download | site-files-1c5025d54c3a8244fcbe818f96dea49e51054ba6.tar.gz | |
Update to new media directory syntax
Diffstat (limited to '.md/tutorials')
3 files changed, 12 insertions, 12 deletions
| diff --git a/.md/tutorials/pc_gaming/common-gfx-card-installation-woes.md b/.md/tutorials/pc_gaming/common-gfx-card-installation-woes.md index 19e3c1c..f9370ec 100644 --- a/.md/tutorials/pc_gaming/common-gfx-card-installation-woes.md +++ b/.md/tutorials/pc_gaming/common-gfx-card-installation-woes.md @@ -138,6 +138,6 @@ you're still seeing your desktop, you should be  good to go! I ran Kerbal Space Program 2  (currently in early access) as my first test. - +  Looking good, Jeb! diff --git a/.md/tutorials/vim/how-to-fix-neovim-nerdtree-rendering-issue.md b/.md/tutorials/vim/how-to-fix-neovim-nerdtree-rendering-issue.md index df0af33..1ff6fe7 100644 --- a/.md/tutorials/vim/how-to-fix-neovim-nerdtree-rendering-issue.md +++ b/.md/tutorials/vim/how-to-fix-neovim-nerdtree-rendering-issue.md @@ -6,18 +6,18 @@ scroll the window, I'd get a mess.  ## The Problem - +  Now, yes, I know I'm a heretic for using the arrow keys and not just  jumping around, but I thought it was weird I didn't see this issue  anywhere else. Also, vim doesn't have this problem. - +  It's also not because of my meme tmux setup, the same issue happens in  terminator, which I happened to have installed. - +  ## The Attempt @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ from Debian's default bashrc, but all I had to do was change it:  export TERM='tmux256-color'  ``` - +  No more hacky autocommands! diff --git a/.md/tutorials/www/quick-intro-html-css.md b/.md/tutorials/www/quick-intro-html-css.md index 3fe94ad..d94c254 100644 --- a/.md/tutorials/www/quick-intro-html-css.md +++ b/.md/tutorials/www/quick-intro-html-css.md @@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ tags in this example:                  <td>FSF!</td>                  <td>                  <a href="https://www.fsf.org/"> -                <img src="https://static.fsf.org/common/img/logo-new.png" /> +                <img src="https://static/media.fsf.org/common/img/logo-new.png" />                  </a></td>              </tr>              <tr> @@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ example:          <meta name="keywords" content="HTML, CSS, JavaScript">          <meta name="author" content="John Doe">          <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> -        <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/static/main.css"> +        <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/static/media/main.css">      </head>      <body>          <h1>My Great page</h1> @@ -332,7 +332,7 @@ syntax. CSS allows you to set attributes to *all* tags in a specific  document and create a unifying style for all your pages.  ``` -<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/static/main.css"> +<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/static/media/main.css">  ```  As before, "href" points to the file to be linked. In this example, we @@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ img.gray {  Applied:  <img style="filter:grayscale(100%)" -src="/static/jazzcat.jpg" +src="/static/media/jazzcat.jpg"  />  You can read lots more options for image formatting @@ -471,7 +471,7 @@ For one, that will only dim black-and-white images; anything else will  just turn to mush like this:  <img class="icon" -src="/static/jazzcat.jpg" +src="/static/media/jazzcat.jpg"  />  Instead, I'd like it to just apply to select elements; I can do so by @@ -486,10 +486,10 @@ img.icon {  And to implement it in HTML:  ``` -<img class="icon" src="/static/rss.svg" /> +<img class="icon" src="/static/media/rss.svg" />  ``` -<img class="icon" src="/static/rss.svg" /> +<img class="icon" src="/static/media/rss.svg" />  #### Use the div tag to make sections | 
