A collection of projects, with a bit more about them.
Jacks is a framework for building responsive websites. It is based around Ethan Marcotte's book, Responsive Web Design.
It's designed to provide a starting point for building sites. It (aims to) provide the standard requirements (some base styles, jQuery, an HTML template) that allows you to easily produce responsive designs.
This site is mostly Jacks defaults, apart from the width.
These are all of my config files for the various applications and utilities I use. It includes (in no particular order): vim, tmux, mutt, bash, irssi, git, screen, gnome-terminal.
Over time, more stuff is added, and I'm likely to evolve it. I'm yet to remove the configuration for something I rarely use, though (e.g.: screen).
This is a simple tutorial designed to be an aid to teaching Python (and programming, in general).
It includes: a Hello World, the same but with user input, a Fibonacci sequence generator, an example pulling in the Twitter API and the shell of a text-based adventure game.
The last one is designed to get people hacking away on something - and more importantly, build something neat from a simple position.
I used to use TextMate as my primary editor. I put this together to provide CSS3 support. Note: It could probably do with updating.
Buttons. Simply buttons. Styled using CSS3.
A rest-client like library for PHP which is designed to make doing RESTful requests easier.
These we most likely quite useful once. I likely haven't looked at them for a long time. You probably shouldn't use them.
This is a projects page by me, Nick Charlton. I'm a Cocoa/Obj-C & Ruby developer. I also occasionally design thing (mostly for my projects). I'm also a Computer Science Student at Plymouth University.
The idea for this was to have a single place to point people to for projects I've worked on. Especially the Open Source ones. Most of the stuff here is MIT licensed.