How’s it going, I'm a Adam, a Full-Stack Engineer, actively searching for work. I'm all about JavaScript. And Frontend but don't let that fool you - I've also got some serious Backend skills.
Location
City of Bath, UK 🇬🇧
Education
10 plus years* active enterprise development experience and a Fine art degree 🎨
How’s it going, I'm a Adam, a Full-Stack Engineer, actively searching for work. I'm all about JavaScript. And Frontend but don't let that fool you - I've also got some serious Backend skills.
Location
City of Bath, UK 🇬🇧
Education
10 plus years* active enterprise development experience and a Fine art degree 🎨
How’s it going, I'm a Adam, a Full-Stack Engineer, actively searching for work. I'm all about JavaScript. And Frontend but don't let that fool you - I've also got some serious Backend skills.
Location
City of Bath, UK 🇬🇧
Education
10 plus years* active enterprise development experience and a Fine art degree 🎨
Maybe it works like a USB plug. You try with a comma and it doesn't work. Then you try without a comma, and it doesn't work. Then you try again with a comma and this time it works.
(Also sounds like my debugging session.)
My latest Firefox just searched for your example string hmm
Did you add the
l
based on my instructions, I mentioned in the note above the instructions?This absolutely does work in all browsers. Infact this example is based on the example from Mozilla Development Network.
Did you take it out of the quotes of the a href
I got an
Address doesn't look right
the first time and also got Firefox to search the string the second time.These are my tries. You have to look carefully at the comma and the full string you enter in the address bar.
3rd times the charm.
Maybe it works like a USB plug. You try with a comma and it doesn't work. Then you try without a comma, and it doesn't work. Then you try again with a comma and this time it works.
(Also sounds like my debugging session.)
Haha, sometimes it feels as if code has a mind of its own