remove ambiguous <center> tags (#224)

This commit is contained in:
Cadey Ratio 2020-10-02 18:20:52 -04:00 committed by GitHub
parent f78925c6ad
commit a6ee2e7e36
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
8 changed files with 11 additions and 11 deletions

View File

@ -23,13 +23,13 @@ This is a surprisingly hard question to answer. Most of the time though, I know
Art doesn't have to follow conventional ideas of what most people think "art" is. Art can be just about anything that you can classify as art. As a conventional example, consider something like the Mona Lisa:
<center> ![The Mona Lisa, the most famous painting in the world](https://xena.greedo.xeserv.us/files/monalisa_small.jpg) </center>
![The Mona Lisa, the most famous painting in the world](https://xena.greedo.xeserv.us/files/monalisa_small.jpg)
People will accept this as art without much argument. It's a painting, it obviously took a lot of skill and time to create. It is said that Leonardo Da Vinci (the artist of the painting) created it partially [as a contribution to the state of the art of oil painting][monalisawhy].
So that painting is art, and a lot of people would consider it art; so what *would* a lot of people *not* consider art? Here's an example:
<center> ![Untitled (Perfect Lovers) by Felix Gonzalez-Torres](https://xena.greedo.xeserv.us/files/perfect-lovers.jpg) </center>
![Untitled (Perfect Lovers) by Felix Gonzalez-Torres](https://xena.greedo.xeserv.us/files/perfect-lovers.jpg)
This is *Untitled (Perfect Lovers)* by Felix Gonzalez. If you just take a look at it without context, it's just two battery-operated clocks on a wall. Where is the expertise and the like that goes into this? This is just the result of someone buying two clocks from the store and putting them somewhere, right?

View File

@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Death is a very misunderstood card in Tarot, but not for the reasons you'd think
Tarot does not see death in this way. Death, the skeleton knight wearing armor, does not see color, race or creed, thus he is depicted as a skeleton. He is riding towards a child and another younger person. The sun is rising in the distance, but even it cannot stop Death. Nor can royalty, as shown by the king under him, dead.
<center>![](/static/img/tarot_death.jpg)</center>
![](/static/img/tarot_death.jpg)
Death, however, does not actually refer to the act of a physical body physically dying. Death is a change that cannot be reverted. The consequences of this change can and will affect what comes next, however.

View File

@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ the real thing that advances is the skill of the player. You make the
deliveries. You go the distance. You do your job as the post-apocalyptic UPS man
that America needs.
<center>![UPS Simulator 2019](/static/img/ups-simulator-2019.jpg)</center>
![UPS Simulator 2019](/static/img/ups-simulator-2019.jpg)
By [mmmintdesign](https://twitter.com/mmmintdesign) [source](https://twitter.com/mmmintdesign/status/1192856164331114497)

View File

@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ I recently posted (a variant of) this image of some Go source code to Twitter
and it spawned some interesting conversations about what it does, how it works
and why it needs to exist in the first place:
<center>![the source code of package maybedoer](/static/blog/maybedoer.png)</center>
![the source code of package maybedoer](/static/blog/maybedoer.png)
This file is used to sequence functions that could fail together, allowing you
to avoid doing an `if err != nil` check on every single fallible function call.

View File

@ -48,9 +48,9 @@ NixOS and how they fit into how I use NixOS on my desktop.
Earlier, I mentioned that Nix is a _functional_ package manager. This means that
Nix views packages as a combination of inputs to get an output:
<center>![A nix package is the metadata, the source code, the build instructions and
![A nix package is the metadata, the source code, the build instructions and
some patches as input to a derivation to create a
package](/static/blog/nix-package.png)</center>
package](/static/blog/nix-package.png)
This is how most package managers work (even things like Windows installer
files), but Nix goes a step further by disallowing package builds to access the

View File

@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ make this data anonymous, simplistic and (reasonably) public.
Here is how it works:
<center>![A diagram on how this works](/static/img/pageview_flowchart.png)</center>
![A diagram on how this works](/static/img/pageview_flowchart.png)
When the page is loaded, a [javascript file records the start time](/static/js/pageview_timer.js).
This then sets a [pagehide handler](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Window/pagehide_event)

View File

@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ We'll see though.
I have also designed a placeholder logo for pa'i. Here it is:
<center>![the logo for pa'i](/static/blog/pahi-logo.png)</center>
![the logo for pa'i](/static/blog/pahi-logo.png)
It might be changed in the future, but this is what I am going with for now. The
circuit traces all spell out messages of love (inspired from the Senzar runes of

View File

@ -37,9 +37,9 @@ identical source code that could be used to create a byte-for-byte identical
copy of your program's binary. But surely nobody would do that, that would be
crazy, wouldn't it?
<center>![Noooo! You can't just port a Nintendo 64 game to LibGL! They're
![Noooo! You can't just port a Nintendo 64 game to LibGL! They're
completely different hardware! It wouldn't respect the wishes of the creators!
Hahaha porting machine go brrrrrrrr](/static/blog/portingmachinegobrrr.png)</center>
Hahaha porting machine go brrrrrrrr](/static/blog/portingmachinegobrrr.png)
Someone did. The fruits of this effort are available [here][sm64dc]. This was
mostly a proof of concept and is a masterpiece in its own right. However,