![]() I understand the value of encouraging students to seek most information organically at those levels, but in this particular area there is so much mis-information out there (often stated in ways that make it sound like the seeker is stupid for not doing an impossible thing) that (in the humble opinion of this student) it’s likely to result in a fatal level of frustration for many students at this level. Since there has been a recent cascade of common free image hosting services blocking hotlinking completely even at the lowest levels, it would be helpful if this issue were addressed in early directions for codepen projects (similar to the hint about weather API’s in the weather app project). This is the only place I’ve found Cloudinary mentioned. Even this chain discusses Dropbox public folders (which don’t exist anymore) and imgur (which blocks codepen) plus a few other recently-turned-unusable options. Microsoft has heavily invested in AI through products like GitHub Copilot and Bing Chat that can generate original code, text, and images on demand. Inside the share dialog, choose the permissions drop-down and select Anyone with a link. Next, right-click the image and choose Get link to get the shareable link of the uploaded file. ![]() I’ve found mountains of instructions that became obsolete within the last year. Go to Google Drive and upload the image that you wish to embed in your website. If there is no directory to upload the file to, create the directory and upload the file there. jpg image will be uploaded to the myimage directory. Go to the File manager and navigate to the folder where the file will be uploaded. I’ve spent an excessive amount of time on this seemingly simple issue - significantly more than I spent on learning Javascript, Bootstrap and JQuery combined. Directly linking to a file on the server. ![]() To Any FreeCodeCamp leaders that might read this: It looks like Cloudinary has a business model that works for these projects (free at the ridiculously small amounts of bandwidth we need, cost kicks in at the levels a “real website” would encounter). I’m trying Cloudinary, and so far it looks like it is working. Generally, image hosting providers make it easy to store images on their servers and then to direct link those images back to your application.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |