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Modern: HTML: Update annotations.
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@ -1,15 +1,41 @@
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{{! <!--
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Welcome to the annotated HTML template of the MODERN theme. This is the
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template used to generate the output HTML format of your resume when you
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choose the "modern" theme in HackMyResume or FluentCV.
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These comments will be stripped when the resume is generated.
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FRESH themes are just plain text documents with a bit of template magic
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built in via Handlebars or Underscore (in this case, Handlebars). Here we're
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buildng an HTML version of the theme, so we'll create an otherwise normal HTML
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document, then inject data into it using special tags. Where does the data
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come from? From our FRESH or JSON Resume-format resume, represented in this
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template through the "r" and "RAW" objects.
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r.some-propery
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r.some-method
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RAW.some-other-propery
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So let's begin with a standard HTML 5 doctype and prelude.
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--> }}
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html>
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<head>
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<meta charset="utf-8">
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{{! <!--
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Set the document title to the candidate's name. We use RAW.name here,
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Set the document <title> to the candidate's name. We use RAW.name here,
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instead of r.name, because RAW gives us the text *as entered by the user*.
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The double bracket notation automatically encodes this value. If we wanted
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the unencoded raw value, we'd use triple brackets as in
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((( RAW.name ))).
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--> }}
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<title>{{ RAW.name }}</title>
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{{!<!-- TODO: Optimize Google Fonts and Font Awesome access. -->}}
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<link href='https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Open+Sans:400,300,300italic,400italic,600,600italic,700,700italic' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/font-awesome/4.3.0/css/font-awesome.min.css">
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@ -22,18 +48,27 @@
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{{{styleSheet "modern-html.css"}}}
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{{! <!--
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If the user passes "css embed" via the command line, any styles present
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in "html.css" will be embedded into the document via the <style></style>
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tag. OTOH, if the user passes "css link" via the command line, then
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"html.css" will be referenced via a standard <link> tag. If no "css"
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parameter is given, HackMyResume defaults to CSS embedding via <style>,
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because even if it's not as "correct" as <link>, it helps produce a more
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"standalone" resume with fewer external dependencies.
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Now, depending on options, "modern-html.css" will either be embedded
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via <style> stags, or linked via <link>. Users can control this via
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(for example) the --css option in HackMyResume.
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Why might you want to embed CSS into <style> tags when most CSS guides
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instruct you to use <link>? Because embedded CSS creates a more hardened
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"standalone" resume with fewer external dependencies. This may not matter
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in a typical web scenario, but HTML resumes are also used to drive PDF
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generation, not to mention emailed, viewed locally, etc.
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TL;DR Use the "styleSheet" helper whenever possible.
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-->}}
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</head>
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{{!<!--
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So much for the <head> element. Now let's tackle the <body>.
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-->}}
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<body>
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<main id="main">
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<main id="main"> {{!<!-- Use your container markup of choice here -->}}
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<div id="container">
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<header>
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@ -96,6 +131,7 @@
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</section>
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{{/has}}
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{{! <!--
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Okay, let's create a custom SKILLS section with colored skill bars.
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@ -104,40 +140,46 @@
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omitted from the resume if either a) the section is empty or b) the user
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tells us to hide it.
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Always wrap your sections with the "section"!
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As fpr the colored bars, those are just standard HTML and CSS, with the
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height and color of each bar linked to the candidate's skill "level" from
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the resume.
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TL;DR Always wrap your sections with the "section"!
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--> }}
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{{#section 'skills' }}
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<hr>
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<section id="skills">
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<header>
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<h2>{{{sectionTitle "Skills"}}}</h2>
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</header>
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<span class="fa fa-lg fa-code"></span>
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<ul class="list-unstyled">
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{{#each r.skills.sets}}
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<li class="card card-nested card-skills">
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<div class="skill-level" rel="tooltip" title="{{ level }}" data-placement="left">
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<div class="skill-progress {{toLower level }}"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="skill-info">
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<strong>{{ name }}</strong>
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<div class="space-top labels">
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{{#if skills}}
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{{#each skills}}
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<span class="label label-keyword">{{ this }}</span>
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{{/each}}
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{{/if}}
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</div>
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</div>
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</li>
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{{/each}}
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</ul>
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</section>
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<hr>
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<section id="skills">
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<header>
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<h2>{{{sectionTitle "Skills"}}}</h2>
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</header>
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<span class="fa fa-lg fa-code"></span>
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<ul class="list-unstyled">
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{{#each r.skills.sets}}
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<li class="card card-nested card-skills">
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<div class="skill-level" rel="tooltip" title="{{ level }}" data-placement="left">
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<div class="skill-progress {{toLower level }}"></div>
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</div>
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<div class="skill-info">
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<strong>{{ name }}</strong>
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<div class="space-top labels">
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{{#if skills}}
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{{#each skills}}
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<span class="label label-keyword">{{ this }}</span>
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{{/each}}
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{{/if}}
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</div>
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</div>
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</li>
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{{/each}}
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</ul>
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</section>
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{{/section}}
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{{! <!--
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Now let's render the EMPLOYMENT section.
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So much for SKILLS. Now let's render the EMPLOYMENT section.
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We could do this manually with custom HTML, like we did with the SKILLS
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section, but let's take advantage of some predefined partials instead.
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@ -155,16 +197,29 @@
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((> section/skills ))
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However, in this case we also want to override the heading icon used
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in the global partial. So we also declare what's known as an INLINE
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PARTIAL, using ((#*inline "icon-skills")), and set its content to the
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icon we'd like to display for the SKILLS section. The global partial
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will reference this template by name, so it allows us to selectively
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override that part of the global partial.
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(Replace the parentheses with brackets). However, in this case we want to
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override the heading icon used in the global partial as well as its content.
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That is, we want to use the "section/employment" partial, but selectively
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override portions of it with our own markup.
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--> }}
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{{!<!--
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First, we create an inline partial called "icon-employment." The contents of
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this partial will be referenced by the section/employment partial we invoke
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below. This partial doesn't, by itself, render any content -- it's a template.
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-->}}
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{{#*inline "icon-employment"}}<span class="fa fa-lg fa-building"></span>{{/inline}}
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{{!<!--
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Next we create another inline partial called "body-employment" and set its
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contents to the markup we'd like to use for the body section of each job. This
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also doesn't render any content.
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-->}}
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{{#*inline "body-employment" }}
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<div>
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<h3><em>{{ position }}</em>,
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@ -183,12 +238,22 @@
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</div>
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{{/inline}}
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{{! <!--
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Actually render the employment section. Invoke the "section/employment"
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partial (which lives at partials/html/section/employment.html). The header
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icon and body of each employment stint will be rendered with the markup we
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defined above.
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--> }}
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{{> section/employment _icon="icon-employment"}}
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{{! <!--
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Do the same thing (roughly) with the PROJECT section.
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Move on to the PROJECTS section, giving it the same treatment we gave the
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EMPLOYMENT section.
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--> }}
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{{#*inline "body-projects" }}
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<div>
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<h3>{{#if role}}<em>{{camelCase role }}</em>,{{/if}}
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@ -214,10 +279,7 @@
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{{! <!--
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We'll override all section heading icons the same way, for the rest of the
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resume, using the same inline template technique. Keep in mind that these
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inline templates do not, by themselves, create any markup. They emit markup
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only when referenced by another template. Which template? In this case, the
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global partial for each section.
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resume, using the same inline template technique.
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--> }}
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{{#*inline "icon-education"}}<span class="fa fa-lg fa-mortar-board"></span>{{/inline}}
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@ -230,9 +292,8 @@
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{{#*inline "icon-references"}}<span class="fa fa-lg fa-thumbs-o-up"></span>{{/inline}}
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{{! <!--
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Use the predefined global partials for the rest of the resume sections as-is.
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Note: we can still customize the style of these via CSS. But we'll use the
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default markup.
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And we're done with the customizations. For the rest of the resume, we'll
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use the default section partials and style them with whatever CSS we like.
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--> }}
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{{> section/education _icon="icon-education"}}
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