@Tom Well, most of the developers involved with the project insist that it's very dangerous to use in production, and people who use it for prototyping and "research" work say it crashes all the time
The reason I asked was because I have found JavaScript confined to the web; and has never really caught on as a full fledged scripting / programming language outside it. Comparing it to perl or python. Node.js looks like the first project which is gaining a bit of traction
@vivekian2 I'm trying to remember - the oldest one is "Helma", but there's a derivative of that out now - it's cool because you can find Google app engine support for it
@MatthewCrumley yes that's what I was thinking of - it's unpalatable for Java-haters, but getting the massive JVM runtime to exploit (esp. DB support) makes it pretty powerful
Pointy, vivekian, I've used node.js for some crawling applications and never had any problems with it crashing. I know Yahoo is working on using it as their mail backend and there are already some (admittedly not too commonly known) websites hosted with node as the webserver
@Tom i see; i have never delved into it much myself. But I think there are a couple of good books out there now which can be helpful: Pro JavaScript Design Patterns is one.
@HoLyVieR, I think so yes, I'm just not sure what the proper setup is to do OOP in Javascript, lots of my concerns I described in stackoverflow.com/questions/4008766/…
So, one of my professors says that JS files should be included on the head for a "better performance". He also said that JS the server because the validations are done in the client. I know, at least I think, that both of them are false statements, but before I opened my mouth I wanted to be 100% sure, are they?
Well if you put javascript file in the head, they will load up before the rest of your content. If you don't need to execute any javascript before the pages load you should put them at the bottom of the body
@Ben Well, in some browsers where JS is loaded async it'll make the JS finish loading quicker (as it starts sooner), but in others where JS blocks parsing, it'll make the rest of the page load slower. Validation has to be done server-side too, because the client can send any evil content, esp. if it starts not executing Js.
@sworoc - perhaps I was too ambiguous, it's often a monetary decision outside the purview of any developer, e.g. a large corporation that won't upgrade because their intranet apps were never close to having valid markup.
@NickCraver totally agree Nick - the "IE6 people are dumb" really ignores how complicated and expensive are huge IT projects like upgrading 50,000 workstations/laptops, esp. given craptastic IE-only "enterprise" intranet apps
@sworoc You can't do that. Imagine making a bank web app, you can't just throw in there "use chrome", all the grannies who bought a PC with windows preinstalled will be like "wtfis chrome"
Very true, I guess companies will go the Google route and just install a plugin for everything that IE doesn't do right out of the box, until it becomes a terribly slow modern browser.
I guess there's something to be said for working for an engineering company where the attitude is basically, "you're in charge of your own workstation, you must run anti-virus if you use Windows (here's the anti-virus software you're required to use), and you're not allowed to use certain programs x, y, and z with bad security records"
@gsnedders Well, unless you download porn at work or download any of those "download me and get 1 million dollars" programs, I don't see the need for an anti-virus
@tpae the closest div is inside the commentlist. My input delbutton get hided while the rest inside the same div doesnt.. that's my issue and thats why i implented the text instead..
ok I think I understand the confusion here, $(editorText) doesn't change the existing element, you're creating a new document fragment, elements with that markup....you're not performing operations on the editor itself but on a separate set of elements not really related
@whobutsb - though CKEditor's functions, you could for example do $('<div />').append(editorText).doStuff(....) then grab the .html() from that same fragment, use that value (the new html) to set the editor's contents
@tpae jsbin.com/ucevi/edit Here is it. Ok what i originally want is that status$id to hide, and not just the button only(don't know why it does that, when i activate the $comment.hide().remove(); )
Anyone get the "Script Stack Space Quote is Exhausted" when running JQuery and Microsoft Templates? Anyway to increase the quota with a preference or something?
@user457827 parent selectors are usually used like this: <div class="parent"> <div class="child"><input type="button" class="me"></div> </div>, and when you call $('.me').parent().html("blank");
@user457827 - a) please change your name, autocomplete is painful :), b) no, that's incorrect, .parent() has nothing to do with class="parent".anything() has nothing to do with class="anything", they're different concepts