@bjornl simply said, success is called when the server responds 200 (or equivalent), failure is called on all other responses, when the server is unreachable, or when the request timeouts
I've been going through the source to find out the critiera for jQuery.ajax()'s success/failure methods being called. It is not based solely on the status code, it seems to also involve the data type.
I always resort to writing custom error handlers using the 'complete'-callback.
Exactly which ...
may seem strange, but I think the jQuery weighs a lot and you just addicting. You start with her, and her and then goes 70Kb adding more things, more and more in the end you have almost only 500kb of javascript. This happened in my old project. While I use pure javascript, I can change more easily, and learn more. My opinion.
my answer came out a bit wrong. I meant I have used that one once but I prefer a jquery based one. it always depends on the requirements
@PhE this is a valid point. i take good care to load as much as I require for every project. but when you have something like a datepicker which is a complex (but comonly used script) I will try not to reinvent the wheel to save 10-50Kb. my opinion
@Circadian Yes, it's a difficult decision. For now, as this is a job for the university I will not use any third-party library, but eventually, I'll check the requirements and consider well.
Hm... wow... nice discussion topic. Actually failing to find good grid component for my purposes I started to write my own. At some points it's better then jqGrid for example, lightier, but it fails at some others - extensibility for example. DatePicker in jQuery UI is pretty mature, why would you want to write your own? It's nice exercise, but on big part huge waste of time, if you already now what you should do to make it tick.
Yes, I agree with you, everything depends on the time and the requirements you must meet. The problem is that most javascript libraries now depend on jQuery. Currently, only to use due to jQuery DataTables.
Interesting. some useful libraries. have fun http://www.javascripttoolbox.com/
The internet is full of such projects, how to know which is better, if both have advantages and differences. let programmers free, and do not benefit anyone ;D
$.uuid was intentionally exposed in 1.4.3 for plugin developers, it's the current key in cache
e.g. add a handler or data to an element that doesn't have any, it gets the $.expando property added, with a key of the current $.uuid which gets incremented, next element gets 1 higher
when you look at a DOM browser and see all those jquery1234293487243="12345" properties...that's what that is, to prevent circular reference loops IE will never clean up
Questions in the html, css, javascript and jquery tags tend to profit immensely from the asker providing a ready-made example on jsfiddle.net or a similar "live preview" service.
The problem becomes instantly visible; the answerer can enter, test and share their modifications straight away; stu...
@DimitarChristoff - they are, so the impact's less but it's still spam/clutter...I mean if nothing else that's a really bad tutorial, I'd downvote just for that
@KeeperOfTheSoul Which version of Chrome is it? Works fine for me but I can't tell you my version because the "About" menu option has been replaced with "Update"
@Tomalak - I use the moderator tools... but not likely in the way one might expect ;-) It provides a nice filtered view of questions that might be spam to down-vote/flag, as well as interesting questions to check out
I was also thinking that at some point I will simply check if a fiddle was displayed and if anonymous fiddle was not displayed for 3 months it will be deleted :)
@YiJiang i always copy the contents of the filddle into the answer and try to make sure SO has all the data on its own accord, should the external sites fail
not to mention the search func cant access data off-site
@KeeperOfTheSoul I know, but I need the round for some special binary encoding stuff(which truncates after the 2nd decimal place, since I don't need more precision) everything else is blazing fast only floats are slow
Hi guys, I'm trying to build a simple extension for Opera 11 and I've hit a massive snag I'm sure most developers meet.
In case you don't know, an extension in Opera is just another .html file, with some Javascript if you choose.
What I'm having trouble with is getting the HTML source from the ...
@DimitarChristoff I was thinking it could be handled on the target :P Writing a javascript which would parse it is certainly possible and it would fallback to a link which is a great idea
@IvoWetzel I think changing user interface from a large scrollable table to a pageable table will leave complaints. I dont know whether its considered bad practice to use ajax to query large-ish tables
@IvoWetzel I could do. But not sure how "smooth" it will be. I have to see how slow the loading of the table over ajax actaully is to see whether its needed.
@Raynos Did I overkill too then? github.com/BonsaiDen/BiSON.js (used for a Node.js game running off my local computer, don't have any hosting, so I really needed to squish out every byte possible)
@Raynos Quite some data actually with the game, and I only got 120kb/s upload :/ Overhead on V8, none. it's twice as fast, so that's good for the server. V8's JSON is slooooow :/
@IvoWetzel Is it possible to write games with js front & backend. Without hitting performance or security issues? I think its a nightmare to control an open source front end.
@Raynos It's always a nightmare if you put game logic in the clients, that's why blizzard has warden. In otherwords, put all your logic on the server side and it works fine