Can you guys tell me how bad is to rely full on javascript for validation, forms submits and a lot of that stuff, in a codeigniter proyect? this is not because i don't want to validate in php, it's because I don't want my site to run without javascript at all, mainly for UI purposes....
I want to add some jQuery functionality to our sites where one piece of markup will have a click handler which will need to cause action to happen on another piece of markup, i.e. A is a trigger for action from B. There's no guarantee about the relative structure of A and B, so I can't rely on a...
@PavelChuchuva - there's no issues with using data- attributes in HTML4 as well, I use them when needed
@josecortesp jQuery does not do this, not at all...there is a metadata plugin which reads data from there, but jQuery uses data attributes (since 1.4.3) or $.cache for data storage
@PavelChuchuva - added an example to your question for others finding it later, we'll see if it gets down-voted by the "must obey the validator at all costs" crowd :)
I would use data- attributes for this now, in site of XHTML compliance, like this:
<div class="jquery-feature-trigger" data-actson="targetID">Trigger</div>
These are an HTML5 feature, but don't cause any issues in HTML4/XHTML other than not being valid attributes in the validator.....
has anyone used jquery mobile with google's map api? I want to set the map width and height to 100%, not a fixed value. However, since the jquery mobile css is in a cdn I can't manipulate the map div parent. Any ideas?
I don't mind being corrected, I rather welcome it since it makes the question a better google resource later. However, being corrected for "this is wrong because..." when the corrector is answering a different question it's relatively annoying, answering a question other than what is asked is a never-ending rabbit-hole
I'm trying to debug some Javascript in VS2010 but keep getting an error when I try to set the breakpoint... "The breakpoint will not be hit. No symbols have been loaded for this document." What am I missing?
What are the efficiency differences between making a single ajax call to a webmethod with paramaters and having a full page postback with data in hidden fields? (ASP.NET is what I'm using. But I would hope whether the backend is asp or php or etc. shouldnt matter that much)
What are the efficiency differences between making a single ajax call to a webmethod with paramaters and having a full page postback with data in hidden fields? (ASP.NET is what I'm using. But I would hope whether the backend is asp or php or etc. shouldnt matter that much)
Did I post that message twice? It said it timed out.
If anyone has used jstree with jquery, could they help me out here: I'm trying to get a collection of the node objects that contain the LI and context as properties... can't seem to figure it out
@Raynos In simple terms, when doing AJAX query you are only sending data that is relevant to a particular method (so in webmethod call it includes method name and parameter values). When doing a full postback you send back all enabled input field values + viewstate, etc.
@Audrius I meant if I were to send the same amount of data via AJAX as a full postback would AJAX be slower. Is AJAX inherently less efficient then a full postback?
They're pretty much identical - the only difference is that you do not need to reload (either from cache or remotely) the entire page context in order to show the result.
I cannot guarantee that, but why should it be less efficient? It does open a new connection to a server, executes query and gets a result. This is the same as doing a full postback: open connection, post data, get response.
So, in my opinion depending on how you handle the result of the AJAX call - AJAX would be a much more optimal route to go than a full postback. Of course all modern browsers should cache content/resources, but when doing a full postback you need to re-render the page, which will take time no matter which browser you use - sure maybe not a huge amount of time but time none the less, time which could of been used to update an element with the result.
Same here - I've heard good things but have been unable to take it for a spin yet. I'm stuck on XP at work, and when I get home I tend not to think about 'playing' with IE ;)
What has your impression been of it - if you've taken it for a test run?
@Raynos I've hooked the "select_node.jstree" event to LoadItem(data.inst, data.rslt.obj) ... I really want to be able to call this function on every node in the tree. I can do this now by clicking each one manually, but I want an automatic function to do it...
...the main thing I want is getting at the data.rslt.obj of each node/leaf/whatever
Hi folks, I'm trying to get myself a good OOP class structure with private instance members/methods, private static members/method, public instance members/methods and public static members/methods. This is what I got now: gist.github.com/646597 - could anyone verify this?
@Tom but also I think its more worthwhile to think in terms of closures, object constuctors and prototypical inheritance rather then class based inheritance and public/private/static keywords
@Raynos I think I could get some bad hack going ... do you think it would be possible to fake a click event on each LI in the jstree - would that call the select_node.jstree event?
@Tom he means anything with this.function should be in the prototype. If you put them in this you clone each function to the object derived from your class. In the prototype there copied over by reference.
The only reasonable thing you can do is have a convention, say, use __ as a prefix to all the private members, and mangle them in some form of obfuscation step.
if by 'private' you mean 'each instance has its own copy' then yes, putting the function in the constructor makes it 'private', but it's public in that anyone can access it.
@DaveVandenEynde by having a function within a closure only anything within the closure can access it. I cannot call that "private" function directly from within an instance
Anyway, @Raynos, you're saying this is bad practice, trying to make Javascript Java like. However, can you tell me how to create well structured and easy to maintain, huge server sided projects? I'm not talking about the small web apps out there
@Tom That's out of my league. You can model java based OOP if you think it will make the codebase organised without training. But still I think you need to ask someone more experienced about Closures & prototypical inheritance
@Raynos, I actually used to use haXe (haxe.org) to allow OOP and it'd convert to Javascript. The problem is I have to create bindings for every library, thus I have decided to learn Javascript and get used to not having a strictly typed language
So far, I have not really found any good resources explaining me how to get going though
I have the following dynamically generated strings:
var stringA = ["a1", "a2", "a3" ... 'a600']
var stringB = ["b1", "b2", "b3" ... 'b400']
How can I get an Array or string of both combined like this:
var myString = ["a1b1", "a2b2", "a3b3" ... "a400b400" ... "a600"]
Thank you
Is anyone else disaproving the emulation of private, public instance and static members/method for server sided Javascript with node.js? Eg. an object template like this: stackoverflow.com/questions/4008766/… ?
@Raynos, actually I think one problem with my draft is inheritance.. as far as I know the private fields wont be accessible by classes extending this object
@Raynos, it can be a whole backend replacement. I am using it for that. I am setting up my own Node.js scaleable web server with a templating engine etc.
node.js doesn't replace a server-side platform yet, it needs to mature a little first, lots of functionality missing that every other platform has added over the past decade
@Tom - most of the encryption either doesn't work or isn't there
you don't have to defend it, I don't mean to criticize it, but thinking a brand new platform has covered every edge case the others learned/dealt with over 10 years is a bit...well, frankly absurb
@NickCraver, I'm not wanting to defend it, merely asking for what I don't know - anyway, I figured the technology is mostly based on google v8 which uses javascript, which is not new