That might be the problem with your script. Perhaps the focus call is happening while the user is still holding down the mouse button or key they used to move to the textarea.
@Tek The problem seems to be that the onInit thingy isn't firing. Perhaps you should just do setTimeout(function(){$("#content").tinymce().focus()}, 3000) and wait for TinyMCE to fix that bug. )-:
@Na7coldwater Profiling just shows that the markdown converter of WMD does a cuzillon of calls
@drachenstern Well I imagine that you could use some timers to see how long it takes to parse the thing and then adjust the parsing interval or something.
@IvoWetzel Maybe count the time in between calls. If it's too short it either means that the user is typing very fast or that the function is taking so long that the user has time to type their next key. Either case would be a valid reason to slow down the rate of repreviewing for a few seconds.
@Na7coldwater Thanks for the suggestion, I'll have to try it out later though. I have other matters to attend to. Thanks for the assistance, I appreciate it a lot!
Hi,
I'm trying to use jQuery UI 1.7.3 datepicker widget in a jQuery UI dialog. The contents of the dialog are from a page template which includes all the various imports of javascript required to make the page function. One of the things I also import is the famous date.js file.
This page tha...
"Changes to the C++ representation of JavaScript values allow Firefox to execute heavy, numeric code more efficiently, resulting in cleaner graphics..." What?
@rchern: did you notice the blockquote bug was fixed in Chrome today? I looked at the code and it seems the team preferred the browser detection method over the replace function method I suggested.
@Raynos: ECMA 5th Edition implementations allow it through Object.defineProperty(), other versions of javascript may or may not support the __defineGetter__ and __defineSetter__ functions
@Raynos I have no idea. The thing is those test are supposedly done with the js engine separated from the rest of the browser, so there's no easy way to do these tests yourself
> Chakra includes a new JavaScript compiler that compiles JavaScript source code into high-quality native machine code, a new interpreter for executing script on traditional web pages, and improvements to the JavaScript runtime and libraries.
@AndyE: btw you were right. .textContent does not throw an exception on IE. I was a little confused from the jQuery source. Resig did put a try..catch around his globalEval() while using .appendChild(scriptnode). So that might throw on some browsers for some reason
I'm still wondering why they're using appendChild(document.createTextNode()) instead of .textContent() or the fallback case .text() on IE
@AndyE: yes. Using pretty much the same algorithm, just skipping the try.. catch. works perfectly on all chromes, firefox 2+, IE6+ and safari. didn't test opera so far
but by naming it, I'm really curious if opera knows about textContent.. might be the reason why jquery is using .appendChild(doc.createTextNode), but I hope not
@Raynos Correct, String, Number, Array and Function all have their own prototype.toString() method that works differently to Object.prototype.toString()
anyway, using a multipart xhr stream to transfer all of your scripts in one request, evaling or -script-tag-inserting-with-textContent on readyState3 works so great and so incredibly fast. really cool.
@Raynos: the terrible downside of <script> elements is, they block the render process. Even if that is quite fast on cuttingedge browsers, plus each request creates a lot of overhead data. So using a single request to transfer several files at once is way more lightweight
@Raynos: sure, websockets would solve this issue even more elegant with even less overhead.. but unfortuantly we're not living in the world like this. :)
In this case I'd use a data- attribute, like this:
<a href="#" class="showmsg" data-sound="bark">dog</a>
<a href="#" class="showmsg" data-sound="meow">cat</a>
And your click handler can fetch it, like this:
$("a.showmsg").click(function() {
alert($(this).attr("data-s...
downvoting means it's incorrect, IMO, so it does bother me a bit when the answer is perfectly valid for the question - if it says HTML4 only solutions that's fine, then I would have posted a "this works in every browser, it just won't validate" in the answer along with it
I think many programmers tend to make assumptions that the same restrictions apply to every question as they deal with daily, e.g. if I deal with only HTML4, so must every other programmer...and they make incorrect assumptions like that
Agreed, it's a waste of time in most cases, I do run the validator over our site every so often to check for issues, but things that work cross-browser 100% I immediately ignore
A better option would actually be using type="number", but the lack of a method to remove the stupid spinner is really making this far less useful than it should be
Hi,
I need to detect OS name & version in JAVA. That I can do by
String os_name =System.getProperty("os.name", "");
String os_version = System.getProperty("os.version", "");
but the thing is that this is not so much reliable. Sometimes it returns incorrect informations and even it can't de...