Quick question. If I use something like $("#foo").append("<div>hello world</div>") to create a div inside the parent div. Will that replace any other existing divs?
Hi
I have a div that I want to change some values in, when I click a button.
If I click on
<button id="image320x150">320 x 150</button>
then I want to change the width to 100 and the height value to 200 in the div.
and if I click on:
<button id="image320x200">320 x 200<...
@NickCraver Somewhat borderline off-topic. You guys use parameterized queries for your Ajax database calls, right? I didn't hear about them until very recently. =(
Well not just nick, I meant to say that to everyone.
So specifically in a mysql database. Take the following code and tell me what to do.
// connect to the mysql database
$unsafe_variable = $_POST["user-input"];
mysql_query("INSERT INTO table (column) VALUES ('" . $unsafe_variable . "')");
// disconnect from the mysql database
I've used parameterized queries for a few months now. It's just ridiculous that I didn't hear about them until recently. I think it's been around for more than 5 years.
I had never ever heard one single developer (usually on developer forums) speak of them.
Until I came here to stack overflow. (Thank goodness.)
I'm doing a comment form. And to reduce queries, server load & bandwidth (albeit not much, but every grain of sand can become a big pile no?). I want to post the data and just create a new <div> with the text with javascript
A few reasons: It's sanitized, it's accurate, and you're not giving a false positive...what if there was an error and it didn't actually commit to the DB, you've given the user the impression it did
always show a result only after it's for sure, that's what I'd go with, echoing what you expect to happen on the client's screen can only cause problems, not solve them
why is there no love for !!$("selector").length? don't hate!
You have a very good point. But I have to say I'm biased to the other idea. I just can't see how anything could go wrong. HTMLPurifier has worked so well so far :P
or any other error, what if the result was different? encoding issues, sanitization issues, etc...you can preview the result, but not 100% accurately reflect it.
Now if you put the result on the <div> them immediately updated it, maybe...but still, what if I post, see it there, leave the page before the AJAX request completes?
Let's take a practical example: SO, I vote, leave the page quickly...half the time that vote didn't stick, even though I saw it visually immediately
When I'm looking at a good question I can't answer I will often upvote it and immediately click on the SO logo to go back to the homepage. What then happens, in very quick succession, is:
The upvote button turns orange, which indicates to me that the vote succeeded.
An error message box appears...
I completely agree this should be the behavior. To me it's a matter of the intended lifecycle for voting. Aren't I supposed to vote after reading the question (or answer) completely? At this point I'm done with the content, I would like to submit my vote and move on. This means I'm very likel...
@Raynos - are you on jQuery 1.4.3 and using iframes?
api.jquery.com/odd-selector "In particular, note that the 0-based indexing means that, counter-intuitively, :odd selects the second element, fourth element, and so on within the matched set."
No, i have a script for greasemonkey.. And a site with some images (In flash)... I would like make a script for select that and navigate to url of that images..
@Luca You can't do that, if the images are embedded in the Flash movie - Flash content basically speaking cannot interact with the other elements on the page
There are exceptions, but those are usually built into the movie explicitly
@YiJiang Im pretty sure you can talk to javascript in a roundabout way with flash. you have to be able to either communicate with the server or with java or something :)
Also assuming that if you know flash you know actionscript
$(table).bind("click", bla). Whenever I click on a td or tr the event target is always table. Are there any options I can set with .bind or do I need to iterate over a list of tr/tds ?
@Raynos Yeah, but that's only if the movie's author coded that option into the movie, so given that we're talking about GM scripts here... that's highly unlikely
@Raynos GM - Greasemonkey - a Firefox add-on that allows users to run their own Javascript on any arbitrary page. GM script authors are usually not the original authors of the websites that the script operate on
That's why sometimes a degree of reverse-engineering is needed
Can someone explain how event bubbling occurs. $(obj).click(function() { } ); function gets called only once and I cant see any evidence of it bubbling
or when people say bubbling do they mean. obj gets clicked. check if it has any eventhandlers attached. if none bubble up?
I guess then it only works if i do $(obj).parent().click() & $(obj).click()
@NickCraver The tooltip text, not rendering speed :P Geesh, I was saying that I don't want to wait the half-second it takes to see the title tooltip text
@Chouchenos Hehe... well, the key difference is that you can actually get work done in one. The other is to show off to your friends that the people at Mozilla has a sense of humour.
Now that you mention it, though, that is a really condescending way to bring up the fact that everyone's off topic. I might use it when I feel like being an ass.
I noticed if you randomly keep editing your post a little bit (just adding a space or such), the edit feature stays open... would be cool to post a real funny joke that everyone stars, and then hours later edit it to something terrible about Nick :P
I've had this problem twice on two different sites. It works in all browsers other than IE9.
I have a div being opened and closed using jquery slideup and slideDown (the same problem happens with slideToggle). I'm able to see the content of the div as it slides down, but as soon as the animation...
belated response...I'm toying with the idea of whether or not I could spend that much time alone in the house instead of getting out and physically going to work with people.
is it possible to use ":odd" on a single element comparing it to its neighbours as to whether it is odd or not without just checking if its in obj.parent().children(":odd") ?
@AndyE: well the basic improvement here should be the usage of a binary operator, looking if the first bit is '1', which indicates we got an odd number
but testing this on jsperf there is a variance about 2%.. so pretty trivial
@NickCraver yeah, thats probably the most useful thing I do with bitwise operators. I do use them in my hex to rgb code, but it's not as readable as a string split and parseInt
damn I just stated something like that I'm confused a little about binary (or bitwise) oeprators in ecma. Mr. Crockford stated in serveral places that they are bad and kind a slowish whereas lots of other folks I highly respect (like Nicholas C. Zakas) say you SHOULD use them because of better performance
@Raynos: I'm a friend of microoptimizations so I really like to gain performance wherverever possible. And further I really thing there spots where bitwise operators do have a significant performance impact
@jAndy No, that's not right - like I said, bitwise operators first convert their operands to integers, perform their operation, and then convert back to floating-point numbers
Okay, this is stupid. The numbers for all our machines doing both of these are running into the millions per second. If this really has any real-life effect the script would've have had should be minuscule.
@YiJiang: well you're right, but you can say that for any "microoptimization" I guess. I guess bitwise operators do perform better on doing canvas/image manipulation or palette inverting stuff
I would like make a script for Greasemonkey (GM),that find and navigate in a link embed in a flash element.
I think that is possible to make it to work with function .click() ,but won't work :(
Here's the source code of the page that contains flash elements..
Source code
Is possible to make th...