I think this may be the answer you are looking for.
(function(){
var COURSE_ID_List={},
COURSE_ID_List_timerId={};
window.setFilter=function(ddl, value) {
var list = COURSE_ID_List[ddl];
if (!list){
list=new ListFilter(ddl);
} else if(list.getFi...
^ I'm failing to see a major difference between this answer and my own, except for the unnecessary introduction of a closure
Stepping through this object in the function "Function.prototype.afterConstruction" contains ontextchange. the this object in the sourcesubmissionConstructor does not
The problem is this line here:
oldObj.apply(oldObj, arguments);
In your code, you never actually create an instance of oldObj - you're creating an instance of newObj. Since you're technically replacing the old constructor with a new one, you need to be applying the old constructor function to...
@Tom whats confusing you is the this object when prototype.AfterConstructor is called and the this object when the function that prototype.AfterConstruftor returns is called
@Tom jsfiddle.net/P7cSP/9 use firebug and step through the code using the "debugger;" keyword. If you just step through it and watch the locals window you can see what is happening
@Tom this is what you get for writing complex code :P
Simply put, when you call a method that is a member of an object using dot notation, this becomes the object. e.g. myObj.myMethod(); <-- this === myObj
@Raynos, I know a lot of people create projects for node.js in different ways, so you might want to look at existing ones, though personally I get hopelessly confused when I see files with dozens of objects and hundreds of lines
Before I make a multiplayer testbed what happens if I try to put game logic on a server and sends ajax request back and forth at 30 times a second in javascript?
@AndyE also it makes more sense if you think in terms that the object literal uses the new Object word so thats where this points to
@AndyE I was thinking about using RenderEngine. But I wanted to write something from scratch I think the its best to hand write/optimize the server/client communication rather then the client rendering engine
@Raynos, you can develop me a great library for huge javascript projects while you're at it, and create some great IDE that forces strict typing and more
@Raynos, why's that? It causes unnecessary logical constructions to check for types, and overhead because of type casting in the background (I believe)
@Tom I had a large nested object I was using an associative array and when I send it to a webmethod I had to create a typed class with sub classes just to handle it and C# made a mess of it :(
@Raynos, thats why you have classes in OOP, you create an associative array like so: assArr[MyObjType] = new Array(); Then class MyObjType { someMember:String; someOtherMem:Int; }
This way it's very structured and on the server side you know exactly what to expect
I need to know when the iframe's session has been timed out and the user is sitting on their login page. which isn't valid for the user because we have an sso set up. so they said "oh, we'll set a variable you can read so you can re-initiate the sso"
which would work. except for not being able to access the variable (;
@drachenstern: you can access the parent window, but the problem is that most members are inaccessible because of x-domain restrictions. Attempts to access a variable or an element will result in an access denied error.
@rchern IE8 supports window.postMessage and window.onmessage. The pre postMessage workaround involves running a timer in the parent that checks the value of window.location.hash. The child window can change the parent's location to something arbitrary like top.location.hash = "#reset";
Hostname shouldersofgiants.co.uk is blocked in your defense plan. This is a known "Spyware" web site which is blocked as specified by your Defense Plan.
I want to place a scrolling marquee in my html title tag using jquery but don't know how and can't seem to find a good explanation online anywhere. Can someone help me please?
Besides this way you clarify that the value should be "" and theres no ambiquity as to what the code should do in case of the string "false" or other annoying edge cases.
I've attached multiple functions in multiple files to $(document).ready and would like to attach a single function to happen before them as either the first that $(document).ready handles or to independently trigger before the $(document).ready handler.
Is there any way to handle the order of fu...
@drachenstern my question is basically is a $.beforeReady custom function bad practice and should I redesign it to trigger ordering with custom event flow?
I think that a window.onInit function is a good idea, but I can't imagine how often you would need it
I think that if you have something that needs to occur before the dom is ready, then yes, but I think you have a hard time making that case in most browser instances
because otherwise you should just use inline scripts ...
but logic encapsulation would suggest that doing it in a member function makes more sense than just tossing a bit of code inline. keeps things architecturally neater
@shaahin I have an idea but I'm pretty new to javascript so I couldn't tell you the commands. You should make a question about it if no one else here answers.