ahah, reading the doc closely yields "This expression may optionally declare new variables with the var keyword. These variables are not local to the loop, i.e. they are in the same scope the for loop is in." (emphasis mine)
so didn't you recommend one var statement at the top of the function to remind yourself what's really going on? Or did I see that elsewhere...
I've been using JSLint to make me feel bad about my JavaScript. It is great, by the way. There is one check that I don't quite understand and I'd like your views, please.
From jslint.com:
In languages with block scope, it is usually recommended that variables be declared at the site of first us...
@IvoWetzel Even if you have decent tests, you still have code that does "something" (c.f., "testing can prove the presence of bugs, but never their absence", etc.) — but maybe I'm just bitter working at a 190k test level normally :P
Indeed. To go back to the point at hand: I've seen several times where people have accidentally dropped a "," at the end of a line, at which point semi-colon insertions comes in, and the remainder of the meant-to-be-local-variables end up defined on the global object (at least in non-strict, in strict they'd throw ReferenceError).
Proposed Q&A site for feedback on projects you're working on, by sharing your code with fellow programmers and getting extensive feedback/review of best practices, design pattern usage, application UI, security, etc.
But that should be avoidable by actually keeping implementers on-board and not just going off a where-ever they want, ideally with implementations following the spec as it is written.
It's hard to see how sweeping strict-mode could've been, restrictions effectively meant it could have no new syntax
(By personal opinion is that the aim should be to get ES6 out quickly, and that we could've done without strict mode)
I on the whole think management have changed, and that ever since the start of IE7 (and especially IE8) that they've given the IE team the support they need to move forward.
The IE team is nothing but competent — I have absolutely no doubt in /their/ commitment to standards (and yes, I would say that of those who developed IE6 too).
But that's a dangerous view to have around web developers :)
(IE6 was really quite good when it came out in terms of standards support — admittedly it wasn't as good as IE/Mac at the time, which was unquestionably the best — and the IE team had every expectation to ship IE7 within a year or two. Then management killed IE/Mac, then shortly therafter IE/Win. Then time passed, and things progressed, then it wasn't so good any more…)
Anyhow, time for me to continue to evade sleep by watching Inception.
Sure, it may have better supported standards than prior versions, but don't forget a poor implementation of a standard is worse than no implementation...
@ircmaxell Compared with the competition at the time, it was good. I'd much rather have a slightly broken implementation than something like Netscape 6/Mozilla 0.9 which simply didn't work for large parts of the web.
(And, as has been said by several on the IE team at the time, had they known there was going to be no further release for five years, more bugs would've probably been considered release-critical, but with the expectation that they'd have another release in around a year, the line was drawn where it was.)
function Constructor(arg) {
var fakeprivate1;
var fakeprivate2;
this.foo = function() { ... }
this.bar = function() { ... }
// body of the constructor with local variables
var local = arg.foo
while (local.next) {
var thing = local.nextThing();
constructme(thing);
}
}
Is there any kind of rule of thumb distinction between fake privates using closures and local variables used for computation inside the constructor?
I want to insert column1 from table1 to column1 in table2. If the value at column1 in table2 already exists I don't want it to insert it.
Though, I found a question on here that is similar but with all the table columns/rows instead of just one, plus both tables have different schemas except for...
Right, but I was wondering if I could insert an extra value manually I don't want to copy the 2nd column to another table like I did with the first one
I'll test it in a bit, I have to leave for a min or two
Had to take care of my cat. Now lets see...
Well, I'm glad I backed away for a bit. I think I'm doing this completely wrong. xD
I mean, the way I'm approaching the problem.
I have int values in table1 , column2 that belong to a name colum1 . I want to show statistics. Should I calculate each time a visit uses the page? Or should I create a table2 and insert the name along with the corresponding total value?
@Raynos A while loop will work just fine, though I still think a for in loop should be best. If you want a for loop, the while loop syntax is cleaner than using a for loop
Is it considered bad to explicitly check for the boolean true. Would it be better to do a simple if(success) ?
I've seen various jokes made about how if (someBoolean == true) is horrible code in a strongly typed language but is it also considered bad in weakly typed languages?
This would apply ...
Is there any error in my code esp var newpoint[0] = new Point; . I wnat to know on how to do oop in javascript
function Point()
{
var x;
var y;
}
var length = 1;
var arrayindex;
var newpoint[0] = new Point;
newpoint[0].x = 10;
newpoint[0].y = 10;
for(i=0 ; i<10; i ++)
{
newpoi...
Before I comment your code, read a Tutorial: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Guide
And now for entertaiment:
function Point()
{
var x; // great a local variable!
var y; // another one! they drop out of scope... (protip: use 'this')
}
var length = 1; // ???
var arrayindex; /...
Well doesn't saying if(var==true) mean that var could be some sort of ambiguous type? Should we not handle our data a bit more strictly? (I dont know, this is just my thought I might be wrong)
@TomGullen you make the mistake into think I'm using type coercion. I use ===
" if (someBoolean == true) is horrible code in a strongly typed language. " That's supposed to be a snippet of <insert strongly typed language> not javascript.
=== is an invalid operator in most strongly typed languages (i.e. C, Java)
Admittedly I didn't make it very clear. I meant the == strong equivelance used in most strong languages which is equivelant to javascript's ===
I have a little sanity check button on my page whilst debugging. It either alerts sane or insane. I gain great satisfaction when it tells me I'm sane (It asserts the code has done what it was intended to do)