Hi peeps, my Search function uses an older version jQuery, and if I link to a newer version, it stops working. I really need that newer version of jQuery because otherwise I cant use the jQuery UI Datepicker. Question about this can be found here: stackoverflow.com/questions/13817700/… Any help would be appreciated! :)
Thats the thing, I'm loading it like this: <script type="text/javascript" src="js/jquery-1.3.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="js/jquery.watermark.js"></script>
@FlorianMargaine that last comment seemed quite bitchy. "we want you all to report stuff and help us do our jobs but when you do you MUST DO IT THIS WAY!!! NO DONT USE THE OTHER TOOLS AVAILABLE FOR THE SAME THING!!!"
like, wtf are you using github for if I cannot submit a pull request... dicks.
I think the numbers make perfectly sense if you consider languages used in companies. Of course, no sane person would use VB for an open-source project and put that on github
okk.. okay, having git now here at the company, but the requirement to still have patch files for all changes kinda.. kills pretty much of the enjoyment again
Do you guys have experience with working with GitHub? I did a bunch of pull requests on the "Can I use" project, e.g. github.com/Fyrd/caniuse/pull/78. All these pull request have been merged, and closed, and now there is a message at the bottom: "Pull request merged — the simevidas:patch-9 branch can be deleted safely.". Does this mean that I am supposed to do that now (delete the branch)?
I am going to answer the question in your title:
How to display alert and confirmation if back browser button has been clicked
You can't know if the "back" button was clicked or if the page was refreshed or just page changed ->
The onunload event will handle all of those cases.
@ThiefMaster: well, all customers have different versions of products and our 'leadership' thought that its a great idea to continue, using linux patch file, for patchting and upgrading those systems
which of course, causes more trouble than doing anything good at this point
@FlorianMargaine: yea, but its a huge.. annoying thing.. in the workflow. Like creating a branch, doing some stuff and then before you merge or commit, create a patch and whatnot, sucks hard
If a dev has a clone of a repo on their machine, then they technically have their own repo. It's just that it may not be accessible remotely.
My company uses Mercurial as more of a centralized VCS, albeit with branches of the main repository (living on the central server, and cloned to dev machines)