I'd rather design my algorithms so they make more sense to the programmer. Sure, you can find a parent node matching a condition in a loop, but the way we think of it, it's a recursive function
function parentMatching(el, fun) {
if (fun(el)) return el;
return parentMatching(el.parentNode, fun);
}
You can certainly make it a loop. But the algorithm is recursive.
//maybe this related example (so we don't just return the argument):
function ancestryMatches(el, fun) {
return fun(el) || ancestryMatches(el.parentNode, fun);
}
I have a bit of html that looks like this <div id="text_1_2"><div class="theText><p>stuff</p></div></div> and i'm trying to use jQueries .children to get at the text of the "theText" div but it returns an empty string. $("#text_1_2").children(".theText").text();
@BenjaminGruenbaum oh wow, that was easy. Hm, then I guess I should be asking if anybody knows of any CSS tutorials? You know becoming framilier with it
@Esailija Your description would be: while there is still an element, if the element matches the function then the result is the element, otherwise, the element is now its parent, repeat?
@BenjaminGruenbaum yes I'm of course aware of the actual recursive divide & conquer problems. But here is obviously just a loop converted to recursion because someone needs an ego boost or something.
I run into this same problem quite often. First, I create a namespace and then add modules to this namespace. Then issue I always run into is how best to initialize the application? Naturally, each module has it's own startup procedure so should this data(not code in some cases, just a list of it...
We always think recursively, we just have a hard time expressing ourselves. Iterative constructs help express ourselves without having to understand how code works.
@cx Oh, that's fibonacci, forgot I meant to do factorial :P
boss: Hey, so I have a program written 20 years ago I want you to re-write because it only runs on win95 me: ok.. got the source code? boss: no me: ok.. know what it does? boss: no me: ok.. boss: Here is a sample input and output from the old program. me: ..
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So when you conjured in your mind the above closest function, you thought about the instructions it'll execute, you told yourself that it's a loop, instead of saying the simpler definition?
I'd probably write reverse iteratively, that's just because I conceptually think about it as taking each character and sticking it in the n-i'th place matching it.
function revstr( str ) {
var len = str.length;
if( len <= 1 ) {
return str;
}
var half = len /2 |0
var left = str.substr(half);
var right = str.substr(0, half);
return revstr(left) + revstr(right)
}
@Esailija No, it's not being a douche. Either that or our brain is so douchey and filled with want to impress our fellow lispers, that we think of recursive problems recursively.
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I have a large file of functions. Each of these functions is responsible for drawing a particular part of the application. My app has x and y parameters that I use in the setup function to move the whole app around in order to try different placements. So, naturally, I need to use these x and y v...
I have the following code for my application.
<div class="btn-group radioButtons amountButtons" data-toggle="buttons-radio">
@if (Model.PresetValues.Count > 0){
foreach (int value in Model.PresetValues) {
<button type="button" onClick="captureAmo...
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Sankey diagrams are a specific type of flow diagram, in which the width of the arrows is shown proportionally to the flow quantity. They are typically used to visualize energy or material or cost transfers between processes.
Application
They are also commonly used to visualize the energy accounts or material flow accounts on a regional or national level. Sankey diagrams put a visual emphasis on the major transfers or flows within a system. They are helpful in locating dominant contributions to an overall flow. Often, Sankey diagrams show conserved quantities within defined system bounda...
@Loktar ok, so i've been starting with a finite number of points - I think this is wrong? I should start with two points and splice in points as I calculate midpoints?
while someone doing a large rebase without his previous HEAD being saved somewhere is stupid that's kind of nasty - if someone did not back it up he'd have no way to undo the rebase ...