Here's a fiddle with the desired table and the javascript function containing the array from where I want to populate the table, what I don't figure out is how, because if I use rowspan and colspan I have to create different <tr> for each product...
If there's another way to get the desired tabl...
JavaScript is one of the noisiest tags with one of the largest percentage of off-topic questions and duplicates of remedial information on SO. This just proves there are more help vampires using JavaScript than the other tags. — Jarrod Roberson3 hours ago
@JarrodRoberson: can you back up those claims with some data? — Cerbrus1 hour ago
> Permitted parent elements - Within the required parent <table> element, the <tbody> element can be added after a <caption>, <colgroup>, <thead> and a <tfoot> element.
> multiple<tbody> elements are permitted (if consecutive), allowing the data-rows in long tables to be divided into different sections, each separately formatted as needed.
@feniixx Not sure what you mean by "the only way". You do know that, in actual DOM, the divs will be moved up and away from the table and becomes empty?
I do think flex table may solve your problem. In fact I had a link stashed for you... http://benfrain.com/css-performance-test-flexbox-v-css-table-fight/
Here's a fiddle with the desired table and the javascript function containing the array from where I want to populate the table, what I don't figure out is how, because if I use rowspan and colspan I have to create different <tr> for each product...
If there's another way to get the desired tabl...
I'm teaching intro javascript courses and a lot of the workshops are on react - didn't know if anyone had an opinion on weather or not it is worth looking into and ever using
I just really like separating "view" html from logic that manipulates the view - whether you use MVVM or MVC it seems react.js violates both design patterns
@ScottSelby You can have layout in HTML and only reusable components in React/JSX. Even traditionally, you have been making DOM elements in JS and appending to layout anyways.
I know , but I like angular or knockout how the javascript can only manipulate models or objects and the view can do whatever it wants with that change
@ScottSelby Then you are more suited for something other than React. I personally enjoy React and JSX/TSX syntax quite a bit. It gives me more control and better typing, whereas pure HTML with custom (framework-based) attributes is hellish to maintain and debug.
@ScottSelby They say that to PHP too. And then they developed HTML template engines for PHP. And then people realise that PHP itself started as a template engine and having html in PHP code is not, by itself, a big problem. (Mixing them with business logic is.)
Angular puts expressions in the template, React puts the template in the code, they're both blurring the line between code and markup imho, they just approach it differently
I was extremely sceptic to JSX first time I saw it, but having worked with it I like it a lot
I'm about to create a whole new admin section for a site that is about as big as the site , so I'm just looking around at different js frameworks to use. I think I'll probably stick with angular , angular can become a nightmare with routing though
@ScottSelby And vice versa, you don't get template-specific help and validation from your IDE when you're writing HTML and it's completely oblivious to the fact that you're adding attributes to, essentially, add logic to the HTML file. :-)
we have modals that are supposed to be their own routes so the user can go directly to opened modal . I tried my best at getting that requirement dropped
VisualStudios understands when your putting angular in HTML - your a .Net guy , right @RoelvanUden
@ScottSelby Sure, it does understand that, but it sure as hell doesn't understand I just refactored the controller variables and functions which causes the horrible dynamically typed bullshit angular statements to completely fall over themselves :-)
@ScottSelby (Note: I'm basing everything I say about Angular/React of TypeScript support; meaning that I value typed and compile-time checked code. In this case, TSX compile-time checking is extremely extremely extremely valuable. Otherwise, meh, Angular is good enough I suppose)
@Cerbrus Heh, don't count it out just yet. Microsoft and Google are both pushing typing, Facebook has their own type checker, it's not unreasonable to think that one of the many typing proposals is eventually adopted.
I see a "loaded" class on the <body> and a inline style=display: block. Have you tried removing (the line that sets) that inline style, and adding it in css to body.loaded?
A flash of unstyled content (FOUC) is an instance where a web page appears briefly with the browser's default styles prior to loading an external CSS stylesheet, due to the web browser engine rendering the page before all information is retrieved. The page corrects itself as soon as the style rules are loaded and applied; however, the shift is quite visible and distracting.
== Technical information ==
The issue was documented in an article named Flash of Unstyled Content. At first, FOUC appeared to be a browser problem unique to Internet Explorer. FOUC behavior has also been documented "as a Safari...
@BenjaminGruenbaum my guess, it takes a while for styles to be applied because the DOM isn't what you expect yet (i.e. missing structure, classes, etc)
I see a very long period of "Scripting" in the timeline.
@BenjaminGruenbaum My sense of smell tells me that something long and synchronous is stopping the DOM from building into the correct structure for a second or so