@SomeKittens Seen that it existed, grouped it together alongside books like "Hacker's Handbook" as something which looks cool, but will likely ultimately disappoint me
@KendallFrey Are you trying to get to the point where if somebody assassinates you, people will will continue on with their lives feeling as if a slight but persistent irk has been cleaned of them?
@JanDvorak so at the bottom? The 3 "did you know" facts would go with the landmark info when you changed sections in #2. In #1 they would stay all the time.
@afonsomatos Another way of putting it is that when you install a package, its executable is under /usr/bin and the other files it may need are under /usr/lib.
That would then download the main executable and put it in /usr/local/bin. Then I just need a way to auto-remove it, so I could make an argument to that executable that executes the uninstall script.
@Luggage I'm still green so take this with a grain of salt, but I'd stay away from Docker Compose
I finally learned it, got everything setup with it, then hated it and had to set it all up again using just docker commands. A little more verbose, but overall a nicer experience.
if you have a <tr> styled to hidden. and you want it to style to BLOCK when ALL 3 inputs on a page have a typed value in them. What is the correct way to fix this this Jquery call to work properly: $('#cashg','#cashb','#cashbst').val().length !==0 function(){do_something};
No, it seemed like it should be functional under a single Jquery multiple selector idea. I tried working off of the idea suggested here http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9173533/inputnotempty-is-not-working but no luck in getting it to work right
you can still use a single selector, just loop over the results. jQuery comes with .map() but really you want something similar to JS's Array.prototype.every()
@Luggage couldn't quite get the suggested method you provided to trigger right, however your testing each singularly did. I ended up with this: *** if ($('#cashg').val().length !== 0 && $('#cashb').val().length !== 0 && $('#cashbst').val().length !==0) {$('#pom').css('display','table-row');} ***
double equals is a 'lose' equality. It will coerce types into other types if it makes things equal. 1 == "1" will be true where 1 === "1" will be false.
This may SOUND desirable, but it's not. It's better to be strict about types as early in your code as possible.