don't get me wrong, I know who you support. I think they're both ugh. I was a bernie guy, but I'm Canadian. I can have an opinion but not a say and I know that.
Part of me wants Trump to win, just to teach the U.S. a lesson about responsible democracy (not that my country's had a particularly good run recently)
I don't agree with most of Bernie's views, but I would have voted him because he actually seems like a trustworthy person that actually wants to do good.
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user6815795
6:44 AM
function x(t){
var a = something;
$.each(a, function(index,value){
y(this);
});
}
function y(t){
$.ajax({
}).done(function(r){
if(r.success){
}
else{
}
});
// This function should be called for the second element
// in the each function only if its completed for the first element.
I'm taking part in an interesting project where I need to parse some URL's and find contact details on them.
I'm extracting the links from linkedin group for example: http://prntscr.com/cvpnp9
You can see that the url here is very long and somehow obfuscated: https://www.linkedin.com/profile/vie...
I´m build a rest api in js (express) following a tutorial. The Code is structured in Services (business logic) and Controller (HTTP API). But he doesn´t had included a database here. My Question is now where would i integrate the Database now. Should I create a new folder for databases and call the db queries from the Services or put them directly into the services?
@BayLife Do whatever feels logical. You can always refactor later. I personally would put HTTP handlers in /controller, services in /services and put entities into /model. Then I'd just put the queries directly into the services. This makes sense to me, but it's not 'the only way'
your DD abstraction is in "data source layer", your domain objects are in the "domain model" and the services are governing the interaction between them
@RoelvanUden I'm sorry, I've never heared about it. I thought it's simplyer. I thought I can use an adjacent service or program that could do this thing...
What? You have to investigate how this service does redirection. Presumably it does so merely by tagging a Location header into the HTTP response headers. Thus, launching a HTTP request with the HEAD verb should be sufficient to get the response headers. You can then use that response header. If it doesn't tack on a Location header, check the redirection method (e.g. via a meta or JS) and you can merely emulate it.
I uderstand theoretically but I have no idea how to implement domething like that. Morover so that the transformation could be bossible I have to be logged in into a linkedin account. I thought there's already a program or service which can do all that automatically. Anyway thank you for you're detailed response :D
@RoelvanUden yup. We use it at work too. That lets you add "hooks" for any file extension (node's require lets you do that too, but it is not documented), so we have hooks for JSX transformation and LESS for those who like to put those dependencies in their JS code (I don't). Then some super complicated webpack config with lots of plugins compiles it to working bundles, but I don't deal with that part.