I'm glad that you think that. It's a competitive advantage to me that I can build systems faster in Java while those who don't understand it fret about how bad or ancient it is.
@KendallFrey he just sounds like someone who hasn't left their comfort zone in a long time.
@AliceYoung you come here - start a debate about Java - while I raised several (tens) valid problems with Java (type system, features, etc) you mainly called me an amateur and bragged about your (not that big) paycheck.
@copy clojure is... different - I think you'll enjoy Rick Hickey's lectures too if you like listening to lectures - the most famous one is "Simple Made Easy" - Zirak really enjoyed it too I think.
@SterlingArcher if it makes you feel any better - I think I'm mediocre at some of the most recent trends in programming. I've done FRP and deployed code with the paradigm but quality wise it'd probably look like someone using Angular for the first time. I don't have enough functional programming experience at all. I suck at low level stuff (the stuff copy is great with). I suck at working with bad code (although I've been actively working on that for the last two years). Lots of suck.
You don't mind using variables for this - but in assembly this would be a comment.
@KendallFrey it's true, but it's also true in assembly, in assembly I saw you relied a lot on convention and global state to cut corners for performance.
math looks fine, probably you're not drawing in the right position. Looks like you have a y offset.
An ellipse is just the geometrical location of all points whose summed distance from two central points is equal - then again you got the math right so you already know this.
@AndrewKim Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@TommyDDD Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@towc I am also finding a bit of difficulties... but I have a low res screen and even moderate lines of code go out of screen when I have to nest functions.
I am using this regex to filter urls. (https?:\/\/\S+) But this also selects links like this: http://example.com/test-link.html<div> In above link <div> is an html tag. Can you please suggest modification. Thanks in advance.
Yes, yes, I know https isn't officially supported.
If you go to a chat room link like https://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/1 (note that there isn't a room name), it would automatically redirect the page to the canon URL (with the room name included). However, that redirects to the http:// versio...
I want to check if event.offsetX is supported. Can I do this without first creating an eventListener for the mouse? Can I directly look at the mouse object? How?
The rest have https, but StackExchange doesn't officially support it (so if there's a bug, they aren't obliged to fix it), although they're working on it.
Btw, I really think there should be one big article about all the features of dev tools and how and where to use them. Yesterday only, I discovered the iframe trick and now I am thinking why the hell did I not know this for so long!!!
@SecondRikudo oh I was talking about the mouseevent constructor
@NeerajKumar This moves a lot of the work done to the NodeList (or whatever jQuery uses), and saves you the performance penalty of hitting the DOM multiple times.