Chrome/Opera folks: Has anyone noticed that arrow functions seem to have been removed? They used to work for me, and I'm curious if there's a way to get them back.
I was using zepto 1.1.6. It says in the docs, that $.ajax supports the .done but, does it need any external dependencies? because its saying .done is not a function
> If the optional modules “callbacks” and “deferred” are loaded, the XHR object returned from $.ajax() calls implements a promise interface for adding callbacks by chaining
@ASR 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.
@argentum47 @darkyen00 ggsipu.nic.in/scripts/links/dropmenucsshome.js (this is from the website of delhi's first university, and was last updated in 2014). We are part of a flawed system :/
view-source:ggsipu.nic.in just see all the code and scripts...
note to self To find the motorcycle stylings of a Ducati Monster the proper google search terms is "naked motorcycle." Not the search terms you just tried of "naked bike." RIP safe search filter.
I'm basically trying to implement a client-side ping tool of sorts, which I'm well aware isn't what JavaScript should be used for - I'm simply doing this for fun, and I've hit a rather large hurdle.
I found this fiddle that displays a checkboard. Each cell has a in it. If I remove the non-breaking spaces, it renders the same in Chromium and Firefox. What are the non-breaking spaces for?
Hello all :) Anyone got time to help me with setting up onpopstate function`? I am kind of wondering, is it nescessary to learn/use JSON, to get it to work smoothly? :)
And how I would define a state, I want it to work smoothly with my ajax code and onpushstate(this is working good), I am only missing the back/forward, share and reload part of the page :)
@SomeGuy ... i was just told "Americans bahot advance hai angreji singers future me jake indian logo ka gana copy karte hai, indian singers ke gane churate hai"
and i don't think the other guy is trolling, cause hes defending !
Hi everyone. I had a question. (Who'd have thought?)
I'm quite new to writing unit tests for my code. I've been getting to grips with Karma and Jasmine for a few months now. But one thing I don't feel has been answered for me is: when should I not bother writing a unit test? When do I decide that something isn't worthwhile testing?
Also, somewhat related: does anyone have any experiences with JavaScript DI frameworks outside of Angular? It seems that a lot of the things I'm finding difficult to test would be a lot simpler if I could just inject dependencies in my test code, but without having to inject them in my actual production code.
@JimmyBreck-McKye When to write a unit test is the most interesting question about unit testing. I write tests to support refactoring, to prevent regressions, and to inform my design. I don't write tests when the ratio of difficulty-of-testing to protection-from-bugs becomes too large, or for (most) one-off projects, or for methods and classes that are adequately tested indirectly via other unit or integration tests.
For me, the fact I don't have a DI framework seems (I think) to offset that difficulty-vs-benefit ratio quite a bit. At least, from what I've heard.
Then again, is it worthwhile unit testing an object that calls some helper functions just by mocking those functions and testing that they're called? Or is that just not a worthwhile thing to do if the object doesn't contain any logic beyond that?
You can test for DOM interactions, you can test for thrown events, but actually testing whether the UI does what you want automatically is not trivial at all.
Okay, that looks fairly simple. I just decorate a function with dependencies with a method that lists them. Then, in my production code, I can just call 'get' from Chusha and it'll give me an autowired function.
Hello! anyone care to help me with ths popstate event in javascript/ajax? http://jsfiddle.net/vwd6bnjc/1/ I have a problem understanding how to use it, or, how to code it..