Hi guys, if you are kind to give me some hint/advice.
I'm looking for a code or the syntax to load a JavaScript function after the function has complete, I have found "setTimeout()" example. Are there anything else to go about this?
@phenomnomnominal the JavaScript is outside the html file (xxx.js). But due to the large amount of table data it has to process, currently after page load you can see a weird table for 5-10 seconds. What I am trying to do is avoid the display of the loading table.
@EnglishMaster do you happen to have an answer to what I asked phenomnomnominal?
I'm looking for a code or the syntax to load a JavaScript function after the function has complete, I have found "setTimeout()" example. Are there anything else to go about this? the JavaScript is outside the html file (xxx.js). But due to the large amount of table data it has to process, currently after page load you can see a weird table for 5-10 seconds. What I am trying to do is avoid the display of the loading table. I have a minimized sample of the function in http://jsfiddle.net/revzephyr/b42vn2nh/96/
@phenomnomnominal I'm not surprised, I don't really know JavaScript. Just did what I can and put 4 different parts of codes together. I tried to refine/clean it up, but I don't have the basics....sorry for the messy code. Thanks for looking.
Which one would you prefer 1) a bunch of if and else statements, takes 10 minutes to write 2) Spending 1 hour trying to figure out what observer pattern is and trying to emulate that in your code
would anyone mind to help me with a javascript issue? i'm banned from asking questions on the site. for some reason, in IE 11 two variables are returning the same value, but in other browsers this does not occur.
@EnglishMaster Not sure if you're trolling or not, but here's the basic problem i'm experiencing. I don't know enough about javascript to know why this happens. but its only in IE. puu.sh/gX5bs/d1dac7150c.png the numbers old_price and new_price seem to always be the same according to IE
Is there some tool that can syntax-check my JavaScript files to see if they contain syntax errors that would bother the Javascript engine of Internet Explorer, especially excess trailing commas?
Example:
var some_object = {
valid : "property",
one : "comma too much ---> ",
};
This code wo...
function makeRouter(routes) {
return function(req, res) {
var url = req.url;
async.eachSeries(routes, function(route, cb) {
if (req.method !== route[0].toUpperCase()) { return cb(); }
if (routeMatches(route[1], url)) {
route[2](req, res, cb);
} else {
cb();
}
});
};
}
// when the route handler calls res.end() rather than cb(), is this a memory leak?
It's been a long time since I touched any js, but somebody please tell me when I should use the "new" keyword. I find it somewhat amazing how searching SE found me absolutely no straightforward answer among even those with hundreds of upvotes...
I don't know of any problem to the developer that uses the lib that way, but the lib itself will be harder to reason about for whoever develops it. The problem isn't with new. The problem is with this and prototype.
Sorry, was interrupted. So obviously then, but just to confirm; when I'm creating an object on the fly like this: `var r = (function() { var rect = cv.getBoundingClientRect(); return { x: rect.left, y: rect.top, w: rect.width, h: rect.height } })();`...I don't need to bother using "new" at all?
how do i stop a certain function to stop working after specified amount of time, for eg: I want to stop the given function after 1 second .. how do i do that ?For eg this code : repl.it/g5o
I want to solve Project Euler Problem 1:
If we list all the natural numbers below 10 that are multiples of 3 or 5, we get 3, 5, 6 and 9. The sum of these multiples is 23.
Find the sum of all the multiples of 3 or 5 below 1000.
Here's my code:
\documentclass[10pt,a4paper]{article}
\use...
I spent two hours today trying to re-write a core module to my works application only to realize I probably can't do any better and it is ugly for a reason.
I managed to recover a few because someone had an IRC bot called CrockBot that also scraped facts from the site, and there are a few logs here and there :D
@ApathyBear I use what @SomeKittens posted for the most part; if I'm just going to write a quick note (regardless of lines) that isn't quite meant to "document," then I use //
@DON 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.