@Mdermez 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.
@SomeKittens ok then, I will try to remove and check what more changes would be required if at all ... providers and directives are actually where things get interesting for me :P
Guys I don't know if you had a look at my question. Let me know if you need any additional information. I tried to solve this out but I am not that good in JS . :/
@GarrettKadillak Fun behind-the-scenes story: About halfway through the testing lecture yesterday, I realized I didn't know how to access the this of a controller (since we were using controllerAs) in the tests.
I have a simple controller:
myApp.controller('HelloController', function () {
this.greeting = 'Hello!';
});
I want to test it - but I can't access $scope like usual:
beforeEach(inject(function (
_$rootScope_,
$controller
) {
$rootScope = _$rootScope_;
scope = $rootScope....
@Coldplay 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.
I have really wanted to learn algorithms like bfs dfs and etc over the past couple of months, (or maybe an year) , but the idea of using C/C++ and pointers, freaks me out.. which language , might allow me to bypass this pointers thingy, and actually learn those algorithms
@BenjaminGruenbaum just to make sure I get it, preventDefault cancels the event (if it can) while stop propagation will prevent attaching the parent events?
so I am by no means a coder , even though i have huge respect for the "art" , but i am wondering about the pluses of jquery v's javascript v's css.... obviously the "coder" answer is "well, it depends what your trying to do..... but is there a bias towards using one language over another for web development with different plaftorms/browser/resolutions in mind i wonder??
@user3504751 As to a "bias", JavaScript is the only programming language that runs in browsers, and will continue to be the only one for the foreseeable future.
yes but the more i appreciate the forms i realise that there is quite a lot of crossover for all 3 , especially where css can do a lot of interactivity things
somekittens :- not really a problem i just care about you guys' opinion on choice of languages as i have no bias as i have no skill and may learn more about one over the other depending on the opinions of this forum
@user3504751 the main reason to use jQuery for what it does is cross-browser compatibility. If you can't do it in JS without issue, do it in JS ... also jQuery isn't a language, it's a library. And like others have said, you can't really compare CSS to Javascript to jQuery
didn't realise that if there aren't any changes in the DOM the browser does nothing to it so it wasn't reloading (although your clone code also worked well)
as do most things , they say 10,000 hrs on anything makes you pretty much an expert
most of the js knowledge that you will ever need is simple as hell. but people try to think of js as a client side browser scripting language which is inherently tied to the browser. this is useless complication which only pulls back people.
I wouldn't agree with 10,000 hours on anything makes you an expert. I've worked with sysadmins who called the customers idiots, and then I had to call those customers back and help them out
some people are just lazy. I'm saying don't be lazy
i have to admit , the example was initially applied to playing golf as a non golf player , it was a "scientific" study but that doesn't necesarrily give it additional credibility i appreciate
typeof Function.prototype => "function" I didnt see that coming. What is happening behind the scenes? So basically then Function.prototype.prototype should exists?
Hi! Can jquery's Deffered be used to load an array of assets asynchronously, do something when each one has finished loading and do something when everything is done?
In passportJS when deserializeUser()'s verify function invokes done(err, user) and passes the user object back to passport.authenticate(), which then passes it to the callback under req.user, what do we actually use it for in the callback? What's the point?
@Zirak, "new F just creates a copy of F.prototype" i'm not sure that i understand you well, can you please explain it further. Here "F" is any constructor function or just "Function"?
Nah just learning layouts on Treehouse... the guy is splitting 2 columns using inline-block for each column and setting them to 60% and 40% respectively.
He's adding -5px margin because he says inline-block creates extra whitespace.
I have this pre mongoose middleware for saving passwords,I previously used synchronous implementation,now I am doing an asynchronous implemntation as mongoose middleware:
schema.pre('save', function(next) {
var user = this;
var SALT_WORK_FACTOR = 5;
if (!user.isModified('local.password'))...
@Zirak "new F just creates a copy of F.prototype", it sounds like every call to new F() will create new copy of F.prototype instead of creating blank object setting _ proto _ to point on F.prototype
You're using bcrypt-nodejs, which expects two callbacks:
hash(data, salt, progress, cb)
docs
You've only provided it once, and so cb isn't defined when bcrypt-nodejs hits it.