@Luggage yes, but still I don't think they need to do any component creation from a string, because it's 'static' you declare which component you want, and each component know which child component he has
Is this list vague enough to coax people into using my framework?
**Features:** Models (via sequelize) Views (default via Marko) Controllers Routing Sessions (via Redis) Easy API via Annotations/ Class decorators Built-in Error re-routing/ messaging Simple API for making external requests Very easy to make a RESTful JSON api
$('.pagenav a').next('.children').removeAttr('href') after removing the if completely, however that will likely not do what you expect it to. .next() only looks at the next element; it doesn't look for the next element that matches the selector, it looks at the next element if and only if it matches the selector.
use ng-change instead of onchange and declare your function as $scope.myFunction = function() { ... } I don't think the DOM knows that myFunction exists, because it's delcared in an angular controller that is outside of it's scope. — Sterling Archer7 secs ago
I'm not positive about this -- can somebody confirm?
don't you actually want to cancel what's inside the promise, not necessarily the promise itself? the promise.all will already result in a reject, but if you're wanting to abort any outstanding ajax requests after a single failure, you'll need a way of getting back to the xhr.
containers on the agent will make for absurdly massive agents. Somebody decided to combine our services, so we now have one macroservice that takes 12GB of memory to run its unit tests.
this is awful... I just had to subscribe to a rowing membership online and the only way to pay (not phishing, I'm really sure about it) was to insert your card's credentials...
jeez
the site also seems really outtdated. I bet that there are a lot of ways to leak other people's credentials
now I just need to check for issues fixed only for outdated versions of PHP and stuff that didn't meet a fix in newer versions and chances are it's a way in