@rlemon How about (in the spirit of a Caprica backend), have Caprica report every time a command is used to a server, and write a simple client-side app that polls/websockets the server and displays the latest commands in reverse chronological order
On second thought, JSONP needs to be supported by the server too.
JSONP is basically you call a URL like this: http://example.com/ask/for/data?param1=value1&callback=myCallback
And then the server will respond with this string: myCallback({"data": "here"});
So all you need to do is to create a <script> element, set its src to http://example.com/ask/for/data?param1=value1&callback=myCallback and define a global function myCallback() to handle the data
@SuperUberDuper No, but if I create a <script> element, and the document found in the src of that script element is: myCallback(something);, then that script will be executed.
:o! Whaaaa... So I just do a get request from my server and that is a-ok? Or does it work differently, coz a buzzword I can google so I don't ask so many questions? @rlemon
The following code will build a hash with the key as the character and the count as the value. You should be able to use this strategy to build the type of object you need, and this will keep the order of the objects the same as the string input.
arr = '11222233344444445666'.split('')
hash = {...
Has anyone used electron? The way I see it is that I basically have to still have a server back end, like express, but when the server is ready, I just launch a new electron browser window that points to the server? Should be that simple...