Wife got me the SI swimsuit issue and it came with a cardboard VR insert. the SI app worked fine on my iPhone, too. About as good as my Oculus DK1 and less bulky
@JackGaray Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
Hey is the above tutorial mentioned by doug65536 really wrong? Dont know much about REST, but I thought http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ was a good place for beginners
The only real use of <noscript> is to dump a GTFO message to overly paranoid users
"Client-side JavaScript does not allow the reading or writing of files. This has been kept for security reason." - not quite, even though there are limitations
"JavaScript cannot be used for networking applications because there is no such support available." - huh wat. Apparently AJAX doesn't use networking
"JavaScript doesn't have any multithreading or multiprocessor capabilities." - outdated at best
"the language [attribute] has been phased out .. your script tag should include it anyways"
Devastating sub-par tutorials is my hobby
" We added an optional HTML comment that surrounds our JavaScript code." - hell, even Lynx knows better than to dump javascript to the user, and it doesn't even give a damn to CSS.
"JavaScript ignores spaces, tabs, and newlines" - bs
"NOTE − Care should be taken while writing variable and function names in JavaScript." - duh.
"JavaScript also recognizes the HTML comment opening sequence <!--. JavaScript treats this as a single-line comment, just as it does the // comment." - blatantly false. This only applies to the first line. x<--x gives you a bool.
But really.. We don't even bother to include a noscript tag where I work
Neither do they, so let's sin them for hipocricy
Fck, they don't even bother to HTML-comment their javascripts, despite shoving them into every example
In this blog post, I show six tricks enabled by new ES6 features. At the end of each section, I point to related material in my book “Exploring ES6” (which is free to read online). Enforcing mandatory parameters via parameter default values ES6 parameter default values are only evaluated when they are actually used. That lets you enforce that a given parameter be provided: /** * Ca…
Oh and... storing flowcharts as JPEG is a sin. No, I haven't checked the file extension. It's obvious even without that.
"The break statement, which was briefly introduced with the switch statement, is used to exit a loop early, breaking out of the enclosing curly braces." - ...
soon after they are bold enough to bolden document.write
"A function is a group of reusable code which can be called anywhere in your program." - sure, an anonymous function is not a function until you store it in a global variable.
"It helps programmers in writing modular codes." - and the hindishism of the year award goes to ...
"f you do not want to keep an extra copy of a page, then you can mark your printable text using proper comments like <!-- PRINT STARTS HERE -->..... <!-- PRINT ENDS HERE --> and then you can use PERL or any other script in the background to purge printable text and display for final printing. We at Tutorialspoint use this method to provide print facility to our site visitors. Check Example." -- yeah, because @media{print} is not reliable enough.
Their explanation of OOP is really WTF as well
new Array, new Object, lowercase constructor name, setter for price named addPrice
That tutorial is a piece of garbage
with introduced without a hefty "do not touch" sign, or even as much as a note that it's often a bad idea
"Use the prototype property to assign new properties and methods to the Number object in the current document" - actually, no, don't.
"The Array object lets you store multiple values in a single variable. It stores a fixed-size sequential collection of elements of the same type." - blatant lies.
[a-Z] - not only [A-z] matches more than just all letters, they have reversed the cases, and [a-Z] is a syntax error.
"p$ It matches any string with p at the end of it." - nope, it matches p at the end of a line.
@MadaraUchiha I tested it on a 5k file with 5 instances of strings that would be matched by that regex and it didn't freeze. Are you running this on a raspberry pi? :P
So anyways, I gave up on making the SSG. I think SSGs should be replaced with simple servers and caching layers. Limiting the scope to "static" is only going to harm, and adding too much server magic to an SSG will make things confusing.
Hence, I am going to focus working on JSHP instead today and add vhs helpers to it. I'd later make another layer which can use the JSHP server to generate static sites using the same semantics of JSHP.
What I really need is a way to to make node listen to a unix domain socket now instead of a TCP port.
So some kind of TCP->UDP abstraction for HTTP.
Anyone knows of one?
@JanDvorak you are probably partly trolling and partly serious, but if you have some fair criticism for PHP's http abstractions, please tell.
Other than "hiding too much" or "false impressions on newbies". because frankly everything we use does this one way or the other. Picking up on PHP for that is gonna be unfair.