conditional sticky headers have 2 parts. The conditional part which requires you to know when the user has scrolled past a certain point, and the sticky part which is really just a simple 'position: fixed' rule combined with positioning.
The conditional part is the part that takes more effort. But if I recall correctly jquery has a built in function api.jquery.com/scroll that will help you do that
If you don't want to deal with the conditional part (aka you don't care about fancy resizing or recoloring effects on scroll) just use position:fixed and it will still stick to wherever you position it.
`In a somewhat optimistic sci-fi vision of the future, it was believed your browser would know how relevant a given piece of content was to you, allowing it to show it to you at a larger size:
@FlorianMargaine well, I traded in for an Nvidia Tegra for the extra battery life, though I did it because I was certain I wouldn't ever run anything more than a tab and the secure shell to do work
@William well, you can hack at some cafe, put the device to sleep, turn it back on in the bus and roam to your phone and not lose your session, which already makes it a better client than SSH
yes yes but the internet is browsable even youtube on a mobile device. There is no reason something like mosh shouldn't be able to be usable like that on a mobile connection
Im looking into ajax currently and I came across these words: "After the document loads, the browser reads the hash and runs the AJAX requests, displaying the page plus its dynamic AJAX changes.whatever.com/script.php#some-ajax-state" and my question is: how do i tell the browser what to run based on #some-ajax-state
@William meh, it's still really painful, you feel like you're idling 2/3 of the time instead of punching keys, you want to smash the device after 20 minutes... it's like going back to dial-up
Yeah I had that feature which just swapped out the last array but it was poorly implemented. Tomorrow I think when my head is on straight I will think up the algorithm for it
apparently you can turn github repos into websites just by forking them to a branch called gh-pages and access them via https://{user}.github.io/{project}
@Greg you can nest expressions and that looks good, but you'd use the $elemMatch operator for permissionList only if it was an array of sub-documents you wanted to query based on multiple fields
@FilipDupanović I really appreciate the compliment. I've never had my code reviewed before though, so I'm sure there is something I can improve. Any suggestions?
moving to ES6 and extracting a module out of your script would be the next improvement; you can drop the IIFE, deindent and the classes make it a bit easier to collocate data and related functions together
not really sure why you wanted to do that @yosefrow, the stuff in there is also mostly static (like the Table constructor) and isn't bound to settings or the game you declared within
well, it'd make sense that it only returns either the GameOfLife constructor (that's what the script from the global context would only care about) or either remove it
this means that whichever game's script is evaluated last might overwrite what was declared by the previous game, they would basically clash in preparing the global context, to odd results
what I would need in the document to run the game is basically to call two separate constructors, so if each of your scripts creates an isolated execution context and spews out two functions that get assigned to two distinct names in the global context--that would solve the problem