@rlemon I have a vibrating pad I can connect via a jack connector to my alarm, and when the alarm rings, the pad vibrates. When I connect the pad to my phone, it never vibrates though. I'm guessing that the pad is getting special signals, so I guess I would need to write a driver to add support for it. Any resource on that, globally speaking? How I can get started with "write a driver that sends signals to the pad"?
and I guess I'll need some kind of equipment to plug on my alarm to see what signal it's sending? do you have an idea of what I can get?
> This non-latching relay switch will switch the relay on in response to an audio input signal. The relay turns off immediately the trigger signal is lost.
If we have different bundles created by webpack and we require.ensure something to dynamically transfer+eval it at a later point in time, it happens via jsonPadding and some webpack js magic. If we have
require.ensure([ ], ( require ) => {
console.log('before...');
var data = require( '....
@Luggage the question is, how to let bundle / pack webpack a module (let's say 5 resources containing js/html/css/font) so it is only one file to transfer over wire, but have callbacks or like yielding options on the client, when those files are unpacked and loaded in the browser
right now, this happens entirely synchronously, leading to blocking the browser on "big files"
myModule.js has 5 fiktive require() calls, so the webpack engine recognizes those as one bundle and zips all together, leading to one file with jsonP data.
that is required with require.ensure or AMD require, the transfer is not the problem, but once that bundle file is on the client.. all those individual components must be evaluated ... THAT is the point which blocks and bothers me so much
well I could manually modify the webpackJsonPaddingCall or whatever it is called. I'm wondering if there is any way to hook into that process via plugins or postLoaders. Basically you would need to setTimeout each file processing or really use es6 yields
So I'm making an app with a bunch of JS objects connected to a UI. What's a good way to update the UI when my objects change? I'm used to WPF and INotifyPropertyChanged
props = state from the outside, state = internal state
into the component
Is there any specific scenario you'd like demoed?
user406009
@KendallFrey If you need to do something really simple, feel free to manually update things with JQuery. You can use developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… to capture updates to a property (setters and getters and whatnot)