hello i have problem in expanding view. https://jsfiddle.net/nayyarmannu/qprohfst/3/?utm_source=website&utm_medium=embed&utm_campaign=qprohfst the tab is not coming below the pointer.
@mikhilmohanan 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.
Normal? Why wouldn't you have alerts set up in the event a server that collects tens of gigs of data when it starts to get within 10% of maximum capacity?
Overall the job isn't as awful as it could be. Flex hours, lenient on the remote work when you're ill (which makes sense for an ultra small company), and decent pay.
@Luggage Pffht, I've been fighting that battle for two years. After I finish my current project, I finally got it okayed to actually write out development standards for the website and sql.
Mathematically speaking, numbers cannot have leading zeros. In JS, Putting a leading 0 on an integer is the equivalent to parsing octal, or base 8.
var num = 011111111;
//is the same as
parseInt(011111111, 8);
When in reality you want a decimal parse, which is base 10. To keep your leading zer...
@Luggage I checked the github repository and I grabbed a stock file, still no dice. Made a new project frmo stock files, doesn't work.
I was hoping to use a comma, but I don't know how to append after gulp.series() unless if I do gulp.series(), console.log()
In other words, I have: gulp.watch('src/assets/img/**/*').on('change', gulp.series(images, browser.reload)); And I think I want to change it to: gulp.watch('src/assets/img/**/*').on('change', gulp.series(images, browser.reload), console.log('Super Test Tested Super!'));
ok.. so.. I'll say it a third time. Are you sure you need to use .on()? It's not in the documentation and I don't use it with my gulp.watch.
also, you are console.log()ing before you even wathc the files
you pare passing the RESULT of console.log() into gulp.watch(), which is nothing.
and in an argument AFTER the tasks.. I think you are just making shit up
4
this looks like gulp 4.0. did they change it there?
@MassDebates so.. both are true. gulp 4.0 did add an .on('change'), but you don't use it for tasks. See github.com/gulpjs/gulp/blob/master/docs/… The tasks are in the .watch() call and .on('change') is just for adding an additional event for 'other purposes'.
the example even has a console.log() just like you want.
They'd probably be more useful than most of the doctors I've seen at the VA.
Fuck, my current PCM isn't even a doctor. Anything he writes has to be validated by a Nurse practitioner (who didn't even look at what he wrote, just initialed it).
hey folks - question about preloading images. does a simple var img = new Image(); img.src = url get the job done, or will that not be cached by the browser? Do I need to load it via an ajax request instead?
Can you tell me if the function I wrote below is enough to preload images in most if not all browsers commonly used today?
function preloadImage(url)
{
var img=new Image();
img.src=url;
}
I have an array of imageURLs that I loop and call the preloadImage function for each URL.
I tried doing what I could to the file but I wasn't able to get the gulp script to run with my console.log() in there. I'm probably messing up the syntax.
@Luggage I'm trying to run the console.log() to see if this line is bad like you state. Surely you wouldn't find it a bad idea to actually verify that the lines are indeed bad, no?. I ran it through some syntax evaluators
Anyone has example usecase/code operating on a dataset with chains of map/filter/reduce from pseudo-reallife? This is for a demo - something like findings a movie from a bunch of movies will work. But it should really include atleast 5 or more of those operations.
@Luggage I was being given images that I was told were new images; he accidentally got mixed up and ended sending me old versions. Kind of the reason why I wanted to test it further.
@Luggage Appreciate the attempt to help, regardless! You didn't have to spend that time with me. I'm glad you did.
@Luggage Also, a developer walked me through getting the correct version of the CLI and using it because I wanted to make sure I had the steps down right after what you had to say. We ended up downloading the very same file and everything. Gulp 3.9/~4 -is- the current version, and has been for months.
@Luggage That being said, what you've previously claimed (and reiterated multiple times for reinforcement... in assumption I wasn't listening to you) is really, really confusing now. It doesn't really agree with the docs, either, on basis of relevancy.
It's because the docs were discussing a separate developer goal in that section.
You plug a desktop gpu into it, and plug it into the back of the laptop - and use the desktop gpu instead of the dedicated. Also lets you overclocked the cpu a bit
This might be a case of #lazyweb but say I make an npm module that has a lib/store directory and I want to import from that using import { foo } from 'module/store'. How do I set that up in the package.json file of the module. I tried "main": "lib/" but webpack is just spitting in my face. I'm not sure what I should google and off the top of my head I can't remember any npm modules who does that so I can go look at their source.
So I guess I'd love for someone to either tell me how to do it or point me to a npm module that exposes imports from directories within node_modules/stuff