@stylishCoder "Coder" is definitely too board and need to be more specific. For example I can identify that Chinese programmers love to say HTML5 as H5, or that many senior member in this room don't think jQuery is necessary now. I can also say most real life programmers I know in Hong Kong and UK pronounces MySQL as My-See-Qual. These are much more specific groups than "coders".
@stylishCoder Precision is important. For example, cookie session (generally "cookie") is generally slower and less secure than express session (generally "session").
If you confuse the two you would mix up the bad way from the standard way. Which may be what is happening because the answer use cookie, but you said session.
> V8 implements ECMAScript as specified in ECMA-262, 5th edition, and runs on Windows (XP or newer), Mac OS X (10.5 or newer), and Linux systems that use IA-32, x64, or ARM processors.
V8 compiles and executes JavaScript source code, handles memory allocation for objects, and garbage collects objects it no longer needs.
v8 is a javascript compiler wriitten in c++ in other terms right?
@ibubi It means "running the code". Compile (usually) means "turning human readable code into machine runnable code", e.g. turns code into .exe or .apk.
There are some articles/videos that describe how node and/or javascript engines works.
You need to find them on your own I afraid. We swim in very deep sea where no surface light can penetrates. That and I'm waiting for a meeting call. :|
@ibubi Keep in mind that although we are now using EcmaScript 7th Edition, modern JS engines works haven't evolved much in the last few years and have similar structures and working method.
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I am trying to make a gallery showing 1 tab onload because right now it's showing all the tabs when the page loads.... This is the link if someone can help: plnkr.co/edit/wXBBUt1yXM2eP8vTkmoj?p=info
@whitesova93 your code is little too long for general persons timeframe....you can just reduce the code line so that one should not spend time figuring out which code is actually the one we need to look at.
@whitesova93 Hide all thumbnails with CSS (not javascript) and display them with javascript. Then it won't show the images before the javascript kicks in.
I'm so obsessed with the app, yesterday I cleaned the whole house, worked on my thesis, did some coding exercises, went to the gym and ate healthy only to increase my character's level.
@ibubi Sorry I just finished that page. It starts off with a good introduction but doesn't get any deeper... so here is a slightly more technical blog: creativejs.com/2013/06/…
Curious. I used to read some nice js engine structure diagrams when I was learning about them, but I can't find any now. Any one?
The creativejs one is nice. Not too shallow, not too deep, just enough for you to go to Google IO and have some idea what the V8 engineer is talking about.
Just make sure to follow the links to part 3 and part 4 :)
in fact my main subject is nodeJs, and this article says it is a runtime and is an asynchronous, event-driven framework that allows you to use JavaScript on the server-side.
if it is server side then it should be a sth like web server
@ibubi Node.js helps you run JavaScript code in server side. The JavaScript code can open socket and listen for HTTP request and send HTML back, making it a web server.
But Node.js can also run as a simple command-line javascript environment, like moving files or compiling video.
@ibubi Running javascript on command line is nothing new. You can do that with Spidermonkey before Chrome (or V8) is born. But you can't do much because you can't access file or sockets. There is no event and no API. Node.js provides them, so that you can run some useful js program from command line. Which includes web server.
@ibubi This is entirely correct. It allows you to use it on the server-side. It doesn't necessary mean that you must. See? That's the difference. NodeJS can run anywhere and do almost anything, including acting as a server on some kind of 'server-side' machine, or compile TS on your development machine, bundle some JS or CSS, run CSS preprocessors, etc, etc.
Hey people, Im making an application that uses a datalist which could potentially have multiple options (100+). I want to know if how i can alter the amount of values shown in the dropdown of the datalist, but i cant find any documentation that tells me datalist has a default maximum options to show. Does anyone know if datalist even has a maximum by default?
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Hmm. More accurately, you can control the height of the dropdown (size attribute of the select element), but you can't "show top 100" from a long list.
@Sheepy @RoelvanUden srry i was a bit busy, ok i will ask a question from a different way, lets say u open a web api project on visual studio, create all needed functions and ready to be consumed, then create an angular supported web project and consuming the api. Everthing works fine. Then i cancel the web api project and thinking a nodeJS project instead on server side which supplies web requests, right?
@OliverSalzburg Web API is the standard for REST and OData API end-points in ASP.NET world. In which case, yes @ibubi, you can create a replacement in nodejs. But that's not the only use of nodejs. See NodeJS as .NET. It can be used to create web sites, but also desktop applications, command line applications, and anything in between.
@MadaraUchiha Visual Studio Code is pretty good. I had to get used to the horizontal tabs more than anything. I don't like how it works with TypeScript in comparison with Atom, but that's a mere matter of time (It's catching up in terms of versions). Other languages have all been great for me.
@MadaraUchiha With webstorm, it's apples and oranges. It handles large files better than Atom. I haven't tried out it's git integration, as I stick to git cli. Supports the JS ecosystem well. I don't TypeScript, so I can't talk about it. Its plugin ecosystem is inferior to ST. Has poor support for other languages.
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Meanwhile, IE10 and Edge use the same JS engine - Chakra. But when testing both with a JS benchmarking tool (JetStream/Octane), Edge scores almost twice as high as IE10. Anyone have a clue why?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Let's say I have big JSON chunk with 90k or something lines
the depth isn't limited and the content is kinda' full of depth, as in children has chidren and the saga continues for 6-7 level or more.
now on first level I have some inputs based on which I have to decide if I shall get into the children or not and once I am into the chidren the depth is not limited and I have to pick data from children based on inputs. I have to traverse through complete depth there as well.
I haven't been able to put pieces together. Doing something like this for first time. I have faile…
@jaySon Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
As far as I understand you, the array function reduce might help you. It's actually not designed for this purpose, but I found it very useful to abuse it for deep JSON searches.
var yourJson = {
inputText1: {
inputText2: {
inputText3: "result here"
}
},
foo: "test",
bar: 123
};
var result = ["inputText1", "inputText2", "inputText3"].reduce(function (prev, cur) {
return prev[cur];
}, yourJson);
@BenjaminGruenbaum So, how would I be able to tell that they are "completely different" as you say, when they even have the same name?
It even states in the Wiki article you linked that Edge's JS engine "is a fork of the JScript engine used in Internet Explorer".
Hi js developers. How to do element extraction in javascript?
I have placeholder with any web page url. It should extract the elements when i click on button. I have to show elements and xpath values in my page. How can i do that? Please help me.
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@RoelvanUden "Hi js developers. How to do element extraction in javascript? " sure it contains HI but it is a direct question. Surly not asking if anyone can help.
@Shashi So? The bot is giving a few "Please don't" statements that need not directly apply to the message in question. It's like a the general statements you may get, e.g. please don't pee in the pool. It doesn't mean that you don't get that message just because you didn't pee in the pool.
Sorry if I can't drop this Chakra topic, but this is somewhat important for my diploma thesis and I can't quite get it. Afaik, the only difference between the IE10's Chakra and Edge's Chakra is that Edge's Chakra core is open-source. But what's the reason for a performance difference of 90% between the two engines on the same device?
@Shashi Yeah, it's the message you get on the first message you post in this room.
@jaySon Well, programs evolve. If you compare Chrome 6 with Chrome 53, they both use the v8 engine, but one in 53 is a vastly improved (possibly even redesigned) version of the original in 6. Idem in IE10, IE11 and Edge. They're improvements on the original.
@RoelvanUden So, I only know JIT compilers. But when talking JavaScript, we're talking interpreters which by nature are JIT if you will. So, could you please help me understand what you mean by that?
@jaySon No, no, they're really not. The first JS engines were a mere interpreters. They read instructions, transformed it into a AST, and advanced a little state machine over the AST. It continued doing that over and over, and it worked. Current engines still translate JS to an AST, and then transform those into byte code. When the execution engine comes in, the function is compiled into native code (e.g. ARM or x86 instructions) and executed. Then even later it can do optimization passes.
@jaySon Have you read the Edge blog? They explain a little bit whenever they get some code runs much faster.
@RoelvanUden I'm quite sure IE 10 had JIT. I think would be even slower if it didn't. Firefox had JIT when Chrome arrives, and still eats dust even then.
@Sheepy I have not read the Edge blog. This question came up just a few days ago when I did some benchmark tests on several browsers, including Edge and IE10.
@jaySon Try it. Once you are through it and want to read more you can go back to read the IE blog. It's a journal of how they catch up after a whole decade of neglect.
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Any one know about extraction element in javascript? I have placeholder with any web page url. It should extract the elements when i click on button. I have to show elements and xpath values in my page. How can i do that? Please help me.