@Ananthu 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.
is it possible to have a "$(function()" and have it NOT use a specific jquery file? i have two jquery files that are causing conflict but i cant change the old jquery (jquery-1.5.1.js) file but i can change the new jquery-1.9.1.js
@TheDProgrammer 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.
@anatp_123 Well who made that choice? Maybe I'm dumb, but I can't see a good reason as to why you would load a library twice. Also, I'm pretty sure you can write JS to remove the old one before it even affects you.
Does anyone have an opinion? If I am considering transitioning away from Angular 1, would I be better going to Angular 2 or something like Reactjs? Or some combination?
@Claies don't combine them. I prefer React because it focuses on a smaller part of the app and does a great job, but Angular 2 will be better than 1.
@Trasiva well the real goal is for all the uggs to end up on the floor
user5503464
It looks like your token is a string used to get permission to use an API? If so, unfortunately, by posting it on SO, you have compromised the key - someone else can use it to impersonate you on the API. I suggest requesting a new API key. See help.github.com/articles/remove-sensitive-data for a related discussion. — Kevin41 mins ago
I'm gonna explore new territory; saving/storing attachments uploaded. My initial thought was store them as blobs in a database, but that's just me guessing. The other approach would be to actually put the file somewhere on the server and just store the path. The types of attachments I'm working with are PDFs, Word, and Excel. Any recommendations?
I don't even fully understand what blobs are, that was just me putting 2 and 2 together from what I've read, but I would like to use MySQL since that's what I already have setup. If I don't store them in a database, and I just store the actual file on the server, what exactly would the directory look like to keep it organized and maintainable? Just folder them by dates, user, combination of the two?
Let me spit this back to make sure I understand. Store a record in the DB for every file uploaded, with meta information such as uid, who, when, filetype, etc. And then the path to the file is actually the id of that record, but broken up like you shown to allow it to 'scale'.
I'd just start with what Luggage described, it's easy and works well, then start using hashed names and stuff later.
A really thorough solution would use hashed names, probably store the files in S3 or Swift, allow multiple references to a file, maybe even support tree-like permissions.
OK, you guys just saved me hours worth of searching, now I got a good understanding of the concept...should be fairly easy. Much appreciated @Luggage @ssube
I store some generated files in a more human-readable directory scheme for archival purposes.
Like every time someone submits/edits a 'timesheet' in my app I queue up a process to do some Excel Exports and store them in (e.g.): /archive/2016/March/Sally 2016-03-01.xlsx
oh, now the bluetooth headset works again. I got trapped here while I was trying to debug. I think we can use bluetooth status in debian to determine random numbers
@PeeHaa sup? And as I told you before - I am not working on that bot anymore. Not working on anything with JS at all. I can commence on rewriting it in Rust, Haskell or OCaml if you want.
Yeah I'm about to start something that could be disastrous down the line if I don't have a clear understanding of how it needs to work, so I was curious if UML was still something people seriously used or everyone is pro and draws from their big brains.
@Waxi I sometimes use gliffy.com. Don't get caught up with making sure you use the exactl right symbols for anything. As long as it helps you think or express an idea it's good
is a dictionary what i need in javascript to add these values to something I can check against later?
for (var i = 0; i < jsonData.dtCombined.length; i++) {
var colorUseId = jsonData.dtCombined[i].ColorUseId;
customColorId = jsonData.dtCombined[i].CustomColorID;
var customColorCode = jsonData.dtCombined[i].CustomColorCode;
var customColorName = jsonData.dtCombined[i].CustomColorName;
}