I answered what I thought was a basic C# question in the morning, apparently C# people aren't very used to answers that cite the specification like we do in JS so it got a bunch of upvotes.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I didn't read it all (its a whole bunch), but what I read... I'm uncertain about it. It confused me because first the author stated and granted nazi-germany a superior organizsation and economy, for being on eye-height and even higher with four other major states back then (UK, USA, USSR, France) and in the following section he describes that it actually wasn't any superior achievement at all
beyond that, the article has some major wrong information from what I know about strength of military forces
@jAndy I'm also uncertain about it, I think that if he had a solid point he could had made it more coherently. Also, yeah, the strength of armies information is also different from what I've read.
one of the biggest myth about military strength from 1933-1939 is, how much nazi germany armed up. Compared to its neighbors (france, ussr, uk, poland), germany had a disadvanted of about 97:1 1933 and still about 25:1 1933
that was, by all means, actually never a big enough army to attack
I was surfing on the web in search of a shorthand Javascript notation for an if-statement. ONLY the if, not the else. My question: does it exist? eg:
(i === 0) ? onlyMyTrueValue;
The only snippet I seem to find is this one:
(i === 0) ? myTrueValue : myFalseValue;
Thanks in advance
somewhere in my style sheet I have something that effects the mobile styles and adds a tiny little horizontal scroll. I have inspected the heck out of my site and still can't find the little hidden fucker that sticks out creating the unwanted scroll.
@FlorianMargaine I've never heard of any problems, but given the benefit of the doubt... property in context, or if you're worried about prototype chain, context.hasOwnProperty(property)? Still shorter and less obfuscated
@Zirak I'd write this as multi-line (with lines ending in &&), but I don't see the big issue. Compared to the rest of the jQuery source code it's very nice.
> Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
$.fn.serializeArray = function () {
var result = [], el
$( Array.prototype.slice.call(this.get(0).elements) ).each(function () {
el = $(this)
var type = el.attr('type')
if (this.nodeName.toLowerCase() != 'fieldset' &&
!this.disabled && type != 'submit' && type != 'reset' && type != 'button' &&
((type != 'radio' && type != 'checkbox') || this.checked))
result.push({
name: el.attr('name'),
value: el.val()
})
})
return result
Aw, just copy and paste! :-) 'Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how will you ever debug it?'
// Just lost faith in this API
// create an Array to set multiple initialization values
var initvalues = new Array();
initvalues.customform= 17;
initvalues.recordmode = 'dynamic';
initvalues.entity = 355;