@Ajoo You've failed to meet StackOverflow's and our rules regarding your issue. You don't minimize your issue, don't include a demo in your post, nor do you explain the issue very clearly. There are 3 close votes on your question for those reasons
It seems you have a history of asking poor questions
Anyone know, without using bootstraps mobile-first / hard-coded column re-ordering, if there is an easy way to have a "pinned" div (using just CSS), that will always be on top of other columns when it goes into collapsed mode? Example: jsfiddle.net/aanders50/2sx0frsx/2
Hi Zach ! Thanks for the response. Though I am really surprised when you say that I have not described the problem well. In fact, earlier, after reading the question you messaged saying that there was no runnable code which I have provided thereafter using pastie. I am willing to agree with you if you can show me how could I have asked this question in a simpler manner. Thank you
Hi zach, I have gone through that link & I feel that I have done most of what is mentioned there. I have described the problem showing minimal code where the problem occurs. The code in the pastie is an almost minimal version. The images are required to create the slider and its Tab. I have removed almost all of the server code. What else can I do?
You still have PHP in your code. Include only the relevant, rendered code so that a minimal version of your project with only enough code to recreate the issue is present. Make sure it runs, likely in a snippet or JSFiddle. Then describe exactly where it breaks and what you've done to try and solve the issue, including the research you did into the issue
I keep trying to take notes in this algos course but then she goes to slowly so I stop looking then all the sudden she's done with the whole slide and moves on and I miss half the content :/
Hi Zach, I have further reduced the code eliminating php. I have also slightly reduced the css. The following pastie if implemented will reproduce the problem. I have tested it before posting it. http://pastie.org/10949134.js The images are here http://imgur.com/a/PTSR6 and will be required.
You still have PHP in your code. Include only the relevant, rendered code so that a minimal version of your project with only enough code to recreate the issue is present. Make sure it runs, likely in a snippet or JSFiddle. Then describe exactly where it breaks and what you've done to try and solve the issue, including the research you did into the issue
Line 63 of the pastie is a comment which shows how the problem is rectified easily but using a small bit of inline code and removing another bit from the css file.
sorry the pasties has the .js at the end which was also pasted. Here it is again. pastie.org/10949134
So far, I've been using the former data type for my objects
I've been learning JS through simulations, physics, animations, and it came to generating thousands if not more such points or particles, basically objects that looked like {x:4, y:3, functions}
A friend of mine working in webdev has noticed that I'm just mocking classes basically and suggested I use the latter
my question is, should I just get used to classes, are they faster or otherwise make up for it through design beauty
and perhaps even more notably, I have a function that extracts a pixel and registers its colour that doesn't even take finite numbers as an argument: hex.extract(myContext, x, y);
all of these making objects... is this feasible to do with classes?
as well as functions like .toHsv() which return a converted object
I pass in a canvas context and two coords, and it creates an object based on the colour there
but it's still a (weird) constructor
it returns an object, so I'd do var x = hsv.extract(ctx, 100, 400); -> HSV object var y = hex.createHex("#FFFFFF").toRgb(); -> HEX object -> RGB object, finally var z = rgb.createRandom(); -> RGB object
all of them valid, usable objects with various types and methods... it'd seem like a nightmare to do all of this with classes, right?
erm... both? I've been using it to generate colors mathematically (e.g. colour this thing based on its distance from another) and also compare and mutate colours, yes
So in general, should I completely give up my {} ways or what would be the criterion? If I'm to work with a LOT of objects, is it "simpler" that they be object literals or should I just work with classes?
Here are two fiddles. This one works fine but there is that small bit of inline css code. https://jsfiddle.net/ajoo/4u76Lhxd/. In this one i moved the inline css into the css file (lines 107 to 110) but the tab gets distorted. https://jsfiddle.net/ajoo/totym83v/1/ For some weird reason - i dont know why - the slide tab does not show in jsfiddle. But the problem still demostrates.
When JS changes an element's style, it changes the style attribute. So when you call .toggle() it does it inline. Since, on the first version, you have display:none, it toggles between none and a blank value (which means it goes to the previously declared one, which is display: block in your stylesheet). On the second one, it toggles between none and inline, which causes the issue
if your demo were an actually minimal one, I bet you would have figured that out yourself
Tricky CSS question here. I have 3 sibling elements with varying widths. I need the middle element centered and the other two elements on each side, sort of "floated" next to the centered one. Any ideas?