if there is two textbox on page called user name and password den when the user clicks on user name textbox i have to show a pop up next to the user name textbox and display the message that please enter your user name and the same for password
@NiteshKatare Depending on how long the form is you might want to consider looking at the jQuery validation plugin, else @NickCraver's suggestions would work fine
They have canvas2d implemented, but the compositing is still done in software
which pretty much means: GPU thread takes one core just because of context switching
last time I checked compositing acceleration + canvas acceleration just resulted in an empty window :/
Not to say that canvas speed in chrome is even without HWA lightyears ahead of it's competition
That reminds me, I have to look up that spec one day in order to find out if there's actually an restriction which keeps people from implementing fast clearing code
it's a joke that clearing the damn thing alone takes up 30% CPU
already using 2 canvas(canvases? canvi?) on top of each other, one for more static stuff in the background and one for moving stuff, update code's a mess :/
@Raynos Wrappers, that depends, in most cases I do my own small wrapping functions for setting color, drawing a circle or a polygon, since canvas is soooo slow, using generalized stuff will give bad performance in most cases, at least that's my experience
I'm using the simple code below to replace a textbox (<input type=text />) with a <textarea> element after the user types in a certain number of characters. In the example below, this takes place after the 10th character. The code works, except that the contents of the <textarea&g...
@YiJiang Each time I need to do something under Windows, I scream... especially when I'm running on battery and that damn thing decides to install 40 updates on shutdown -.-
and now that Canonical got that stupid console-kit-daemon fixed in 10.xx my box is running more stable than ever before
but then again.. a terminal is not always fun. for instance, pushing git repositorys just via terminal is like walking on thin ice.. one step away from going crrazzyyyyyy
but then again, I hate question which I open and my screen is full of (at best bad or unformatted) source code.. that's an instant close in most cases :p
Server tells client this thing in your nested tree changed, this is the new value. Change your internal structure and handle appropiate valueChanged event
There's no valid use of eval. Period. Even JSON before native JSON was evil. Anyways gonna hide from Crockford from now on for making someone use eval...
I think its a good way to deal with it. The client has internal state stored in a nested tree. The server tells the client its state changed merely by passing in "top.layer1.layer2.layer3.data.complexStorage.temp" changed to "newValue"
Unless you really have that much data to keep track of that you need to segment it like that, I think you really need to rethink how your data is structured. "top.layer1......temp" ... hmmmm
abusing eval is bad. But I think its elegant for the server to pass in a string telling the client what part of its complex state changed by method of namespace nesting rather then that way the data name and data location are the same thing
ugh -.- I can just take the input and split it by "." and then use a nested top[1][2][3][4]
it's just that if you think you've got a valid usecase for Eval, then you should do three things: try every other way. ask a lot of other knowledgeable people about the usecase. make sure you've tried every other way.
then, after those three, then, and only then, you should use eval.
"A script is causing ie to become unresponsive" How do I deal with this message? Optimise the code? or is there any way to make the message ignored. ie8 is just too slow for my functionality :\
@Raynos I ran this page kangax.github.com/es5-compat-table in beta 7 and the last row says "Yes". Clicking on the "Strict mode" link on the left reveals that all tests except one return "Yes". The one that fails is eval('var x'); x; is a Reference Error.
@drachenstern The release notes ( mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/4.0b7/releasenotes ) mention that beta 7 uses JaegerMonkey - a new JavaScript engine... so I guess, strict mode support came with this new engine.
IE has a limit of 31 style sheets (there are ways around that) but is there a limit to how many javascript files i can include? if i go above it, what happens?
i've got a page now with 40+ included js files.
@rchern Hahah, even with these I didn't have anywhere decent to put my speakers...I can only imagine the size of desk I'd need if they were that big. :P
@NickCraver Mostly all front-end stuff (jQuery/JavaScript). I use VS some on the side for MVC related articles. Use WebStorm these days for standard webdev stuff
@NickCraver Yeah, I like them a lot. The model first caught my eye since it was one of the few with DisplayPort at the time I bought them, and quality wise I have zero complaints so far.
@NickCraver pretty good. i like all the refactor stuff. made by same people who did VS Resharper (so there are many of those types of things, but for JavaScript & CSS)
@NickCraver the IDE was written in Java so I can run it on my Mac or PC... there is a PHPStorm as well (but I don't do that... it is basically WebStorm w/ bunch of PHP features added)