@MarcGravell Don't worry it's mainly designed for being helpful and if someone abuses it, well it has a perm ban list itself, also in need I can always raise the reputation required to use it
@MarcGravell It happens every few days, just 2 unrelated answers at a time, so not sure who...I mean doesn't even affect rep really because of recoup later in the way...more bothered that anyone is voting on people rather than answers ya know?
@YiJiang yup..also agreed, if the content's actually wrong I'll correct or remove it myself, SO should be a resource for great info later, downvoted correct info is against what SO's built for, IMO at least
Actually, I might be wrong, but I don't expect F# to be as mainstream as the other .NET languages; useful in a few circles (academic, compilers, a few other scenarios) - however, don't forget that C# offers FP usage - and it gets better each time: C# 1.2 has delegates; C# 2.0 has anonymous method...
got a load of downvotes in one go; I expect some F# / oCaml advocate (and I suspect I know which) blogged/tweated about this unreasonable answer
but I stand by my comment: No, the question was "...which does for the Java Community what F# does for the .NET Community." - my answer merely attempts to put a perspective on this - otherwise, the question is meaningless.
I don't care if they -20 it; it is a valid argument IMO (at the moment, +6-7)
absolutely was valid - I think people, once on the question, completely forget there's a title (which wasn't also in the question when you answered) - which is unfortunately, because a lot of questions completely change once you include the title context
I have a for() loop in JavaScript, and I want some code to run when it ends. This works, but I'm wondering if there are any simpler solution:
for (var i = 1; i <= 100; i++) {
console.log('Line ' + i);
if (i === 100) {
alert('Loop ended!');
}
}
I have used the script at:
http://www.javascript-coder.com/
i use the following jquery code in which i am calling its methods.
$("form[name='registeruser'] input[name='register']").live('click',function(){
//validateregister($("form[name='registeruser']"));
var frmvalidator = ...
// The <center> cannot hold it is too late.
data.tid = /name="tid" value="(.*?)"/.exec(chunk)[1];
data.token = /name="token" value="(.*?)"/.exec(chunk)[1];
data._ = /name="_" value="(.*?)"/.exec(chunk)[1].substring(1);
that.getOpenIDLogin(data);
You can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool th...
I'm not saying one is better, just that "body" is shorter, document.body should be more performant in older browsers, there's a slight difference in the result
so things attached to a document.body handler like .delegate() would bubble slightly less - for example I use $(document.body).delegate(...) over .live() if I don't know the context
hopefully you have a known parent, but that's not always the case
for most cases yeah - I mean the real benefits of delegate positioning (correctly that is) are the reduced overhead from unwanted events in your checks, .live() suffers the worst since every click gets checked against the selector (as many as you have), whereas .delegate() only checks against it's children that bubble...and the bubble happens either way
@jAndy I would say though that .delegate() over .live() is a much bigger optimization than many realize, they too quickly shuffle it away as a micro optimization, for example from yesterday:
I have about 300+ action links on a page, to which I’m connecting handlers after the document.onready event fires (using jQuery):
$('a.cmd').click (function() { ... do stuff ... });
Is it more efficient to incorporate the onclick handlers into the HTML rather than have jQuery attach them after...
jquery validation plugin. Form.validate().element("selector") checks whether "selector" is valid. But it also runs the validate function. Doesnt that cause the form to be submitted?
var a = "ab";
var b = "ab";
a+=1; // "ab1"
b++; // "NaN"
(Tested on chrome's V8)
Can someone explain why the results are different based on the internal atomic actions of the ++ arithmetic operator and the += assignment operator with argument 1
@Raynos they have two separate fields on the login page for one 8 digit number split into two 4 digit numbers. When the first box reaches 4 digits, it moves focus to the next box. When you realize you made a mistake and try and tab back to the previous box, it refocuses the second box. If you click inside and press one of the arrow keys, it refocuses the second box.
Coding Ninjas? Aren't Ninjas supposed to be agile,concise, know what they do and be able to survive without any help? And what's a coder? Yeah, most of them can't even survive without static typing.
This is quite a newb question, but I have not found any reliable answers through Google/SO/Etc.
If you have content in a Buffer, what is the best pattern for running a .replace() on that content?
Do you simply pull out the content with .toString(), run replace(), then put it back in the Buffer?...
Is there any real difference between e.g. $('selector').append('text') vs. $('text').appendTo('selector')? If not, then what's the point for having two ways to do the same thing?
I've found an answer in meantime. The .append() and .appendTo() methods perform the same task. The major difference is in the syntax-specifically, in the placement of the content and target. With .append(), the selector expression preceding the method is the container into which the content is inserted. With .appendTo(), on the other hand, the content precedes the method, either as a selector expression or as markup created on the fly, and it is inserted into the target container.
@Nyuszika7H its all about chaining $(objtoadd).chain.chain.chain.appendTo.chain.chain or $(container).chain.chain.chain.append.chain.chain which ever I use is based on what object im chaining operations on
Interesting. (Content of #hello: Hello) $('world').appendTo('#hello'); does not work (jQLint: No elements found with the selector: "world"), but $('<span>world</span>').appendTo('#hello') does.
Before you post a Question: RTFM, FAQ you, Google, try harder, Google more, throw something at the wall, search SO for similar questions, learn how to write. And then ask.
agreed, chat should not be a constant thoughtless question alternative to SO...as some seem to think it is. Things like this are easily answered by yourself (as you've demonstrated).
It may not completely belong here, but I can't get Dummy Image to display a plus (+) sign because it replaces them with spaces. My question is, is there any way to make it to display that sign?
If something is broken in IE8 but works in FF3.6 can I file a bug report to the IE8 dev team? Alternatively whats a suitable place to complain that the IE8 fault fixing guys will pick up
@Raynos download the IE 9 beta and see if it's been fixed. If not, there's a feedback option in the menu that will submit the issue directly to connect for other users to vote.
You never send the request.
You need to use request.end()
NOTE: the request is not complete. This method only sends the header of the request. One needs to call request.end() to finalize the request and retrieve the response. (This sounds convoluted but it provides a chance for the user to s...
Why does this show up in JavaScript console all time I use jsFiddle? Unsafe JavaScript attempt to access frame with URL jsfiddle.net from frame with URL fiddle.jshell.net/_display/light. Domains, protocols and ports must match.
Hello everyone,
It is very slow to access this page using IE, but much faster using Firefox. Especially when I increase the number of nodes of people. Any ideas what is wrong?
http://thejit.org/static/v20/Jit/Examples/RGraph/example1.html
BTW: IE is even slow when accessing from local file sys...