I love the way you explain things @Second. Very n00b friendly but also very in-depth. I get to learn what's happening behind the curtains so that I can understand how to build the show!
I really hate the bullshit they pulled in these last two courses. If the android course doesn't have a decent teacher I think I might try to enter CS university instead
function addedToCart(data, element){
var carttab = $('#carttab');
element.empty();
element.append("Lagt i varukorgen!");
carttab.empty();
carttab.append("Varukorg (" + data + ")");
setTimeout(function(){element.empty();},1500);
}
Saying "I need an element to change text and empty out later" is better than saying "I need an ID to get the element associated with that ID and change its text and empty out later"
I see. I just made up a concept that works with the dynamic generation of Thymeleaf. My app is supposed to be agnostic to the content of the shop; you could have 3 wares, you could have 1000.
For most use cases where you need to reuse the element you can break it up like that, but you're going to use a bounded function scope anyway, so it's not really reusable
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But $(parent).append(node); is basically parent.appendChild(node);, except you're creating two bloated handle objects just to perform a simple operation that could had been done in vanilla with the same syntax.
@fge It might make sense if you're an ASP.NET programmer and don't realize that $(node).parent() is basically node.parentNode and $(node).children() is basically node.children, I guess.