I make a post from angular using $http, but I'm not sure of why I get the error response from the server at the first callback function, the status I send if 422, here's my code:
$http({
url: 'request-url',
method: "POST",
data: { 'message' : message }
})
.then(function(response) {
// here's where I get the response even with the 422 status
},
function(response) {
// isn't it supposed to come here?
});
@SterlingArcher the streak continues, I went to get the cases of water from the car I forgot... slipped on some ice, gash on my foot and skinned my knee, pretty sure I also broke my foot... we'll see
shrek just needs to get rid of all his hair and no one will ever think he is an Indian.
2 hours later…
user2620028
7:40 AM
@Jhawins My engine builder wanted $700 for labor to stick a cam in the engine while it was in the car. I think a complete rebuild for $550 is very reasonable for labor on a complete rebuild as long as they aren't cutting corners
sometimes I feel like ts, or angular are some 'troll' moves from microsoft or google who probably don't use it seriously so as to confuse other companies and increase their advantage
but I <strike>think<strike> hope that google will do well with angular2 , according to video tutorials its more like react and redux combined in one place ... Its good, because we have to do less wiring ... I can live with some convention instead of configuring manually everytime
@crl but I ?strike>strike>think<strike> hope that google will do well with angular2 , according to video tutorials its more like react and redux combined in one place ... Its good, because we have to do less wiring ... I can live with some convention instead of configuring manually everytime (source)
@crl but I think hope that google will do well with angular2 , according to video tutorials its more like react and redux combined in one place ... Its good, because we have to do less wiring ... I can live with some convention instead of configuring manually everytime (source)
ES6 has generators that return iterators:
function* range(n) {
for (let i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
yield i;
}
}
for (let x of range(10)) {
console.log(x);
}
And ES7 has asynchronous functions that return Promises:
async function f(x) {
let y = await g(x);
return y * y;
...
@argentum47 nice! I am redoing two of my old projects in rust :D so far I only understand that it is like C/C++ but not ugly/insane/stupid/weirdo/badly-designed/horrible like them.
@FlorianMargaine I need to write a simple quizzing app quickly (only PHP because has to run on shared hosts). performance is not important. and I CBA to write vanilla stuff. laravel good for that?
if you ever have to deal with <table> once, I think the goodest way is:
function tableToMatrix(t){ // <table> to matrix nRows*nCols
var width = Array.from(t.rows[0].cells).reduce((a,v)=>a+v.colSpan,0);
var M = Array.from({length:t.rows.length},_=>Array(width).fill(null))
for (var i=0; i<t.rows.length; i++){
var tr=t.rows[i]
for (var j=0,k=0; j<tr.cells.length; j++){
var td=tr.cells[j];
k=M[i].indexOf(null, k);
for (var r=0;r<td.rowSpan;r++)
M[i+r].splice(k, td.colSpan, ...Array(td.colSpan).fill(td))
}
}
return M;
}
@SomeGuy I'm creating a new character in Dragon Age: Inquisition and didn't have a name, so I looked for a list of Dragon Age characters. It led to TVTropes. I've started looking for a name about 20 minutes ago.
Formaldehyde is a naturally-occurring organic compound with the formula CH2O. It is the simplest aldehyde and is also known by its systematic name methanal. The common name of this substance comes from its similarity and relation to formic acid.
Formaldehyde is an important precursor to many other materials and chemical compounds. In 1996, the installed capacity for the production of formaldehyde was estimated to be 8.7 million tons per year. It is mainly used in the production of industrial resins, e.g., for particle board and coatings.
In view of its widespread use, toxicity, and volatility,...
some npm nerds here ? say I have a globally installed package (bower) and I have many projects that use bower but I don't install locally to avoid useless duplications of the package so I just want to make a devDependencies in the package.json file, I know I can just write into the file by myself but I like the command line so I'd like to know if there is a way to tell npm to write the line. Something like "npm install bower" is there some flags to avoid real installation ?
<div style="display:flex"><div style="flex:1">big element</div><div style="width:50px;">tiny one</div></div><div>another one below</div> but do it without online styles
it's line <div><div style="display:inline-block; width:80%">big element</div><div style="display:inline-block;width:20%;">tiny one</div></div> but flex is more sexy to adjust widths (noneed for %)
I have 2 arrays a1=[1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3] and a2=['a','b','c','d',....] I'd like to get
[ [1,'a'], [2,'d'], ...] // not repeating the other 1's after the first one and same for 2, etc
hey. When using Chrome JS console and console.log() i get the same object state printed when FIRST logging the object, then changing it and then loggin it again. I get 2x the same object state printed. How can i prevent that and get the real object state printed at the time being?
Hmm, I need to make a ~40 minute lecture for this Monday about something that has to do with cyber security and programming to convince people that are somewhat skeptical it's cool. Any interesting ideas?