Oh that reminds me. I was in the bathroom today, and a guy went to the urinal, mid way through, farted, said, "Oh dear." And walked right into a stall.
@towc sure, but that is what the immature developer says. it takes no time at all (with proper tooling) to not introduce little hacks because it saves you a few keystrokes
http://www.w3schools.com/howto/tryit.asp?filename=tryhow_css_modal2 can anyone explain why <div id="myModal" class="modal"> has ID as well as class and only when ID is called the modal visibilty goes none if clicked ?
@neo whereas I agree with do not use that resource, the common practise is to use ID's for grabbing elements in JS, and classes for styling them and grabbing collections of elements.
so <div id="foo" class="foo"> isn't going to be such an uncommon thing to see
Life is tough. When I started using Angular people encouraged me to use it citing reasons like it is new and good etc. and recently I have been told that it isn't good enough. @ssube
to close when you click outside of the modal you must Add an Event Listener to the document body and when it is clicked check to see if the event target is the modal if it isn't you call spanclick()
I asked a few people who were working in firms. We Indians are kinda' slow in adapting to new technologies. They gave rave reviews on Angular and google search result was full of wanking for MEAN stack - what was I supposed to do. @ssube
@neo actually with that HTML it is even easier. just add an event listener to the modal itself and check if it is the modal-content and return early if it is, otherwise call the close
@ssube a magical library that is written over top of... the DOM api? ;) if you want performant DOM handling without thinking about it, you need a library
You can learn a lot about what causes repaints, reflows, etc, and you can learn how to avoid causing them in your code. You can get more performance out of the default apis than I'm sure you're used to
@ssube i didn't link that as an alternative resource, per se. more of an explanation on why w3schools isn't a great resource, and should certainly not be the only resource (like the page says)
We have two revisions on this answer and the problem boils down to one of style vs content. I'd like to see this clarified, and my edited reverted. This is the original code snippet:
for (var key in p) {
if (p.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
alert(key + " -> " + p[key]);
}
}
This is my modified...
the post that the meta post @ssube posted has an answer that suggested it as personal preference, which seems hyperbolic to describe breaking a preference a cardinal sin.
I have 3 pages in a web app that uses html and javascript. The pages are part of a transaction flow. Enter merchant> Enter amount > Choose payment mode. I need to combine these pages into one so that i could eliminate the load times.. What is the best way to do it without using any frameworks
@VivekMaskara Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
depends on the size. You said you're doing this to improve the page load times right?
If you're loading everything up front, and then adding a good bit of javascript to handle what would have otherwise been done by your server, that's going to impact your initial load times.
may still be better though, all depends on how much logic you need to control the application.
all the 3 pages are simple enough as far as the html is concerned and i dont have issues with the initial load times as that too wont be too significant.
nice point. for every successful transaction the user would be using all the pages..
i have one more related query. i have a few functions that are supposed to be triggered on only one of these pages. for eg i want to listen to the keyup and keydown events only on the payment page.. what can be a good way to do it
i dont feel comfortable using if(currentPage==="payment"){ \\ do something}