Given this snippet of JavaScript...
var a;
var b = null;
var c = undefined;
var d = 4;
var e = 'five';
var f = a || b || c || d || e;
alert(f); // 4
Can someone please explain to me what this technique is called (my best guess is in the title of this question!)? And how/why it works exactly?...
I guess, but it would still be less than I'd get otherwise
it doesn't really matter because people who are searching for how to compare multiple values are usually looking for crazy [].indexOf and regex answers anyway :P
@bitten I think you were right when you said you aren't sure if node.js should be used as a reverse proxy. I am still new to web development beyond the front-end and simple backend in php or node.js. But after spending the entire day yesterday reading and trying out different solutions it looks like all I need is a nginx reverse proxy server :p
Not surprising. Sometimes I read it on news a few days before the site got it in the headline. I think someone saw the Swift news and decide to bring up Angular...
@Cerbrus - that whole delay function leaves a bad taste in my mouth... but can't quite put my finger on it, or where to start. there are easier ways to trigger things every second.
@Sheepy - not for me! I got too much on my plate as it is. New water control system touch interface (that wheel thingy I used to bug you with), bicycle rental system for a library, and a badminton scoring system for the boss. >.<
@thedigitalmouse Like the raise of smartphone app, Node may catch up and become a new king. I am aware that many media servers are available in Node, but otherwise I don't see a critical problem it solves that existing stacks don't, for us.
And I'm too busy learning baby care to care about Node now.
@TeodorKolev usually the build.js file is in webpack's dist subdirectory. and depending on the boilerplate system or how you installed it, you will probably need to run npm run build' to actually build it first, then copy it to the webserver you want to run it on, using a <script>` tag to include it in your html file (for example).
@TeodorKolev - hmm.. well you could look inside your package.json file, or find the webpack config file... the command to build your..um..build.js file is usually defined in one of those places... usually the package.json if using some kind of webpack template
I had to drive to richmond yesterday to return some heavy ass barrels, but a 4 hour journey turned into an all day trip returning tuxedos, helping clean up the venue, and driving people. 7:30am and I didn't sit down finished until 10pm :(
@SterlingArcher I went back to the venue to collect stuff people left behind, the organiser gives me a set of keys saying "must have been someone at the receptions"
half way into my 3 hour drive home she calls me back saying she gave me her keys
nope, you can now wait till they come in the mail.
We assumed nobody was gonna claim it, and I'm gonna toss it, but it's a(thankfully clean) and shockingly fancy one. So it wasn't like ew gross it's dirty