Can you guys send me a tutorial for passing data from one component to a unrelated one? I want to pass the same data at the press of a button. Example: From component A I click Edit Data and by this I want to get to component B with the variable isEditable = true. So I want to send the isEditable value from component A to B.
if the need arises, it's fairly easy to install nvm and switch for specific projects later on, at least on ubuntu/centos in my experience. I expect it would be somewhat similar on other linux distributions. the hardest part is remembering node version, best stored in a .nvmrc
@KevinB I was thinking of making a Github/GithubPages/Jekyll chatroom. Do you think that would be a good idea? I think it would be nice to have a place where I can help people who want to make github websites.
I think it would be a good idea considering many things
and ive noticed alot of people requesting help for jekyll
@MadaraUchiha If your online, I was wondering why I cant create chat rooms? I already passed the 100 rep mark for creating chat rooms, and I have the ability to ask questions, so Im unsure whats going on?
Hey does anyone know why my variable MULTI is causing my data to go up by one WITHOUT calling the function?? https://hatebin.com/pbbuaeyjhu
The button should be calling `cookies = cookies + 1 * multi;` but instead, its adding 1 to cookies every second, without calling my function. Why is that??
Wait I think my gameloop is calling cookieclick without needing to
but if I remove that, it removes my ability to automatically click the cookie with cursor upgrades
omg I want to die.. mkaing some cookie clicker for a friend and Im actually dying
legit my friend wants me to make a cookie clicker styled as minecraft
setting up the gui and button positions was one thing, but this js is killing me
@KevinB Do you know how I can solve this? I've really put myself inside a pickle with this one
Does anyone know if theres a way to "hide" a onclick funtion like this: onclick="cookieClick(1)"? I dont want people simply inspect elementing it and cheating on the cookie game...
er... yeah. so I'm going to take a wild guess, but if what you are trying to do is "secure" an action, the right solution is almost certainly not to obfuscate the triggering of said action, but to make sure that what receives the trigger does not allow insecure actions.
@'TaylorSpark Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
@TaylorSpark Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
@TaylorSpark Yes, I see it. I read it. There are deobfuscated function names. Type annotations. Most of the clunky '\x7a\x75\x64\x59\x5a' characters have been translated back into their actual letters. It absolutely did not just format.
Lol, still not very readable, still looks like gibble jabble to me @FélixGagnon-Grenier
Of course its "Easier" to read, but I wouldnt spend time manually converting the leftover encrypted variables just to read a stupid 10 letter piece of js