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12:00
@JanDvorak do you mean async or sync?
user1125394
unasynchronousity
well i think i might be
but i can't seem to fix it
@cx You're aware that what you just said is double negation which makes it synchrony.
getAllRates: getrates() dailyPrice is what i'm trying to return
binding an xml to a angularJS scope
it's driving me up the wall
user1125394
12:02
@vimes1984 jsfiddle.net/bpVhK/1 +angular
is it norm to have such spaghetti in Angular @BenjaminGruenbaum ?? (re: Fiddle above)
How can we use .svg in css then set the fill color ?
I'm guessing it's not norm to have such spaggetti in agular
I've been given this to fix
and i can't see to get at it
Angular's ugly.
user1125394
!!are things not async necessarily synchronous?
12:04
@cx Probably
angular is very very ugly
@cx Don't know about quantum physics (@JanDvorak might know) but other than that yea.
@cx this still returns null
Quantum mechanics can't cheat time
SO how do i cheat time....
12:07
@Esailija Can you give an example?
reference counting, union for dynamic values
@vimes1984 basically, you return a reference to a value that you will set. The callee may use that value but not in a way observable to external observers.
@JanDvorak can you send me in the direction to an example?
@vimes1984 q01 = createQuantumState(0,1); q10 = ! q01; alert(q10) /*will take a guess*/; q01 .= 0 /*uh, oh, the quantum state has already been measured*/
12:12
Actually, I'm making it up. You can't set the quantum state ex-post, you can only measure it
I fell this is going off topic
I just needed some help....
HAHA
Help! I need somebody!
Help! not just anybody!
Help! you know I need someone,
Help!
!!youtube the beatles help
LOL
@MatteoTassinari what the hell are you talking about and why are you upvoted? — Esailija 42 secs ago
2
seriously
TIL Attributes are nodes
12:16
@Esailija How are attributes nodes ?
@dystroy they are, parallel to child nodes
child nodes are elements, text nodes and comment nodes, sorted together
@Esailija The other answer
OK... TIL that. But apart the implementation of an interface, what does that mean ?
attribute nodes have no particular order
@copy do you get the meaning of that answer ?
12:18
@dystroy Not even remotely
@dystroy how are elements nodes?
how are nodes nodes?
:>
anything that makes an element a node, makes an attribute a node
so there
a node is a node because it is nodey, an attribute is a node because if you take away the ttr and ute you get ai, and as we can clearly see, ai is pretty much node.
Well, you don't have attributes in developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node.childNodes ?
@rlemon that does make sense, yes...
Because they're not the children of the node
@dystroy there is 11 different .nodeTypes
12:20
If you put them in a tree, they're inside your element-node, not below it.
@Esailija where's my giant "is"?
<element <attribute></attribute>><child></child></element>
??
Nodes are not tags
what the hell is wrong with you people
i'm using this to represent it duh
12:21
learn the dom
how else would I represent it
But can you access them as nodes ? That is get the following one, the parent (the element?) ?
Tags are part of html land; nodes have many more meanings.
I can use [] instead of <>
user1125394
@JanDvorak you is a grammar nazi
12:22
for example
var div = document.createElement("div");
div.title = "hello";
div.attributes.title.ownerElement === div
@rlemon How about representing them...as we know them? <element attribute=value></element>
(btw I am abusing the fact that .title property maps to title attribute)
Ah, here's my giant 'is'
@Zirak I was trying to go for the visual representation of a node within the owner node but not as a child.
anyways, I really don't care.
@Esailija Just watch out, Node.attributes doesn't exist anymore (since FF22).
12:23
@Esailija no problem with that. But can you get the following or last attribute ?
@OctavianDamiean works fine for me
although I am using Element.attributes
@dystroy The attributes are not linked to each other; they're special in that regard.
> Since Firefox 22, Node.attributes is no longer supported (not implemented by other browsers and removed from the spec). It is only supported on Element (Element.attributes). - developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Node.attributes
@dystroy I believe the Map is unordered
12:24
@Esailija my mother grew up in the 70's - acid was all the rage.
> NamedNodeMaps are not maintained in any particular order.
@Zirak So they're not really nodes, right ? Disclaimer : I'm not arguing, I'm trying to understand this thing "attributes are nodes" that I totally ignored until now
so you cannot retrieve "last" attribute or something
@dystroy Why not?
they are nodes in every sense that elements are nodes or textnodes are nodes
what makes those nodes, makes attributes too
=D
12:26
Interesting, according to MDN Node.attributes shouldn't work on FF>22, yet it does on FF23. o_O
@Zirak what makes a node logically for me is the linked capacity, this kind of method : nextSibling
Oh, they have a nextSibling property - it's just always null
they are nodes in the sense they have a type from a predefined set, a value from a set defined by the type and they have a parent element
You can play with them yourselves, just do attr = document.body.attributes.id in this window
For what it is worth, Esailija was probably not being rude, just to the point. He said you were not correct and noted that the upvotes on your comment were unjust as the comment was false. I don't see this as 'rude', rather less sugar coated than some might like. — rlemon 11 secs ago
12:27
ok... so nodes may share a parent and still have no sibling... How interesting on a social plan...
@Esailija I got your back bro!
I don't get it, why does that even work?
@rlemon No, it's really bad java-ish code, why?
@OctavianDamiean can you link the MDN
@BenjaminGruenbaum just wondering. I've seen so little angular and 50:50 it has been spaghetti garbage
12:28
@dystroy You can see them in the spec as well: w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-2-Core/core.html#ID-637646024
Really bad code in general, also - doesn't follow any angular convensions
@dystroy the father of us all is God
err.. of some of us
+1 on @Esailija 's answer by the way, as I learnt something
12:28
For example, in "The Avengers", Captain America is a NODE, his shield is an attribute of that NODE. Iron Man is another NODE, his rockets are attributes of the NODE. NODEs are the highest level of fragment of the document. — DevlshOne 7 mins ago
this makes no sense to me
                            this.getDateCellTemplate = function() {
                                return dateCellTemplate;
                            };

                            this.setDateCellTemplate = function(value) {
                                dateCellTemplate = value;
                            };
@OctavianDamiean Node.attributes is different from Element.attributes
@rlemon Yea, it's wrong.
it says that in the paragraph
How insanely terrible of an idea is it to install Vistual Studio 2012 alongside 2010?
12:29
Come on, you know that's not good code, you don't even have to know what it does :P
@Esailija Oh my ... right.
@Esailija I found that out the hard way :)
@rlemon The shield is a node too.
ofc it is
@rlemon Yeah, I would have downvoted this comment if I had the ability.
12:30
so it his badass jacket
Captain America's name, powers and so on are his attributes.
@rlemon That's because it's stupid
@dystroy I commented.
Or maybe looking at "The Avengers" as a tree is a weird idea...?
@Zirak that too.
12:31
Or maybe looking at "The Avengers" as a tree is a weird idea...?
@dystroy that too.
:D
the hulk would make for some great foliage.
@Zirak You could probably look at SHIELD as a tree. Not so much The Avengers, though.
@RyanKinal You could also look at tis as ore blocks.
If they were a tree, you'd probably have Captain America as the root, but nobody would care, and they'd all do their own thing anyway.
12:34
0
Q: Retriev variable values in javascript function

KarimkhanI am using facebook API for my project and getting some data in following manner in var mydata if (response.status === "connected") { LodingAnimate(); //Animate login FB.api('/me?fields=movies,email', function(mydata) { //-- console.log(mydata); ...

@Datsik
i think you will love this track :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum that was FE not IIFE ;P
@Esailija Right
@BenjaminGruenbaum Should we close this as too basic ?
12:39
@dystroy What's 'too basic' ?
the question. Or too trivial.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Should be closed.
For what?
He does have the minimal understanding of the problem solved, it's a simple problem that requires little or no understanding, why close it?
It's a dumb question ripe for rep whoring. I'm surprised @Neal isn't all over it..
@BenjaminGruenbaum If anything then probably a dupe I guess.
Find a dupe and I'm with you
12:41
I'm almost 100% certain that there is a dupe for this one.
lol
function doAttrib() {
  var node = document.getElementById("div1");
  var a = document.createAttribute("my_attrib");
  a.nodeValue = "newVal";
  node.setAttributeNode(a);
  alert(node.getAttribute("my_attrib")); // "newVal"
}
I don't like this asymetry
should be called getAttributeValue
this seems to me like var string = createString(20); string.setCharacterAt()....
(yes, the DOM isn't verbose enough)
@BenjaminGruenbaum nice, someone else who recognizes it and is annoyed by it
don't look at meta history
12:45
Mhmm, createAttribute seems to be deprecated.
@rlemon What? What are you talking about?
@OctavianDamiean doesn't say so on MDN
see what I replied too
Ah
yesterday, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
The only one doing SO right is @Neal , he is the one who really gets it. Proving day after day you don't need to be particularly smart, or know any programming to get high rep in SO. All you need to do is answer the same question a thousand times and use google generously.
you are pulling a Neal and not reading context.
12:45
@Esailija [14:43:59.580] Use of document.createAttribute() is deprecated. Use element.setAttribute() instead. @ http://fiddle.jshell.net/_display/:27
(Starred to your right)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I am one of the ten stars already don't you worry
@OctavianDamiean what browser and version
FF23
Might be new.
12:46
-1
A: jquery calling a function with a variable

Elegant CoderI have prepared a sample for you, you can check it. JSFIDDLE : Click Here For Sample. var x = function(){ alert('Hi!! It Works!!'); } $('#Btn').click(function(){ x(); });

hahahaha
@OctavianDamiean yea I see
can we just kill this answer and question please
chrome doesn't say anything
the method has zero practical usage though
at least .attributes is useful for kinds of reflection
@rlemon Oh my ... his user name.
@dystroy answers 15 minutes later which cover the exact same information (worse than the others) are useless
even if he updates it to be correct we now have 3 duplicate answers
12:50
Now we're just mean :/
Nah, Bob's right.
@rlemon I know. But I felt I could teach him something. I'm not sure I'm right.
This doesn't look like an Elegant solution. ;) — rlemon 30 secs ago
I made the comment anyways
@VishalKaushik Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-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.
I just wanted to praise you for the fact that you used .on('click' and not one of the many stupid aliases. Ambiguity is far worse than 4 extra characters. — rlemon 9 secs ago
my last comment, now work.
:( the rep tab on my profile no longer shows negative rep from downvoting answers
12:54
What's ambiguous about the click alias ?
have you read the docs?
yes. The fact that it may call trigger is what's bothering you ? Or what ?
pretty much yea
also, what is the point of the alias? it saves 4 characters
and adds a layer of abiguity
albeit not much, but it is there... and FOUR CHARS! :P
You can do $("<a>", {click: function(){...}})
Well... most of jquery is about conciseness. And really I don't think there is ambiguity when you provide a callback.
12:56
that also bothers me
most of jQuery can be called 99 different ways.
this is troubling to me
same issue I got with Ruby and CoffeeScript
too many ways to do one and the same thing
@IvoWetzel you will hate Perl
I hate optional syntax which does the same thing as something else. It just shows that the designers didn't commit to taking a stand
@JanDvorak I never used it, and I'll probably never... wait... no, never say never
@rlemon do the aliases really make the script run that much slower?
@IvoWetzel so you hate function(x)x*x?

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