@Patel 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.
actually, my li tags populate into div with on click of drop down select, when i use "on" it didn't populate, but use of delegate populates li tags, but clicking on li tag doesnt give alert
@aliasgarvanak 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.
Using the same mechanism on different functions, I get out of it, setting methods that different functions inherit somehow.
A complicated reasoning base for something that seems like a relatively simple concept.
"The function searches blah and if it doesn't find it, it searches the prototype of blahblah's greatgreatgreat grandchild and finds it and so on and so forth."
So it seems. Maybe I'd get a better understanding of it if I took a little while to think through it. Haven't been bothered here lately, never had a use for it anyway.
I was attracted by the idea that I could set a method to an already existing HTMLElement prototype.
That one, I could probably use somehow.
Does anyone think they could show me a simple archetype of a realtively useful DOM application of a prototypal implementation?
elements aren't created by you, usually, and they're used by much more than just your code. I don't like to instill my code in other parts which don't need it. That's not clean.
I don't think I've ever had a problem with it. I figured the value of using strict equals is in the difference between being "is equivalent to" and "absolutely is the same".
Though, I guess it would still work. Save for, when you are not looking for an asbolute comparison.
@sebastian 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'm still puzzled as why we have new in Go.
&Thing{} is as clear and concise as new(Thing) to Go coders and it uses only constructs you often use elsewhere.
In my opinion, having a supplementary keyword is costly, it makes the language more complex and adds to what you must know. And it might m...
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Though, I think the iframe would be quicker and easier to reference.
I'm having trouble with a logic stream.
I need a mechanism that will write a user's username and a new-line to a textarea, then allow the user to continue typing, then when they press enter, the usernameToken resets so that when they type again, it will again write the username.
Oh, older browsers. Not too sure about worrying about older browsers all the time. Sometimes, maybe it's better to take advantage of the implemented features of more modern releases and tell the older generation to update.
The job is for a corporate company, and as you probably know it costs a shit load of money for them to update everything so they can use better OS and browsers.
I guess that's why everyone keeps telling me it sucks, and I can't understand specifically why. Maybe I should try running a test on a slower machine to understand the common perspective of browser quality.