lowerUpper() everywhere really helps, where as by contrast you have PHP where it might be (there's one case, so camel doesn't count) one_two(); or onetwo() or some other thing.
In computer programming, a naming convention is a set of rules for choosing the character sequence to be used for identifiers which denote variables, types and functions etc. in source code and documentation.
Reasons for using a naming convention (as opposed to allowing programmers to choose any character sequence) include the following:
* to reduce the effort needed to read and understand source code;
* to enhance source code appearance (for example, by disallowing overly long names or abbreviations).
The choice of naming conventions can be an enormously controversial issue, with parti...
The link goes to JS:
> The built-in JavaScript libraries use the same naming conventions as Java. Classes use upper camel case (RegExp, TypeError, XMLHttpRequest, DOMObject) and methods use lower camel case (getElementById, getElementsByTagNameNS, createCDATASection). In order to be consistent most JavaScript developers follow these conventions.
generally I've put the bracket on the new line (in C#) but with JS i've been keeping it up. I have no idea why I would behave differently for the different languages; I just do.
brb
okay so i'm working on this Snake game. I've not done as much with JS OO as I'd like. I've got a Game object, which has board, snake, and "stuff" objects. "stuff" is a generic object that can get used as a prototype for objects like the food, obstacles, etc. Does that sound right?
Nibbles is a simple video game and variant of Snake. It was inspired by an early 1980's game called Hustle from the Radio Shack TRS-80 micro-computer. (It was not influenced by Mozaik Software's 1984 Amstrad CPC game, Nibbler in spite of the similar names). Nibbles was written in QBasic by Rick Raddatz, who later went on to create small business companies such as [http://Xiosoft.com Xiosoft] and [http://Bizpad.com Bizpad].
Gameplay
The game's objective is to navigate a virtual snake (or worm) through a walled-space while consuming numbers (from 1 through 9) along the way. The player must...
That just seems to be kind of unsemantic. I'm using baseObject to control stuff like a) how many points you get for hitting it b) how many the snake grows by when you hit it c) any custom method you need to run when you hit it.... none of which are approriate for the snake's pieces.
He didn't make it OO like you're trying however, it's more like a series of functional calls.
You can tell when someone hasn't abstracted correctly when you see near-identical code blocks cut+paste more than a few times, with a few things changed here and there.
If you OOP it you need to think about interfaces to objects. I'm not sure if there's something straightforward in JS to do that, but there was in C++ and Java.
I'm trying to create a Redirect timer plugin from all JS (JQuery) but for some reason its not updating the timer since I started using a different method:
(function( $ ){
$.fn.redirect = function( options ) {
var settings = {
'second' : '10'
};
var options=$.extend( settings...
@Incognito so, for starters, something like so: jsbin.com/ewofeq/edit#javascript,html? (And I won't keep pinging you every other minute, just wanted to make sure i'm generally right before I really get going)
yay I know thats the way you'll get noticed, I'm just wondering if that only works if the person is still present (even tho, "disabled" because of long idle times) or if that works all the time
I'm using some jQuery to display tweets but once the Twitter API limit is reached, the request is sent but just keeps loading and loading. This doesn't look good. I want to be able to determine if the request is taking too long and then obviously do stuff, like cancel the request, change the styl...
This week’s. Or something’s. Your donation for keeping this series up and running would be much appreciated. An overview of what WebKit 2 is. Summary: not really important for web developers; it’s mostly a reshuffling of internal threads and functions. No doubt important, but in theory we should not notice anything. The only browser that I’m certain uses WebKit 2 …