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within a constructor function, if there is a method on the prototype, this.method() or this.method.call(this); the method needs the object as its thisarg
speaking of codepen, I just got an email from someone attempting to learn canvas and who wants me to teach them based on what he's seen from my codepen
if I invite him into the JS room (later) you guys promise to play nice?
I'm curious about the best way to display cutscenes in canvas. When I say cutscene I mean something like a static image fading from one to the other. Would it be best to use a timeout for a certain amount of seconds then go to the next image? Alternatively, would it be better to somehow use the m...
I'm curious about the best way to display cutscenes in canvas. When I say cutscene I mean something like a static image fading from one to the other. Would it be best to use a timeout for a certain amount of seconds then go to the next image? Alternatively, would it be better to somehow use the m...
Should one still use unparsable crufts in JSON APIs? I know that modern browsers do not allow overriding the Array constructor, so is it advisable not to use unparsable crufts anymore?
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"I've never used non-Apple because I like Apple" <- Perfectly fine. "You're stupid for not using Apple because that's all I've ever used" <- You are a waste of oxygen
@copy I like Python but Django is pretty bad imo, it's bad architecturally and its modules (like the ORM) are weak (and it's not modular enough). Mainly, no one says node is the holy grail. Node works well when you're doing a single page application or/and you need to use sockets and/or you need to do lots of excessive I/O. I wouldn't use it for a website, or an application with special demands. Not to mention there are big problems with node servers in certain areas.
Mainly the grail thing, no one says it's the holy grail - it solves a very specific problem.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Agreed, although I don't see the single page part and there are definitely people who think it's the holy grail (the same goes for Go, what the fuck?)
@copy I'm not really sure what's the point of Go at all - especially given other promising "low high level languages" like Rust and the speed of "high general purpose" like C# and Java. The single page part is incredibly easy with NodeJS - when you start having a lot of application logic, in practice being able to share a lot of code between the client and server is awesome.
> the more dead from outside intervention, the higher chance of random zombie occurrence? or random death due to disease. With the piles of dead laying around I can't imagine how healthy that last survivor would be.
How would you set an attribute in a tag without a name in jquery? EX: <details open><summary>Foo</summary>Foo oof ofo</details> <-- Would want to chane the "open" in the base details tag to closed.
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How would you set an attribute in a tag without a name in jquery? EX: <details open><summary>Foo</summary>Foo oof ofo</details> <-- Would want to chane the "open" in the base details tag to closed.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm creating a responsive design and on mobile I'm making it so just the post titles show which means collapsing everything else... not really a problem.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I do not think you understand what I am trying to do. In a <details> tag you can put <details open> and the details list will automatically be open. I am trying to using javascript(Or something) to make is so that open changes to closed. So <details open> --> <details closed>
@BenjaminGruenbaum I do not believe open is something that you can make open="true" its either open or closed, maybe called a property. Don't know the name for it.
@NoahHuppert You can use an empty string for the value like @ThiefMaster suggested, but I really don't see why anyone would use a details tag anyway :)
Yeah, but I don't see why tags like <details> should be in the specification. They should be extensions, then again adding tags is not very well supported everywhere yet.
Since originally writing this answer, a new specification has reached working draft status thanks to the W3C. The Page Visibility API now allows us to more accurately detect when a page is hidden to the user.
Current browser support:
Chrome 13
Internet Explorer 10
Firefox 10
Opera 12.10 [read ...