Consider this string:
var s = "A\0Z";
Its length is 3, as given by s.length. Using console.log you can see the string isn't cut and that s[1] is "" and s.charCodeAt(1) is 0.
When you alert it in Firefox, you see AZ. When you alert it in Chrome/Linux using alert(s), the \0 terminates the strin...
A potential "exploit" : have the browser alert to the user a string like "this code will be executed : some gentle code\0 some bad code". Do you accept ?
@AbhishekHingnikar null terminated strings passed from and to languages with a separately kept length have known exploits. I know Oracle fixed some related security flaws last year
Buffer overflows are a primary source of software vulnerabilities. Type-unsafe languages, such as C and C++, are especially prone to such vulnerabilities. In this chapter, Robert C. Seacord discusses practical mitigation strategies that can be used to help eliminate vulnerabilities resulting from buffer overflows.
We can imagine an exploit using the bug I found on alert in chrome/linux but only in applications so badly designed that it doesn't really matter. But we might worry for other places of Chrome/linux...
@dystroy The fact that we even see Unexpected Token } is a big concern. I imagine you could do some code } [binary to escape native code] malicious code, but I could be way off
Hi. I'm using Firebug and Firefox. Is there a way in Firebug through which I can find out what javascript function is added a dynamic height to a container during page load?
@FlorianMargaine You should read the Song of Ice and Fire books if you liked the show. They're loads of fun, and you know what's happening without having to wait for the show!
@Bartek I always try to improve ,y questions here but for some reason maybe its because I'm not really a developer that most often that not I give as much details as possible but people still dont understand what I'm trying to say....I'm an alien in this world
I'm not sure if my code is correctly formatted I'm not even sure its correctly written since as I said I'm not really a developer more of a self learning newbie...
I'm not even sure if I place it directy in the HTML file or in the JS file
@BartekBanachewicz There are tools that automate this for you - they watch the directory and every time you save a file they generate the relevant result. If you need something more clever - look at grunt - it's the defacto standard build system
I've got puzzled with the following issue, I'm trying to stop and resume 7-second animation of the div, so that the whole period of animation was 7 seconds. I mean, if we just stop 7 second animation after 2 seconds and then resume it without stoping the whole animation time will be (2+7) = 9 sec...
Statically verifying private/protected - like statically verifying types when not working on value types - is meaningless. It's not where the bugs are.
@BartekBanachewicz Java is just not the right tool for that - it's not what you'd use to develop that sort of thing. Not because it's static, because it's managed.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I kind of agree here. However, there were hundreds of successful embedded projects written in java under extremely tight HW constraitns
I've read a guy working for Sony Ericsson that said that maybe Java wasn't that good, but their OSes were by far more optimized that "native" iOS is today and worked faster and more reliably.
Moving that forward, there's a strong connection between earliest possible bug catching that happens with comprehensive static analysis and the lenght of the bugfixing process.
@BartekBanachewicz that's a bold statement from someone who is using a dynamic language for the first time to someone who has been doing both for years.
The thing is the type system doesn't check behavior and I have to write unit tests anyway so it should get the hell out of my way. If they figure out absolute boss type inference so I don't have to care about it - go ahead.
It’s instructive to take a good look at some local mobile browser market stats, as always by StatCounter. Today we treat Brazil. Only 7% of Mexican website hits come from mobile browsers. Thus the mobile browser level is about half of western developed nations, and can’t compare to much poorer developing nations. I can only guess why this is the case, but let’s try: Mexico…
The world called - it's telling you that JS is the language with the most new GitHub repos. It's idempotent, it was chosen over several alternatives - a lot of them static to serve as the language in the only software that practically runs everywhere. You write once run everywhere.
for chrome go to pc > c drive > program file > google >chrome > Application then right click on chrome > properties > compatibility > and disable scaling
do this for any application that you might find blurry