lol sublimetext took a little time to load my php file and for a moment it displayed the name of the file with a completely blank page... I got panic for a couple of seconds thinking my file got erased ..
Now i see my problem on my original js, i was declaring the marker with its lat, lang, title but it wasnt displayin because i had no event calling it, like a button for example. It loaded but i got really frightened!
Every 3 months, backup the entire hard drive onto a small external drive which you can put in the bank (in case your house burns down). Every hour, do a backup with something like time machine. If you're serious, use raid. Use git. Save frequently. Make auto versions every time you save.
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I want to run .hta file from within .html file w/o the browser asking to download it.It should run in an iframe in the html page in the browser. The code i am using is this-
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<iframe src="app.hta">
</body>
</html>
The problem is that the browser asks...
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I want to promisify node-postgres' pg.connect method along with the inner connection.query method provided in the callback.
I can .promisify the latter, but I need to implement the first one manually (if I'm missing something here, please explain).
The thing is, I'm not sure when to use .defer ...
hey guys, quick question. I have a <td> and I'd like this <a> inside to occupy its whole area, so I set it to display:block; width:100%; height:100%, but it absolutely doesn't take up all the height. What's up with that?
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Guys, what am I doing wrong? I created a service. It has a method and a property. It also receives a $http service(?). By the way this is angularjs. So in the method I'm making a request with $http and in .success method of $http I was trying to set the property like this.something = 'blablabla';, but itgave me an error "Check for JavaScript this to be the same in closure and in outer context"
I have a question related to nodejs doc. When you read this it mentions a "requestListener". I know how to make them, but I'd like to know where in the documentation is defined what's a requestListener. Anyone knows that ?
I found an example in the nodejs doc. Do we have to just accept examples as API docs ? ^^
It's a little painful. Any time I need to really know what does a function in a node module (sometimes even the intent of the function), I must track it in the source or logs the arguments... even standard node modules or big ones like socket.io or express... Lib authors try too often to make their API look like magic, they hide too much.
@monners daaa. This is what it says. But I see your point. I'm stuck with the issue, that I wan't to have a service, that would make specific requests, but I need reponse when I call the service method and not later in the future.
@dystroy that reminds me some opensource libs where all the vars are like a1 a2 a3.. function a33 function a23 etc without any comments... made so its hard to follow it..
The requestListener is a function which is automatically added to the 'request' event.
Event: 'request'#
function (request, response) { }
Emitted each time there is a request. Note that there may be multiple requests per connection (in the case of keep-alive connections). request is an instance of http.IncomingMessage and response is an instance of http.ServerResponse.
@FlorianMargaine You said I couldn't make a bunch of features in 10 lines of code, yeah, so I made up a larger number. I have made a chat system with more features than 10 lines of code, but that isn't equivalent to miaou.
Having some trouble fetching json data from 2 google spreadsheet urls and aggregating specific content from both urls in an array.Check out my question
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Alright, I have a div, and that div is called "buttonsWrapper". Now, I would love it if I could get that div to stick to a certain point once the user has scrolled past it.
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There are two styles in JavaScript as I know, which provides you a capability to concate various strings into a single string.
1). With the + operator, e.g.:
var result = 'abc' + 'zxc';
2). With the Array.join() function, e.g.:
var result = [
'abc',
'zxc',
someValue.toString()
].join( ...
@Mosho I won't be in the office in the day of your interview, Wednesday is "student day" and Thursday I have classes - Gilad is a bright guy, when he asks you something - chances are he is asking it for a reason. He is our CTO and not a JavaScript expert or web dev. It'd be nice if you talked a bit about your interest in the stock market, the fact you're fluent in JS, and so on.
Also, don't mention slidepoop :P
@GeloVolro >: (
@Mosho (cc anyone else who interviews) some general tips that differentiate mediocre candidates from good ones
1) There is always more than one solution, when asked suggest several alternatives and discuss their advantages and disadvantages rather than give a straight "I'd do X" answer.
2) When you make a choice justify it, when you discuss a project you worked on, talk about the challenges you faced and how you solved them, what you'd do differently etc.
4) Do not get too technical, an interview is not the place to rant about the typeof operator on null.
5) Be prepared for common questions, we don't ask silly questions at TipRanks like "Name one negative quality about you", but we do ask technical questions, and personal questions.
Mainly 1 and 2 though, they're the two most differentiating factors between mediocre developers and good ones from my personal experience. I guess it's worth adding "Pick your battles" to that.
Also, Joel Spolsky's article on interviewing, it's priceless imo.
Also, know how to code obviously, but I definitely think that's covered as you've actually coded apps in JavaScript. Unlike someone else in the room who just complains about it :P
The fact that I write immutable functional JS doesn't give you the right to condemn me together with all the fucks outside that don't understand that jquery is not a language.
Well, you've never really written a web app though
Or participated in writing one, either as part of a team, as a team lead, or as a contributor to an open source app
Which is why we wouldn't hire you for a role where you'd be expected to write code fast and face the bigger problems. Although I think there is a good chance you'd make the bar for a longer term role.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I did, of course. More than one. But they weren't good enough to even bring up here and reason about JS basing on them, so I keep silent.
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