@VedaadShakib 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.
'click dblclick mousedown mouseup mouseover mouseout mousemove mouseenter mouseleave keydown keyup keypress submit focus blur copy cut paste'.split(' ') Found this in the angular source. Not sure why they chose to do that
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@Meredith - see this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/7519837/… - the answers say split isn't faster, but if you go to the jsperf link, it shows that it's much faster in most browsers (including in mine). I don't know why the optimization works that way though
It's possible, but if two languages have completely different paradigms, translating them is probably going to take a lot longer than just rewriting the code
I remember the day I translated an algorithm that draw 3D boxes from TI BASIC to the C langage, I had to rethink the algorithm because tools were completely different.
You can't even remotely compare node.js to something like PHP. Node.js was designed to provide a full-stack high-performance IO framework, not a scripting language based on a web-server of your choice.
First of all, you HAVE to make sure you fully understand the node.js paradigm and it's event-b...
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@JanDvorak indeed it is good, but the problem is, I can't find a very good way to start learning node. With PHP it was like just start doing the code, and I can collect the rest on the way. Node.JS is not very happy with me...
@Meredith What browser are you using? In Firefox on multiple computers, split comes out a couple hundred times faster. It looks like I misread the chrome results that came out before and that it's much slower in Chrome (though not as much slower as it is faster in FF, if that makes any sense as a basis of comparison). Apparently far from universal.
I'd say, "set a goal, open the documentation, try something (hello world, primitive chat room using websockets...), find out why it doesn't work, learn from your mistakes". Node.js is just Javascript + some server-side APIs.
w3resource.com is not related with W3C by any means except some of the topics taught by w3resource follows standards maintained by W3C. - See more at: w3resource.com/about.php#sthash.SQax1469.dpuf
I guess you make sense, cus the php tuts there are outdated as well... but they did help me start. After that, just any php thing goes straight inside me. Thats what I am looking for js and node.js
The recent php versions come with PDO by default... and they come with mysqli as well. it is just like when mysqli came out and mysql was about to be deprecated... @JanDvorak
umm... w3res... saying that "Cannot automatically write to hard disk." for both Java and Javascript is extremely confusing... especially since you're saying that Java is [primarily] a server-side language.
JavaScript can be used to validate form data ... before sending the data to a server." -- Uh oh. "If you want to validate the said data in server side ..." -- FAIL @ w3resource
@Meredith strict separation of side-effect-free code is a great thing.
@Meredith see? They never tell you you still have to.
Sometimes it is difficult to create pages that are displayed identical on different browsers or even operating systems. JavaScript can detect the visitor's browser and load the appropriate page for that specific browser. - See more at: w3resource.com/javascript/introduction/…
If you want to validate the said data in server side you have to wait while the information is sent up to the server for checking, using JavaScript you can detect the error and prompt the user immediately.
Seems like they're implying that validating with js replaces serverside validation entirely
@Meredith click on the name field, don't enter anything, click out, try to switch to another tab or something, and you are screwed... thanks to the prevent alert option..