@Zirak Proof that once again, you don't need to reinvent the wheel to be better than everyone else. You simply need to reach out to enough people with too much time on their hands and too much money.
It's a little insulting to think that a homeless guy with 10 dollars to spend at an internet cafe could earn himself $46,047 simply due to having enough exposure
Save for being able to write a half-way decent kickstarter
Take Paris Hilton. She may be a stuck-up multi-millionaire with more money than she'll ever use, but when she produces a profume for dogs that people buy, she's at least contributing something considered valuable by society
@Zirak If everyone paid for things that held no value, the economy would collapse in a way not so different than if no one paid for things that held value
@Neil That's totally relevant. You try to make a moral point about a guy getting money while not contributing to society. I don't see a contribution in putting one's well known name on a vanity perfume.
I'm using async and promise to run a seeding script but in the case where all promses are rejected the script never completes.
As it's a seeding script it's set up to not seed models that alredy have data.
Here's (abridged) my code
Any idea what I've missed?
seed = function(collectionName, da...
I trying to understand closures . I learnt that if a variable in the outer scope is bound to inner scope then it creates a closure.. So in here stackoverflow.com/questions/750486 , is it like, as the loop executes the previous values of I are modified because the value of i is retained after the execution of the anonymous function statement ?
@shortCircuit: if you're talking about the example where all the results are 3, 3, 3, that's because i is shared between all the functions and the outside code, so when it's modified by the for loop, it's also changed inside the function.
Paris Hitler perform worth it if the dog likes it, else its the same as paying a fake note to buy a good .. A few fake notes in enuf to increase the price of commodities for a month or two, because as the fake note is getting cycled, the goods are getting sold for free, hence somehow leads to the downfall of economy , I feel it, I can't explain it tho , I didn't have a major in economics
The following function does what you want, using jQuery:
function getElementPath(element)
{
return "//" + $(element).parents().andSelf().map(function() {
var $this = $(this);
var tagName = this.nodeName;
if ($this.siblings(tagName).length > 0) {
tagName +=...
@Zirak Good one. It allows for a constructive dismissive comment. Now I'll ping you whenever I need to be remembered that link. Please don't forget to leave the chat open in your browser at all times.
@Zirak how is that different? this is what he means:
> imagine I post it to net for common use and a statement for usage "you must provide a unique ID each time you use this directive". That just does not seem correct from the architecture/design view to me.
Why would you need to uniquely identify every single element? Can't you store interesting elements in your own data structure, or use some higher level of abstraction?
The spec says "An identifier established by the Client that MUST contain a String, Number, or NULL value if included ... The value SHOULD normally not be Null ... The Server MUST reply with the same value in the Response object if included ... The Client SHOULD match contexts between the set of Request objects and the resulting set of Response objects [within a batch] based on the id member within each Object.". Seems only per-batch uniqueness is required strongly encouraged?
Also, I installed node-inspector, but can't seem to find it (and more specifically the config file) in my npm node_modules folder. Anyone know where I can find it?
Places for configuration:
command line arguments (parsed by optimist)
enviroment variables prefixed with node-inspector_
if you passed an option --config file then from that file
a local .node-inspectorrc or the first found looking in ./ ../ ../../ ../../../ etc.
$HOME/.node-inspectorrc
$HOME/.node-inspector/config
$HOME/.config/node-inspector
$HOME/.config/node-inspector/config
/etc/node-inspectorrc
/etc/node-inspector/config
options from config.json for backward compatibility
defaults described in Node Inspector`s ./lib/config.js.
the "benefits" of it is that I can be a contortionist. I can skip with my arms, turn my hand 360 degrees, put my legs behind my head, fit through a tennis racket, etc.