In my project, to test if a column is well sorted, I used Selenium Webdriver in Javascript.
I wanted to get the first column in a table and see if two by two my strings were sorted in order.
Here is my code :
driver.findElements(webdriver.By.xpath("//table[@id='consentsTable']/tbody//td[1]")).th...
I'm working with the faye browser client using promises, and I have a function that creates a browser client after some asynchronous action, like so:
function fayeClient() {
return doSomethingAsychronous().then(function() {
var faye_client = new Faye.Client('http://localhost/faye');
re...
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val = $('#text').val();
so at the time of adding , the value in the text area is added,
but in line 118
storage.removeFromStorage("notez",val);
its inside the callback of remove,
now this works, but why, did i create a closure there? because, how does it have access to seperate values for seperate entries in the text-area.
yes, i know that, but suppose i have three entries, if i click on any of the remove link then : the entry in the localStorage having a key with a value = value of val is remove and then the tr is removed .
but how , does it know about which value of val . because its only supposed to remove the recent only, which is the current value of val obtained from the textarea input
if you run it once and create a few 3-4 entries and remove one by one, maybe u will understand..
hell no, it is wrong
removing any one element and hitting refresh removes all beneath it, maybe i messed up the stack frame .
@AliK 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.
@AliK I;m not asking you to change the data. Did you look at my updated example? The data is the same, the method for retrieving the value is different
@C5H8NNaO4 do it in two steps, you're writing a compiler.
First pass keeps the name and sets the .name property (on whatever abstract data type you use to represent a function, Vyadislav Egorov has a good article on that in V8), second pass minifies.
Wait, why do you need to minify in the first place?
Also, the closure compiler does get stuff wrong from time to time when renaming functions... it really only works when you use strict conventions and type annotations, otherwise it's pretty basic and doesn't really rename that much.
Or are you actually writing a preprocessor and not a compiler?
So let's assume I have each SourcecodeToken represented as an object. In the first pass I save every functions name in its representing object in the parseTree. How would I let the renamed functions in the generated Javascript code return its original name when accessing the name property.
I don't actually need minifying since there are tools available, but I would like to have written one of my own
I want to make a spinning globe, where pointers or shapes on the globe over certain locations (usually, the major cities) mark some numbers (usually in the millions/billions, needs to be formatted somehow). The globe should either spin, or jump between the points. The data should update periodically (once a few minutes - once an hour). Should be as sexy as possible, and will be displayed on a large screen TV I was told Google Earth can do it, anyone has experience with that / can anyone offer other possibilities?
I have the whole code represented as an parseTree and have a Control flow graph available. Then As another optimization I perform the minification. In what phase should I rather be in? After the optimizations I generate the code from the transformed intermediate representation
And what exactly is the difference between a preprocessor and a compiler?
@JanDvorak yes, you can download a string with ajax containing a function name and then eval it... I'd like to see you come up with a solution that deals with that.
@Quantas The key thing I want to focus on is refactoring of code through annotations. Also macro expansion. It would be a mix of a linter, closure compiler, and sweet.js
And that's exactly where my problem lies, how to know when to not touch something in the face of dynamic accesses
Damn battery on 14% :(
Alone putting a function in an array and unshifting another is enough that I can't imagine how to detect if there would be an access to any of the functions name proprty
I'm trying to give a broad picture of my problem. I need to write a program with Node.js that should be able to detect all dependencies a function.
E.g.
function a() {
//do something
b();
};
function b() {
console.log("Hey, This is b");
};
At the example above I need to have an JSON...
True Dat. I'm not sure if I would be able to implement any of those anyway , it sounds much more complex than normal static code analysis. it would rather be a question of possibility at all
:D Yeah I'm nearly finding any stuff about sca rather than graphic related things
If this were a birthday party, most of the party guests would be standing around with a smile on their face saying absolutely nothing. Every few hours, someone shouts out, "Happy Birthday, Zirak!" and then goes silent again
And I just got an email from OVH saying they detected a problem and are going to inspect it (the email was sent before I sent them an alert with the reboot action)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't want to as the angular code is seperate from a typescript one, should I stick the angular stiff in the ts project too then as a module?
@SecondRikudo It's been more than one minute and it's still loading and the screen is black - edit had to kill it after a few minutes of waiting, my whole browser was unusable
I'm working on a project where one exercise asks to traverse a data structure below and returning an array containing all the files (i.e. *.js, *.css):
var fileData = {
dir : 'app',
files : [
'index.html',
{
dir : 'js',
files: [
'main.js',
'app.js',
...
@Dan 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.
Vous avez fait la demande d'un reboot hardware à distance sur votre serveur ns38090.ovh.net. Nous venons d'exécuter votre demande mais votre serveur ne répond toujours pas au ping.
Il peut s'agir d'un défaut de fonctionnement du système de reboot ou bien d'un problème sur votre serveur. Nous vous informons qu'un technicien va intervenir sur votre serveur pour régler le problème.
I want to return all the files under a given folder name. So for the file structure in the link i provided above if i pass 'js' as the folder name i should recursively return all the files that are under that folder. So i should return - 'main.js', 'app.js', 'misc.js', jquery.js' and 'underscore.js'.
@Niang 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.
I run multiple animations and perform some action when they're complete, using jQuery promises:
$.when(foo(),
bar(),
baz())
.done(allDone);
Each function (foo, etc.) returns a jQuery.Promise().
Now say I want to include a function which doesn't animate anything, but its...
@AbhishekHingnikar From your name, it might be possible to find who your father is. Are you sure publicly exposing this might not cause him problems ? You know, in some circles, this could be the case...
You know this is indexed by google ? And that searches are always getting better ? We here don't care, but the employer who'll survey him next time he looks for a job will do a search
room topic changed to JavaScript :: Happy Birthday Zirak: Because being 98 is great. DO read this link: rules.javascriptroom.com. Before asking inform yourself on the XY problem goo.gl/taIqf :: YES! Angularjs is on topic here. stop asking. [ecmascript] [javascript] [mine] [mine] [mine]
jsfiddle.net/aghosh/TUKLU why is that if the 'add' is triggered the .remove doesnot work , but if after page refresh, the remove is triggered as usual .
I am curious which way should I design a function.
Which interface should I choose and when?
Either:
foo(var1, var2, function (){/* my inline callback*/ });
Or:
foo(var1, var2).then(function (){/* my inline callback*/ })
When should I prefer which way?
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@FlorianMargaine @anybody I'm currently on ssh on my crashed server with a rescue net boot os and I can't seem to be able to mount my disks. Can somebody help me here ?
Is there an advisable way to stop a Play Framework promise? For instance,
import play.api.libs.concurrent.Promise
val timeoutFuture = Promise.timeout({
Logger.info("timeout expired.")
}, myTimeoutValue)
What would be a good way to cancel this future before myTimeoutValue expires?