I'm just wondering if this works intuitively - ps1 runs of my computer very well, ps2 is a strain, so does that necessarily mean that ps3 will be drastically more taxing, or is there some kind of gain at some point?
This script: http://jsfiddle.net/8mzgoqvd/ doesn't work on jQuery 1.10.1, but does work on 1.7.2: http://jsfiddle.net/8mzgoqvd/1/ How can I make the script work for 1.10.1 ?
@SomeKittens I did some basic research on those two topics you suggested. Not really what I was looking for but thank you very much! Very interesting stuff nonetheless. What I need is a "here's an accepted way of doing this" sort of tutorial on interface backend. I am building a game and it will need a rather in-depth interface. Settings menu to change gameplay and display settings, inventory screen with moveable items, entity health bars, etc.
See this is why I'm looking for tutorials. I don't even know where to start I guess. From what I have studied thus far I know I need to separate presentation, interaction, and simulation, if I want to keep it all maintainable. I thought that MVC, MVVM were common structures to address that.
Everyone touts these buzzwords like they are chapters in a personal bible, but when you ask for specifics they're just like "you should just find your own way." No offense. I have gone about building the system by going from bottom to top. I have a simple game simulation running, with no input/output other than the console. Now I want to add a simple view, and then add controls between view and sim. Is that a good plan? Or should I be building things across the whole application in unison
Hahaha I can definitely see the truth in that. Do lots of programmers just like to pontificate? Whenever I do research I always come across things like MVC, MVVM, and they are talked about like they are the industry standard and that's the way all data will be handled until the end of time. I mean, obviously, I don't believe that. But I don't want to seem like a fool to future coworkers because I don't know the paradigm definitions of terms. Is that something I should worry about?
I started developing an angular app for Firefox OS recently. In that, I am using Firefox Building Blocks' drawer UI component. The problem right now is that, when I click on the drawer icon, the drawer doesnt open. This is because the URL that comes up is: file:///D:/projects/svn/trunk/index.html#/drawer If you remove the / before drawer in the URL, it works. Any idea why the URL is coming up that way?
i'd like to make a popup, iframe, called with javascript, linked to google maps that would allow me to locate something... the map should appear, and, on click, i will get back lat/long of the clicked point... is that possible? anybody knows how to do, or has already done such a thing
@Julo0sS yes. Don't get much depressed by that fact though. A big amount of devs use thier apis across the world. Reading that message more carefully, I guess that most of your work would be with the api only. It's not that difficult to have an iframe and window interact with each other.
@AwalGarg : openstreetmap looks as intrusive as gm... whata maze to get a key, need to give many many information (fake or not)
[paranoid]
^^
most of my work is NOT related to this... all i need is a way to locate an object... my work is handeling objects, various objects, not related at all to google maps... the only thing i need from them (or not) is to give me the possibility to geo-locate the object by clicking on a map, by locate i mean get the coordinates (latitude longitude) that's all...
how to know latitude, longitude on click of a map in google maps api v3.
i have done this in google maps api v2 with this code
GEvent.addListener(map, "click", function(overlay, latlng) {
if (latlng) {
marker = new GMarker(latlng, {draggable:true});
GEvent.addL...
the thing is : i have my button, geoLocate, on click, i have my popup coming, with 2 buttons : Cancel & Confirm. The thing is, on click, the popup has to initialize (with a map, idc if it comes from GM or anywhere else) but i don't want my app to become heavy & slow cuz of this... then, when i have it i set a point in this window, and get my coordinates back on "confirm" button.
@Qantas94Heavy resource management - let's say you want to open a DB connection (or several) and have Bluebird close it for you when you're done multiple times in your app.
.catch is for handling errors, using is for managing resources.
Hi! I have a window.onkeydown = function(event) { function... Is it possible to know where I'm writing ? i.e. if I'm writing in elements of class "myclas" => dosomething
In fact I have lots of <div contenteditable="true"> elements... How to change a flag edited=false; to edited=true; only once text has been modified in one of these divs ?
how can we check whether the person loading a site on a Verizon 4G LTE Samsung Galaxy Note 2 if so i can redirect the desktop site to my mobile site can any one please help me
I have used precompiled handlebars templates for v1.3,I am testing v2.0 but there seem to be some differences,I did install handlebars 2.0 npm module,why is this throwing the error
How do you deal with JS code with different OS / Browsers ? Example : I have to bind CTRL + KEY on Windows, but COMMAND + KEY on Apple... etc. Lots of small things like this vary as well here and here. Should I do : 1) detect OS / browser in PHP => then serve myjs-osx.js or myjs-win.js etc.
2) detect OS / browser in the JS code itself => the I have only one big js containg lots of "if (osx) then ... else if (win) then ... "
@DrogoNevets yes sure I could bind both "event.ctrlKey" and "event.metaKey" (=Command for Mac) .... but then on Windows "metaKey" (=windows key) will also be bound (binded?) which is not what I want
but the paradigm for javascript for years now has always been let someone abstract away inconsistencies between platform/older browsers/newer browsers/different browsers rather than try and mess around with magic numbers and platform specific fixes, such as keycodes
it's not the way i would always like to do things either but it certainly is easiest
"2) detect OS / browser in the JS code itself => the I have only one big js containg lots of "if (osx) then ... else if (win) then ... "" i definitely agree with you here but i don't really think there's a lot of other ways to do it unfortunately (without relying on external libs), although you can always try and be smart about reusing that code as much as possible
you kind of get into the problems of premature optimization and maintainability if you go down that route
like yeah you would be saving each platform's users however many bytes by only serving them platform specific code but i think the benefits would be outweighed by it becoming harder to keep track of everything
@monners sure! like probably many people here, math has always been simple for me because I had programming examples in my head, so dealing with variables, sets, sets of sets, etc. is straightforward if you have programming example in mind
@BenjaminGruenbaum hum... i don't know... sometimes when you really think about it, you find some example... what math example do you have in mind with no programming intuition link ?
@Basj lots, there are a lot of fields in Mathematics with no link to programming whatsoever. Heck, there are fields in compuer science with no links to programming. For example - how would you give a programming example that uses imaginary numbers? All the examples would be math centric and the programming is very secondary.
(I used imaginary numbers since they're so basic)
I think that even more generally - the more advanced the topic gets the more you need your math intuition in programming and not vice versa.
Even in the more basic crypto algos today like RSA, the tricky parts are the group theory and not the programming part.
yes that's true that the examples that we could give would be a bit math centric, and programming would just be a useful way of displaying it nicely...
Stuff like high school trig is just basic enough that you can "pick it up as you go" when you do game programming, I'm not sure the same trick would work for matrix multiplication when you apply transformations in graphics which is still pretty basic, and it probably wouldn't work when you write a DFT
@Basj it's cool to have people who're into math in the room though :D
@BenjaminGruenbaum i think it could work "pick it up as you go" for DFT for example... as I did much programming on audio things, I learned DFT "by doing it / by programming it" before I learned Fourier at university
so I think that's possible to do it "as you go" / "when you need it" when an application (DSP on audio example) requires it
@Basj You knew what a matrix was, and what an imaginary number was, and what the unit circle was and what a unit root was before you picked it up though - right?
You could figure out the identities that make DFT work because you knew the basic fundamentals.
If you hadn't known any of those things - I can't think of anything "simpler" that could have gotten you used to imaginary numbers, or "cis" representation of unit roots and that sort of stuff - you had to practice how these things work before applying it in programming - not to mention what a polynomial is.
@BenjaminGruenbaum matrix : no ( i was 17), imaginary numbers : probably, but i didn't use, i just learned good old fourier with no imaginary but only a_k * sin(n k) + b_k * cos (n k) , so no imaginary is really needed....
@BenjaminGruenbaum : at this time, for me, matrix = an array of numbers (like in programming), and i did not know anything about matrix multiplication, etc.
btw if anyone interested, that was pretty useful what I started learning Fourier before really studying at school : dspdimension.com/admin/dft-a-pied
@BenjaminGruenbaum There are definitely areas where the fields don't overlap, but I can certainly attest to the value of seeing a mathematical concept demonstrated in a programmatic context.
Guys :) if anyone as an idea... I instantiate a google.map map into a popup on click on a button... I locate things on it with markers, and set values in fields i can get back on confirm button... When i close my popup... And then call it again... My map display is broken, seems like my map object is instantiated again on the previous one... I need to destroy my objects before calling it again...
@BenjaminGruenbaum That kinda supports my position though. Seeing the physics of a ball bouncing and the difference made by changing values is, in my humble opinion, much more descriptive than trying to memorize formulas in a purely numerical context.
@Basj I do, but it depends on what I'm working on - in JS/web I use highschool trig and basic stuff - the hardest thing I had to do is a gaussian blur which is first year of the BSc. In backend I mostly had to do probability, but again pretty basic. In machine learning there's plenty of math though. Also - as a hobby - all the functional stuff I work with is pretty math intensive - but that's hardly "work".
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main() {
cout << "I love you ";
for (unsigned int i = 0; i < (unsigned int)(0 - 1); ++i) {
cout << "so ";
}
cout << "much!" << endl;
return 0;
}
@Neil Java has a bad rep because it's a bad language.
@Neil that's completely false btw.
C# and C++ are very different, they have different semantics, different notions of ownership, different notions of determinism and so on, not to mention different syntax.
Wrote a distributed password cracker :D was pretty nifty. The guy I was working with managed to write an application in C++ that could do segments of a hash cracking task. So we'd split the task into segments dependent on how many clients were connected, that way the segments would always be the same size and wouldn't have an increasingly detrimental effect on client machines.
Then we connect the entire university network together to crack passwords.