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19:00
not sure if it works with jQuery, and sincerely I don't care. I'd just use querySelectorAll
@towc it doesn't work.. just tried it.. i wonder if you actually try your answers before writing them here and using foul language
@JoeSaad then start using a more complete and standard API
@towc why did this get flagged?
@JoeSaad I don't because I don't try them in jQuery
@JanDvorak did it get flagged?
not even the vanillajs worked
19:05
@JoeSaad what did you even try?
show me a fiddle
@JoeSaad Dude, every time I've seen you asking a question here, it seems like you've had a bad attitude about it.
18 mins ago, by Joe Saad
@towc great.. complete agree on that.. but i have a feeling that you don't understand my simple question anyways
@Retsam Well to be fair, he didn't seem to understand the question
"you don't understand my simple question anyways" is not something you should say to someone who is trying to help you.
It's really the word simple I'm taking issue with.
Saying "I don't think you understand what I'm asking" is one thing but implying "look, my question is simple, the problem must be that you are just too dumb to get what I mean" is completely another, and that's what adding the word simple communicates to me.
@StephanMuller that's because I wrote other things before which fullfilled his requirements, then I thought that maybe I actually had the question wrong, so asked if it was the opposite of what I thought
Please note, I just came in here because I got curious about the flagged answer and I'm reading back the convo, I have no bias for or against anyone, I don't know you guys, nor Joe's question hisrory. Still, the question is rather simple, and all answers that have been given are wrong
@towc Ok, that provides context.
19:10
> <div><strong>Hello</strong> World</div>
i just want to print "World" only
yesterday he asked about how to get <strong>, today he asked that
Yeah I see how that gets confusing. The <strong> part is easy, the second part not so much.
Well, still not a huge problem but definitely not as simple as a CSS selector
I was trying to get him to give the parent a class to explain if it should display it's inner strongs using css, and just toggling the class with js, if his only concern was just only printing what's outside of strongs
like:
.notDisplayStrongs strong {display:none}
Depends on what "print" means
then he said the problem was actually getting the strongs with js
if he wants to save "World" in a var and output it somewhere, then that's a whole different ballgame
"print" is rather ambiguous
19:14
so I said it was simple for who knows vanilla: document.querySelectorAll('div > *:not(strong)') returns an array of all of the elements fitting the rule, in his case only text nodes, from which you can get the string
wait, let me test that. I didn't think that CSS rule would actually select the "World" part
but doesn't work with jQuery because jQuery isn't made for advanced JSers, then I got angry
@towc Wow, sorry but I disagree wholeheartedly on that statement, regardless of the question at hand
@StephanMuller yes the CSS rule wouldn't select the "World" part as you said
but you might be right on the queryselector, have to check
19:17
@StephanMuller I don't think that anyone that has the knowledge and knows the basic concepts of the dom should use jQuery, but that's very subjective
Well that discussion aside (let's agree to disagree for now) your query doesn't work either.
the issue isn't really whether jquery is applicable here or not.. many javascripters start this argument of how jquery is good and how dumb people who use it may be.. but this is not the argument here
@JoeSaad another solution is to use div.childNodes, which returns an array of all of it's child, then just iterate over it to check just for what's not a strong and you've simulated the css rule
So you'd either have to extract the whole text from the div and then subtract the part within the strong using a substring match
or a regex
Ah yeah, that might be a good solution
19:19
i can use javascript and have been doing this already but it was still not getting what i want.. then in the end i got this statement "ffs, i'm giving you the answer (which actually didn't work) but shut up"
@StephanMuller yeah, actually didn't test it, but I'm pretty sure that the childNodes solution is valid. Let me make a fiddle
Yes, childNodes is valid, just tried it in console
i was talking about starting to use regex if the selectors weren't able to use it and towc told me not to do so
@JoeSaad I haven't been following this conversation incredibly closely to say, but again, I specifically remember past incidents of rudeness from you towards people trying to help you in the past.
@StephanMuller you probably can explain him better than I can why should nobody use regex to parse html
unless it's the only solution
19:21
Yeah, it's a bad idea
If someone's answer doesn't work; say so, but don't be rude about it. They are trying to help you still.
var text = $("div").contents().filter(function() {
  return this.nodeType == 3;
}).text();
Nice jquery solution
i don't mind not using it.. i just thought of it as a last resort since couldn't get the selectors i wanted
well, thanks for coming. I guess all is settled now
I might stay, I like js :P
19:22
good. We like who likes js :P
We could have an interesting discussion about jquery one day
@StephanMuller i tried using this solution and someone have mentioned it before.. it works but it didn't work when trying to pass arguments to that function..
let's not
heh
@JoeSaad What do you mean by that?
@StephanMuller ha ha.. increasingly becoming unpopular and i don't mind any technology as long it gives me what i want in an optimal way
i maybe doing something wrong here..
19:28
You are. Filter returns something, but nowhere are you using a 'return' inside your function to pass the text back to the alert
Also, you omitted the .text() at the end, which means this would make it return an object (list of nodes) even if you would have returned
hey sorry i quickly edited it before sending it
Yeah, now just add .text() after the filter function
@StephanMuller not this is working..
i'm using your version and it is working great.. Thanks a bunch!!
!!>"ba,baji.".replace(/,|\./g,'')
19:31
@RobertMallow "babaji"
oh hey caprica
she's in here too huh?
!!phtephan
yes. she's a bot
19:32
!!babaji
@RobertMallow That didn't make much sense. Use the !!/help command to learn more.
@StephanMuller I think she started here actually
@RobertMallow That didn't make much sense. Use the !!/help command to learn more.
Yeah, she did.
ah, I generally only hang in the html/css room
19:41
@rlemon and @Zirak wrote most of Caprica, and rlemon hosts it.
@TravisJ rlemon is afk: I likely won't be available in the chat for a while. Tweet me or email me if the bot goes down.
 
2 hours later…
21:18
@RobertMallow what was that for?
21:28
2 messages moved to Trash can
Don't do that
21:57
@Meredith y u never talk anymore :(
!!welcome sterling
@sterling 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.
@RobertMallow - Please don't use the welcome feature on users who are here on a regular basis. It is kind of rude.
22:12
!!welcome poke
@poke 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.
Thank you Caprica!
!!ban RobertMallow
@SecondRikudo RobertMallow added to mindjail.
@RobertMallow you were asked to stop once. We don't like to repeat ourselves.
22:14
That's what happens.
that looks awesome dude
wait you didn't know about that yet? IFTTT is tha bomb
22:42
Hello
I'm reading some html elements, writing them into a JSON object.. is there a way to write that JSON object into a json file by itself?
Using JavaScript, interpreted in the browser? No. It (thankfully) has no access to the file system of the client, and especially not of the server.
You can prompt the user to download a file with that content though.
@SecondRikudo @SterlingArcher <3
You can cause the download of a file without sending it to the server
@poke yeah, that sounds good.. it's like a one time job thing i wanna do.. so i'm exploring if nodejs can actually take the json object from my frontend js and write it into a physical local file
@Joe “local” means on the server where nodejs is running?
22:49
@poke yes
Then you should provide some kind of webservice that takes the JSON data and then saves it to a file.
@copy yes, so is there a way to even have that file downloaded without sending it into the server.. all client, a json file created clientside and downloaded then
You're providing contradictive information now
Do you want to save the file on the device where the browser runs or the device where the server runs?
is "contradictive" really a word ?
@copy it is a onetime task i want to do, just create a json for a lots of data that was present and in this case both would work.. i don't mind client or server, which ever is easier and quicker since they both are in my same machine now
23:01
@tereško *contradictory
@tereško or contradicting
not contradictionist
@JoeSaad Downloading it from the client will be easier
@copy sounds good.. any tips on how?
so the file would be created on the client side and just downloaded from browser
The Internet has the answer
@JoeSaad stackoverflow.com/questions/3665115/… is the first Google result.
23:06
this doesn't show how i'll write contents to that file
See the second answer.
window.location.href = 'data:text/json;charset=utf-8,' + encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify(data));
That would be the probably simplest way…
That is an interesting approach
I think I am going to start writing my .txt files in javascript now and finishing them off with that lol
:P
You could probably also create a in-memory Blob of it, and then open that blob’s URL.
23:30
@poke - hm, I did it, however, it didn't show the dialog, it just downloaded the file directly lol
that’s a browser setting
interesting
I am going to bypass it to force some sort of dialog
23:44
heh, forgot to use .value for the filename though
it also doesn't seem to like new line characters
Doesn’t work in jsfiddle for me for some reason
what breaks?
nothing, no errors
no idea

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