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20:04
@Esailija Opera was a ground-up rewrite.
One of their devs frequents here often.
anyways + seems to be better for overall performance and easier to write
I generally agree.
It fits with the concept of type coercion.
if you want to parse a number parseFloat would probably convey the intention better +"1.2" === parseFloat( "1.2" );
user1385191
1 message moved to bin
user1385191
I actually wonder why parseFloat was even added
user1385191
20:10
you've got the Number constructor for that
hmm
+"1.2asd" !== parseFloat( "1.2asd" );
left gives NaN , right gives 1.2
user1385191
mm, forgot about the string-parsing of parse*
you know what's funny about parseInt
there is nothing about octals in the spec
and it still parses an octal if no radix given
without radix, it's supposed to parse either decimal or hexadecimal
parseFloat is pure decimal though +1
that is literal
as in 07 vs "07"
20:14
IIRC, it was present in ES3 and was removed in ES5
well it's not in es5 for sure, and strict mode supposedly gets rid of octals altogether
but even in strict mode parseInt gets an octal like a good function
(read: bad function)
parseInt with the radix appears to perform better anways
2
A: How to reference an id with brackets in jQuery

Esailija$( document.getElementById( "id[2][t]" ) ).change( function(){ var txtval = $( this ).text(); $( "#textpreview" ).val( txtval ); } );

lol WHY NO ACCEPT
Because there is strange mystery code in the $()
it's magical and complex, it must be a better solution
it also looks very maintainable
20:19
@Esailija Y U USE DOM.
Y U NO MOAR COWBELL
naw man the one with the escape characters is clearly better
yes the next maintainer won't feel like killing himself when he sees selectors like that all over the code
user1385191
what is that id?
user1385191
that's hideous
It's old php trick to have arrays when it gets posted
or something dumb like that
20:20
"they need to remain for other reasons"
:--)
user1385191
no, that's for the name attribute
user1385191
<input name="findme[]" type="checkbox" value="foobar">
@Esailija I'm pretty sure that roughly translates to "they need to remain like that because the code base is a bunch of spaghetti code shit that will crumble if I touch it"
ah
@MattMcDonald it looks like the code generating it, uses it for both the id and name
user1385191
which is something you want
@Raynos, I like how in the other answers they query the whole DOM with jQuery instead of just using the obvious age old DOM method for getting elementById :D
user1385191
20:24
that's general selection syndrome
user1385191
select all "x" tags on the page, iterate, do something
@Esailija dem trolls :(
@Esailija see my comments
yes because jQuery constructor exits pretty early if the passed argument is an object
@rlemon, he probably doesn't care :D
20:31
How would I clear a interval set like so : ` function changer() {
setInterval(function() { //stuff }) } ` ?
user1385191
you assign the interval to a variable
What gripes me about jQuery is not that it is uber bloated - is that people when using it rely on it FOR EVERYTHING
user1385191
then, clearInterval(reference)
the champion way to do it is var l = 100000; while(l--)clearInterval(l);
in the answer $(this).val() === this.value
wtfrigs is $ even doing in there
20:32
thanks @MattMcDonald
@rlemon, damn I missed that
I was going completely zombie after the get by id
like stupidest thing ever
@MattMcDonald so if i set it like : ` ` function changer() {
var slideint = setInterval(function() { //stuff }) } ` will that work?
user1385191
depends on the scope
good point
user1385191
20:34
opera's caret is almost invisible on grey :(
i'd be clearing it outside the function
should i declare the var outside the function and assign it within
@rlemon, lol I refactored it further
$( document.getElementById( "id[2][t]" ) ).change( function(){
  $( "#textpreview" ).text( this.value );
} );
user1385191
that's one option
user1385191
you can also pass it as a parameter
user1385191
then the need to assign it to a variable evaporates as the parameter is the reference
20:36
@MattMcDonald do you know anything about document.doctype in IE8 ?
user1385191
can you show me an example matt?
Well document.doctype === null in IE8 :\
rick astley tags are awfully unpopular
0 questions tagged
20:41
Rick Astley is not the Question, he is the Answer
user1385191
function handler () {}

function clearSomething (timer)
{
	clearInterval(timer);
}

function doSomething (time)
{
	var timer = setInterval(handler, +time);
	if (true)
	{
		clearSomething(timer);
	}
}

doSomething(100);
if (true) // ???
user1385191
it's just a placeholder
ahh
@rlemon determines whether it's opposite day.
user1385191
20:44
it blocks the interval from running
true = false;
#define true false
@Michael then you need the bizzaro operator in there if(¿true)
You'd first need to define false
undefined = void;
false = undefined;
true = false;
this = null;
enjoy
20:48
lol
My favourite so far: Object.prototype = null;
@Zirak, it's not like your code would do anything either
:-)
In theorycraftland, it would
{}
undefined
lolz
@Zirak Object.prototype = window for epic trolls
20:50
Object.prototype = jQuery
user1385191
that's what we call a "circular reference" (referencing window from a global)
undefined = function(){}
I actually ran the null thing in this chat and it's still running
gets rid of that annoying error
//for teh trollz:
document.getElementById = function ( id ) {
    return jQuery( '#' + id );
};
20:51
document.body = document.head
@Zirak remove the .get ( 0 )
oh doesn't run
@Zirak Doesn't that result in a stack overflow?
Indeed, indeed it does :D
That's how you truly get enough cowbell
21:02
hhmm, Ruby is less horrifying than I remember...
Once you get passed the syntax (there are like 7 ways to write an if statement, and about 4 to write text to console (using the same function)), it's got some good ideas
21:18
var tmp = document.getElementById, document.getElementById = function ( id ) {
    return jQuery( tmp(id) ); // speed up your cowbell man!
};
tmp( id ) would throw?
tmp.call( document, id ); works in chrome but very likely not in IE :D
@Esailija it might work in IE :D
21:34
puts "Look ma"
puts( "Look ma" )
puts "Look " << "Ma"
puts "Look " + "Ma"
puts "Look ", "Ma"
text = "Look Ma"
puts "#{text}"
This is perverted and intriguing at the same time.
Does anyone know a jquery UI themeroller ready plugin for check boxes/radio buttons? I don't want the "button" style replacements that come with jquery UI, they have poor affordance
@BenBrocka so just use CSS
21:54
Found a solution doing that too, was hoping there was something I could themeroller to make things easier. I guess it works
Well that was fun
@RyanKinal ^_^
had a nice convo?
That bot is in denial.
seriously...
It's a sad case, really
@rlemon What's interesting about it?
22:13
@rlemon do you use that for spamming
:D
@Esailija no, I use an elaborate system of pullies and levers for spamming.
@RyanKinal it's cool, IMHO. and I blogged about it, so that makes it Extra cool, or Interesting.
my logic is undeniable ..
0
Q: I just stumbled upon Eliza

A Man A Plan A Canal PanamaI just happened to be looking through the chatrooms on meta and I noticed this one: http://chat.meta.stackoverflow.com/rooms/438/the-couch It seems someone on the SE team has created a chat bot called Eliza Is this some sort of ploy for SE to take over the world? Is this bot going to be the ne...

@rlemon Fair enough
any whoo night all.
night
22:18
@rlemon 'night
Cleaning toilets sucks. I should automate that process.
yeah minimize task repetition DRY
CAM
CAM
Yo
AJAX + IE post fail
I deas?
Nah, I already use AJAX to clean my toilet
upgrade to chrome
@CAM How are you doing the AJAX?
22:28
or be more specific =)
CAM
CAM
function send(){
var name = $('#name').val();
company = $('#company').val();
phone = $('#phone').val();
email = $('#email').val();
comments = $('#comments').val();
page = '<?php echo $part;?>';

url = 'n=' + name + '&co=' + company + '&p=' + phone + '&e=' + email + '&c=' + comments + '&pa=' + page;

$.ajax({
type: "POST",
data: url,
url: 'process.php',
success: function(data)
{
$('#result').html(data);
}
});// END AJAX
}// End Send

$('button').click(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
ctrl-k please
CAM
CAM
uhh
?
Formatting.
CAM
CAM
mac
22:29
function send() {
    var name = $('#name').val();
    company = $('#company').val();
    phone = $('#phone').val();
    email = $('#email').val();
    comments = $('#comments').val();
    page = '<?php echo $part;?>';
    url = 'n=' + name + '&co=' + company + '&p=' + phone + '&e=' + email + '&c=' + comments + '&pa=' + page;
    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        data: url,
        url: 'process.php',
        success: function (data) {
            $('#result').html(data);
        }
    }); // END AJAX
There we go :-)
@RyanKinal ^_^
Ooh, that's a lot of globals
so... is the click working? is the send function called? is the ajax success called? check these out with console.log
CAM
CAM
22:30
there are inside the function
yea
we are cool on all browsers but IE
@Neal Dude! @Eliza answered your meta question!
@CAM, I mean in IE..
@RyanKinal HA! that is awesome
I'm guessing one of the devs logged in with the account ;-)
@RyanKinal lol i guess
22:32
Eliza does need more rep... I upvoted her
CAM
CAM
ie is not logging even on doc ready
Er... IE doesn't log
press f12 and see the log
errors?
CAM
CAM
Doh
killed Jquery
added it now it loads
and logs
LOG: Jquery Loaded
LOG: n=sa&co=sa&p=1234567890&[email protected]&c=hgfdajgag&pa=ventures.php
SCRIPT5022: DOM Exception: HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR (3)
jquery.min.js, line 4 character 4774
that error is caused after the ajax loads
?
CAM
CAM
22:40
no AJAX returns
it posts to the script
but no response
Yup no response
console.log(data);
same error
is the response json
CAM
CAM
no
raw HTML
does the html contain head or body tags or such tags
CAM
CAM
nope
script tags?
CAM
CAM
22:44
Nice
good
//header("content-type:application/xml;charset=utf-8");
call
anyways try putting dataType: "text" parameter
CAM
CAM
it works
if you talk the same way you write , then this should be a sight to behold
or is your ISP charging per letter ?
CAM
CAM
whats that sposta mean @tereško ?
user1385191
you
user1385191
22:54
send
user1385191
very
user1385191
short
user1385191
spammy
user1385191
messages
like this /\
CAM
CAM
22:55
oh
cool
so thats douchey?
too lazy to walk over to get my 'good parts' book, but what is the best way to remove an element from an array and have the length of the array be updated?
so
just
much
hell
because var arr; arr = [1,2]; delete arr[0]; arr.length // 2
hah, chat was awesome enough to reject ~4 of these
not
as
splice?
user1385191
22:57
@dmarr Array.prototype.splice(start, deleteCount)
Anyone use .sourceIndex or compareDocumentPosition ?
crap, just realized its on an object not array
@dmarr var arr = [0, 1, 2]; arr.splice( 1, 1 ); //arr = [0, 2]
delete for objects, splice for arrays
for in for objects, for for arrays
and so on
ok but the objects length doesnt seem to update
23:02
ok so do you have an array or object
or object with length
err, looks like i was treating an object as an array. length is undefined for the objec
Decide: Do you have an array, or an object? An array is a special kind of object.
It's got a magical property called length
0
Q: cross browser compare document position

RaynosDOM4 compareDocumentPosition I want to implement compareDocumentPosition. Resig has made a great start at doing just this. I've taken his code and neatened it up function compareDocumentPosition(other) { var ret = 0; if (this.contains) { if (this !== other && this.contai...

Go go go stackoverflow team \o/
Write my code for me
Seeing you being productive makes slackers like me feel really bad
@Raynos how can you compare with documentfragment, it cannot be in the dom?
23:09
@Esailija documentFragment.compareDocumentPosition(documentFragment.childNodes[0])
That should tell you that the child is contained by the document fragment
but the documentFragment isn't in the DOM, there is no representation for it
you append it to DOM and only the elements inside the documentFragment are placed
@Esailija so? Why does it not make sense to compare nodes that are not connected to a Document
so how can you tell if its before that div or those divs if it doesn't exist there
you can tell what it contains
23:11
I think your confusing nodes that are attached to window.document with the DOM
comparison makes sense for any two nodes
if they are not connected then compareDocumentPosition returns disconnected
disconnected means not in the same tree
The DOM is a lot more then what you see on the screen
What you see on the screen is just a DOM tree which starts at window.document
@Esailija easy mistake to make though :)
I mean the live DOM that is actually in the.. page or whatever :D
"there is no spoon", Neo
I always thought a docFrag is some magic, ghosty thing which is just a container for "virtual" nodes, zero connected to the actual DOM
when you do somediv.appendChild( someFragment ); then in the live dom there is no document fragment appended but everything it contained
nor the BOM
@Esailija DocumentFragment is still a node
when you append it you just empty the document fragment
the document fragment doesnt "dissappear"
23:15
I know but how can you tell what comes after it or before it
if it's not represented in the hierarchy
I.E documentFragment.parentNode doesn't make any sense?
unless you append it in js
@Raynos: did you interview @gsnedders about that? he should be able to tell how opera handles docFrags at least
@Raynos: I still don't think, even if it is a node, there is any useful connection to the current DOM tree
@jAndy it works ...
It works on all major browsers
@Raynos: it works meas what exactly?
Go read the tests
nodes.docfrag.appendChild(nodes.el);
var comparison = nodes.docfrag.compareDocumentPosition(nodes.el);
t.equal(comparison & Node.DOCUMENT_POSITION_CONTAINED_BY, Node.DOCUMENT_POSITION_CONTAINED_BY, "el is contained by docfrag");
as in compareDocumentPosition on a doc frag does what you expect
it compares the document position locally
The current DOM tree is nothing special :\
You can make a whole bunch of trees
document.implementation.createDocument() and create an entire new tree and it will work
I mean this:
var frag = document.createDocumentFragment(),
	div = document.createElement("div");

frag.appendChild(div);
document.getElementById("input-area").appendChild(frag);

frag.parentNode;

//null
23:20
People need to stop thinking that just because it's in the "live DOM tree" it is somehow special / different / better
hmm I might get it wrong then, I thought this is about testing if a docFrag itself is contained by the DOM tree ?
the fragment doesn't have any parentnode even when it's inserted
@Esailija frags parent node is always null
so it doesn't make any sense to compare it
You dont insert fragment nodes
it does make sense to compare it
23:20
cos it doesn't have a position in the document at all
because fragments can have children
fragments just cant have parents
Meaning fragments are always the top of a local tree
@Esailija your confusing the document
There is nothing special about window.document other then your browser engine renders it
@jAndy I'm only testing other nodes are contained by a document fragment
you can't retrieve fragments from ....[insert term here]
yes that you can do
@Raynos: ok, that should work just fine indeed then
1
Q: cross browser compare document position

RaynosDOM4 compareDocumentPosition I want to implement compareDocumentPosition. Resig has made a great start at doing just this. I've taken his code and neatened it up function compareDocumentPosition(other) { var ret = 0; if (this.contains) { if (this !== other && this.contai...

@Raynos I don't think you can do better than iterating over the whole document
@gsnedders I was thinking that :\
23:25
@Raynos Which is fun in IE<9 seeming you don't always have a tree-shaped DOM
I was thinking "how do I find the common root to start tree walking from"
What do you mean not always a tree-shaped DOM ? >_>
I mean I could do this thing
@Raynos <b>foo<i>bar</b>lol</i> doesn't create a tree in IE8
IIRC i.previousSibling === i.parentNode in that case
var self = this;
recursivelyWalk(this.ownerDocument.childNodes, function (node) {
  if (node === other) {
    return "preceding";
  } else if (node === self) {
    return "following";
  }
});
@Raynos Will that get into an infinite loop if you don't have a tree?
@gsnedders If theres a circular reference between children yes
23:27
@Raynos Also, you almost certainly want to optimize the case when both are elements by using document.getElementsByTagName("*") and comparing index position
function recursivelyWalk(nodes, cb) {
    for (var i = 0, len = nodes.length; i < len; i++) {
        var node = nodes[i];
        var ret = cb(node);
        if (ret) {
            return ret;
        }
        if (node.childNodes && node.childNodes.length > 0) {
            var ret = recursivelyWalk(node.childNodes, cb);
            if (ret) {
                return ret;
            }
        }
    }
}
@gsnedders I already optimised index position
I need to recursively walk for non elements
I'm going to start writting html markup like <b>who needs closing tags? <i>actually no one, even IE6 doesn't
@jAndy But that's O(n^2) in HTML5!
looks nice actually, even if it doesn't work for all nodes
user1385191
why node.childNodes.length > 0 over node.childNodes.length?
23:29
@jAndy Though there is a maximum nesting level for formatting elements, to avoid n growing too large.
@gsnedders: whats the max ?
@Raynos You can probably do smart stuff based upon the parentNode (which in most cases is an Element) to avoid having to walk the whole doc
@jAndy Off-hand, dunno. 25 comes to mind, but I'm not sure.
It worked \o/
@gsnedders well I can optimise for document fragment
and I can find the nearest parent element
but I cant be bothered to write fast code for ie :3
@jAndy There's an outer loop counter (0-7), and an inner loop counter (0-2). Don't ask me what they do.
@jAndy The adoption agency algorithm is by far the most complex part of the HTML5 parsing algorithm
Is sourceIndex ever negative ?
@MattMcDonald don't know, bad code?
23:33
'Because of the way this algorithm causes elements to change parents, it has been dubbed the "adoption agency algorithm" (in contrast with other possible algorithms for dealing with misnested content, which included the "incest algorithm", the "secret affair algorithm", and the "Heisenberg algorithm").'
@Raynos In IE? No idea.
Oh btw, that recursivelyWalk function is awesome. It solves all your tree walking problems, ever
user1385191
wonder where you found something like that :)
@MattMcDonald wrote it ;_;
(The incest algorithm is IE<9 (as well as legacy modes in IE9, esp. quirks), though in IE10 quirks mode doesn't use it; the secret affair algorithm is Opera < 11.60; and the Heisenberg algorithm is Firefox < 4)
user1385191
it's fun messing around with DOM trees
23:35
Either that means the function is bad, or you dont expect me to be able to write it
It's more fun when they aren't trees, such as the output of the incest algorithm.
Is there an IE alternative of cloneNode ?
@Raynos No
ok
Ok my algorithm is broken :)
How do I find the parentNode which contains both children?
user1385191
23:39
I have no idea as to what this script does
@Raynos Breadth-first search?
@Raynos tl;dr version: the simplest way tends to be starting at root node and iterating while they are the same (and has O(h) performance, where h is the depth of the tree)
;_;
I know why my unit tests fail
var Node = ...;

/ * wall of code */

function () {
  // code
  return Node.DOCUMENT_POSITION_FOLLOWING;
}
hurr durr why Node.DOCUMENT_POSITION_FOLLOWING undefined
@gsnedders before I rewrite yet another event library is there a nice small modular event library I can use?
23:55
@Raynos Dunno
0
Q: Modular javascript event library

RaynosI want a small library that does DOM4 events. Does it exist? Answers that are not valid Use large framework X (jQuery, mootools, prototype, etc) Some library that doesn't work in IE8


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