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) {
var ret = rec...
@Esailija FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFf
Using the real DOM 4 events is a waste of space
why the hell should I use jQuery at all when I can just do document.addEventListener(orig, handler, true);
I can say with reasonable confidence the answer is no. There was talk of a library called DOMe for level 3 events, but I don't think it ever got off the ground.
There are several reasons why such a library would be difficult:
IE 8's never even heard of event capturing (even though it was orig...
RT @sethladd: required viewing for any #html5 #gamedev is Rich Hilleman's keynote from Day 1 of @NewGameConf http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwgsqEPC6Kc
RT @gskinner: Very excited to announce updates to EaselJS, Zoë, TweenJS & SoundJS: http://gskinner.com/blog/archives/2011/11/updates-to-easeljs-soundjs-tweenjs-zoe.html
Hi all! I have a little question about garbage collector. For example i make instances of some constructor in a loop: for (var i=0; i<10; i++) { var o = new A( ); o.someMethod(); }
So, when function returns, all this instances will be cleaned. But is better to make anonymous call, not initializing variable for instance? :
for (var i=0; i<10; i++) { ( new A( ) ).someMethod(); }
@Innuendo: as far as I can tell, the 'var o' would be lifted to the top of the function, so the last created A() will still be referenced until the function ends. But besides that, I'm not sure I see a major difference.
(also, for the record, garbage collection in general isn't guaranteed to collect objects after leaving their lexical scope. They could very well be left until it needs to collect.)
weekly @0penWeb update: “Text editing is certainly a fool’s errand in canvas”, HTML4 abbr attribute resurrected, more http://www.w3.org/QA/2011/11/openweb-weekly-21
“Revisit the decision to remove the PUT and DELETE verbs from HTML5“ discussion launched by @wycats http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2011Nov/thread.html#msg234
Bijeenkomst bij Lessius op 24 november 2011 · fronteers Last week there was a Fronteers meeting in Belgium that I really wanted to attend. Thomas Byttebier talked about responsive design and Johan Ronsse gave a talk called Designing for developers. You should really take your time to click through both of these talks, they’re excellent. They both did a very good job in adding extensive …
Hi. Can anyone tell me the sort of regex I need to enter a valid amount in a textbox for which the user should enter a valid amount. It should not be negative. It can have decimal..
however it would be possible to put a click handler on the parent div, and use the ref attribute or something to store the name of the key, which corresponds to a file
With your code, you could just do something like this:
white = document.getElementById('whites').children;
for(var i = 0, len = white.length; i < len; i++){
white[i].addEventListener('click', function (){
alert(this.textContent); //Instead of alert, you'd be adding your mp3 files
}, false);
}
Hi, I'm a little bit confused with encoding in Javascript. I have an HTML page with UTF-8 encoding but I heard that Javascript uses UTF-16 encoding internally. Are there conversions on input and when submitting form? They have to be. Right?
Do you want to resize an image element, or take an image, resize it and save it back on disk? Former is very possible. Latter is impossible - because you can't save stuff on user's filesystem (now with browser js)
js is Turing-complete, so it's technically capable of getting an image and doing stuff to the data in order to resize it.
Think of that threat if someone, say, hijacked the code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.js. Millions of users passively running stuff from their everyday sites.