From the MDN:
String primitives and String objects also give different results
when using eval. Primitives passed to eval are treated as source code;
String objects are treated as all other objects are, by returning the
object. For example:
s1 = "2 + 2"; // creates a string primi...
Man I hate support, I want to know what they're attempting to do .-. It just seems like they reply so slow, so I'm not sure if they don't understand what going on, are they trying to gather more information, or just grabbing their rubber ducks .-.
> Everybody?! I haven't felt any of that chemistry comin' my way! Iunno if it's because you're racist or because I intimidate you sexually but I know it's one of those two
@Tomek 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.
There is a question mark because the encoding process recognizes that the encoding can't support the character, and substitutes a question mark instead. By "if you're really good," he means, "if you have a newer browser and proper font support," you'll get a fancier substitution character, a box...
@NickDugger Speaking as native-English speaking scum, but I feel like it makes more sense to just code in English. Sure, you have to learn it if you don't speak English, but it's the defacto standard, and by not using it you're blocking people who might otherwise contribute.
Japanese programmers speak Japanese and English. Russian programmers speak Russian and English. American programmers sorta speak English. What's in common?
Same goes for the opposite, though, I'm sure there are some great chinese programmers that only know the few english words they need to program. I think multilingual support for a language would be cool, especially for javascript
@SomeKittens sad that you're not gonna be a speaker. I've decided to definitely go, though. Gotta get out of my shell and meet people; and I figure the best people to meet first will be like-minded individuals
This is how I generally do it. First you need an array to hold the keystates.
var keys=[];
Then setup your event listeners.
// key events
document.body.addEventListener("keydown", function (e) {
keys[e.keyCode] = true;
});
document.body.addEventListener("keyup", function (e) {
keys[e....
thats how I do it, @Shmiddty has a nice answer as well
@BenjaminGruenbaum at my school they transitioned from Java being the "initial" language to Python because it was easier for the kids to both grasp the concepts and general syntax
@computerquest 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.
If I use function loading me JSON, I need v one script calling data.json too? If I delete script daja.json of my HTML5 my ajax say data is no undefined http://imgur.com/idB5sTq
@copy I agree - it's pointless on the client. It's quite meaningful on the server but not so much since petka wrote bluebird
Q was actually impossible to work with since you couldn't reach real loads since it'd actually slow things down. In the past year libraries like when and RSVP gained performance - they're still slower but they're fast enough.
If I have this and I delete this script calling to my data.json from my HTML5, why say data is undefined.
function loadJSON() {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
var url = "../public/js/data.json";
xmlhttp.open("GET",url,true);
xmlhttp.send();
}
Without this is undefined --> script(type="text/javascript", src="../public/js/scroll.js")
@copy On the client I'd love to be able to use native promises - @PaulIrish did a really cool thing with them on the developer tools - you'll get a "promises" tab with all unresolved promises and rejected ones.
if (KEYDOWN[LEFT_ARROW]) { move('left'); movement = true; } if (KEYDOWN[RIGHT_ARROW]) { move('right'); movement = true; } if (KEYDOWN[UP_ARROW]) { move('up'); movement = true; } if (KEYDOWN[DOWN_ARROW]) { move('down'); movement = true; }
so i have setTimeout(fadeIn(), 100); and it is going to early and then when i change it to setTimeout(fadeIn(), 1000); it totally disregards the change of the time
I am making a slideshow transition and by doing that it eats up all of my computers cpu and takes a massive bite out of my ram and i am forced to shut it down