@MarcRasmussen I don't think you can? A single process can only listen on a single port (except for some funky scenarios where multiple processes hand off connections to each other somehow, I guess). I guess your "application" is already on that port?
So say i have a PHP application. and i have a node js server for this application how would i make sure that my clients connect to the right server port?
without them fysicly typing the port number in their browser?
@MarcRasmussen Depends.. if your browser is accessing the node js server and the php server on one site, you will have to manually add the port to links
However if the server is accessing the other server for you, then there are ways
I have an application build with a PHP framework. now i am trying to setup node js with socket io to run chat in my web application. But i do not wish my users to type www.mydomain.dk:3000
@MarcRasmussen Your php server could save port information in the session and pass it on to the client-side, and the client-side javascript connects to your node.js websocket on the same server with the same port
Methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) is an organosulfur compound with the formula (CH3)2SO2. It is also known by several other names including DMSO2, methyl sulfone, and dimethyl sulfone. This colorless solid features the sulfonyl functional group and is considered relatively inert chemically. It occurs naturally in some primitive plants, is present in small amounts in many foods and beverages, and is marketed as a dietary supplement. It is also commonly found in the atmosphere above marine areas, where it is used as a carbon source by the airborne bacteria Afipia, and is found distinctively in human melanoma...
I went with a lady friend to the gym, and she actually lifted with me. She was really happy I was teaching her technical stuff, and not trying to show off for her
> Leela: Face it, Fry. Baseball was as boring as mom and apple pie. That's why they jazzed it up. Fry: Boring? Baseball wasn't... Wait. So they finally jazzed it up.
In computing, the Two Generals' Problem is a thought experiment meant to illustrate the pitfalls and design challenges of attempting to coordinate an action by communicating over an unreliable link. It is related to the more general Byzantine Generals' Problem (though published long before that later generalization) and appears often in introductory classes about computer networking (particularly with regard to the Transmission Control Protocol), though it can also apply to other types of communication. A key concept in epistemic logic, this problem highlights the importance of common knowledge...
So, I replicated google's "ripple" effect from material design, but for some reason, in firefox, you have to click twice for the ripple to actually show up, but the event does fire when you only click it once... FF is gonna be the reason for me losing my mind