Maybe use Keyboards_shortcuts
shortcut.add("Right",function() { //capture Rigth key
alert("print rigth"); //change your pic
});
//TODO: Left, Up and Down
Docs of V1 http://www.openjs.com/scripts/events/keyboard_shortcuts/v1.php
@BenjaminGruenbaum hostels also generally aren't in downtown
user1596138
I don't think I would want to have a private room / in someone's house like that unless I wasn't going to be there much at all. I would avoid going there. At least hotels are feel private when you're in your room
Plus Microshaft has been doing IE for awhile. They only release a true overhaul with the new OS which I assume has something to do with all of the OS level optimizations.
@BartekBanachewicz IE is a major pain to develop for - they are infamous for breaking standards - lots of sites just refuse to work - they're running old outdated JavaScript and the browser freezes if one tab fails for some odd reason - it's also really clunky in the UI. Mostly.
@BartekBanachewicz oh definitely, their touch interface is much better than Chrome's no argument there. It's just a shame it does a shitty job rendering real workloads.
Hey everybody. I have an (embarrassingly basic) javascript question that I was wondering if someone could point me in the right direction. In this function, I want each of the regex replace functions to run before formatString is returned at the bottom. But right now, it returns before any of the replaces have had a chance to run. jsfiddle.net/e2jb7n8z
is there an elegant way to avoid stuff like does.this.exist && does.this.exist.and && does this.exist.and.also && does.this.exist.and.also.this === 'wat'
@rlemon Don't worry about it @FlorianMargaine is a French guy with a huge dick he can say whatever he wants // this is as random as the argument about to be had :P who cares
@Mosho honestly while I consider @ssube a competent developer I'd just roll my own instead of include the package it's like 4 lines of code with abstract references.
@Mosho nono, it is truly elegant - you can also extract it to a function for even more concise syntax. a::get("b")::get("c")::get("d") etc or alternatively a::get(a => a.b.c.d) whatever you'd like.
You cannot use th:field along with th:selected.
If you replace th:field with name=someMeaningfullName the code will work just fine.
Check out this thread on the Thymeleaf forum for more information
I can try that, im still not sure what double braces do though
user1596138
18:58
I saw some thymeleaf code that did a concatenation and it is double bracketed while the code next to it just accessing a property is single.. Maybe it's a syntax thing like PHP in double quotes working with ${} or whatever