error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown){ if(textStatus == "timeout"){ alert("%TIMEOUT% - Det tog över 80 sekunder om att utföra denna handling. Vänligen försök igen, eller testa med något mindre.."); $('#buttonUpload').attr('disabled', false); } }
@YiJiang A custom server that benchmarks your own code. Write one. In node. It's not hard. Whilst your at it edit V8 so the whole timing thing is more accurate.
I recently read somewhere that writing a regexp to match an email address, taking into account all the variations and possibilities of the standard is extremely hard and is significantly more complicated than what one would initially assume.
Can anyone provide some insight as to why that is?
...
@meo you can write a regex that catches 98% of all emails :) It will also work if you only accept specific domains that limit their emails to something sensible
@IvoWetzel ... You basically write jsperf but better.
@IvoWetzel alternatively you do benchmarking on a more local scale.
@ClemDesm Not really, although the status bar should show the link starting with javascript:
You can always use a global userstyle that adds a icon or something to all links with href starting with javascript:, although this can be problematic for older websites still using javascript:void
@TolgahanAlbayrak honestly though from my limited experience I think a generic game framework for frontend javascript is hard to do. Generic is just too slow. It needs to be hand optimised for everything
@TolgahanAlbayrak have a look at craftyjs He beat you to it.
@TolgahanAlbayrak Now a small and efficient wrapper around the canvas that supports easy rendering and animating of basic shapes. That would be useful
@AndyE Spend quite some time playing video games in the last two weeks, I need to find a new project to work on to get back into coding... now that I've set up VIM...
@IvoWetzel only and sane ? ;) the magic of AJAX it pops up with Javascript syntax for basic Math and it's really want to tell him to read up inside the if statement
@IvoWetzel write a small raytracing library/API thing for canvas please. Consider it a challenge. (full webGL support should come by default). You look like you have nothing to do.
@NickCraver I remembered quite a while back you said that there's no way to navigate to a URL ending with .user.js in Chrome without installing the script on the page, and that there's no way of reviewing the source without installing the thing. Is this resolved now?
Interesting - on Chrome, clicking on the link from the Github repo page now results in some nifty ajax to load the source instead of giving you the actual page
I'll try this in Firefox
Hmmm... no. Looks like they might be detecting Chrome specifically
@ircmaxell Quick VIM question, do you know of any way to change the default filename? So that it doesn't start with "Unnamed" but for example with "Empty.js"
I know I can change the syntax via filetype
but the template plugin is too stupid to detect that...
I need to parse regular expressions into their components in PHP. I have no problem creating the regular expressions or executing them, but I want to display information about the regular expression (e.g. list the capture groups, attach repetition characters to their targets, ...). The overall pr...
(although it would be an intelectual black-hole. Our knowledge would go in, and we'd never see it again (since we'd be forced into slavery if not killed outright)
> CDATA sections in XHTML documents are liable to be parsed differently by web browsers if they render the document as HTML, since HTML parsers do not recognise the CDATA start and end markers, nor do they recognise HTML entity references such as < within <script> tags.
Hi,
I come from strong typed unambiguous OOP background and I struggle to find JavaScript reference manual that would fit my needs.
The ideal one should be:
compendious and handy, I'm not
looking for ECMA
standart reference.
type specific, even if JS is not strong typed function arguments and...
Hi,
I come from strong typed unambiguous OOP background and I struggle to find JavaScript reference manual that would fit my needs.
The ideal one should be:
compendious and handy, I'm not
looking for ECMA
standart reference.
type specific, even if JS is not strong typed function arguments and...
It's a shame help.dottoro.com hasn't had much love. It's a fairly decent reference that I've found considerably useful recently - especially because of the browser compatibility summary that's given on each page.
@IvoWetzel: I'm only going on the pages I've landed on and the methods I've looked up in the past couple of months - I don't need to learn DOM/JS so I haven't really seen the rest :-p
@ircmaxell I meant concise on the smaller things, so you don't have 2000 lines of code examples on each page, just the important stuff that really matters so newbies don't get distracted etc.
I mean, you can write short and concise migration guide assuming the reader understands C syntax for stuff like loops and arithmetics, but things like events will still need some explaining
@YiJiang I think we need both : good and useful comment and official doc (which can be withdrawn when noobs ask why this function doesn't work because they use a deprecated version, or for JS, one particular browser)
TIMESTAMP columns are identical to DATETIME columns with one important exception — they can be set to take the current time value when a row is created or updated.
http://www.kbedell.com/2009/03/07/how-to-create-a-timestampdatetime-column-in-mysql-to-automatically-be-set-with-the-current-time/
How would I go about using feature detection to find out whether I need to emulate the title attribute on disabled input elements.
I'm aware that firefox claims & interprets the specification so that it is working as intended but I would none the less like tooltips to display.
The only thi...
The DOM has no "knowledge" of the tooltips, regardless of the state of the button. As far as the relationship goes, a title can be set via DOM, everything else is out of its hands. I think browser detection is your only choice.
Still, there's not much you can do even when you have that information. You couldn't display your own tooltip on hover, for instance, because mouse events aren't fired for disabled elements.