So I saw this weird pattern in all of google plus's scripts. They don't use click events. They use mousedown and mouseup events. Any ideas why? Performance benefits? Tracking users?
Do you guys know of any libraries or tools that could be used to help manage multiple manifest files? So I would only have to change one manifest and both package.json and bower.json would sync?
@NoahHuppert npm is a complete superset of bower, and it's better in every way. Anyone who has bower undeniably has npm installed. Just use npm and drop bower,
@NoahHuppert For your own sake, as well as the community's sake, just use npm to distribute your package. Doing it on bower as well doesn't help anyone.
Using jQuery, I often like to use mousedown and mouseup events in conjunction for pushable buttons.
However, in every case I've used the mouseup event, binding the click event instead seemed to produce identical results.
Is there any substantial difference between the two methods below?
// Met...
I agree that it makes sense to publish to NPM, however a majority of people still use bower for front end dependencies. Cutting that whole platform out is cutting out a large portion or developers.
@MadaraUchiha since you claim to be a god who can create and destroy anything, why don't you create the language of your choice and destroy JavaScript and PHP?
Stupid question: I've got a click handler on a container element that calls preventDefault on the event object. However, this container may hold valid links that we wouldn't want to prevent the default behavior on (we actually want to follow the link). Is there a good way of allowing those clicks to function as expected? Checking to see if the event target is an anchor tag doesn't seem like a very reliable solution. jsfiddle.net/nq0ba7rm
@NoahHuppert See where I'm going with this here. The less people publish to bower, the less extensive and useful it becomes. The less extensive and useful it becomes, the less people will use this fragmented crap, and will migrate to npm like sane people.
Hence, for your own sake, as well as the community's sake, don't publish to bower, you're just causing damage.
@MadaraUchiha I would have to do some DOM walking (which is not exactly encouraged in React), for one. Secondly, I'd have to update and maintain a handful of files for this.
@BenjaminGruenbaum That's a good question. I didn't write this code initially
Basically, there is a click event on the contentItemWrapper that launches a contentItemDetail view in a modal when clicked. Each contentItem can have an arbitrary number of links (user-generated social media content).
The outer click wrapper is currently preventing default for... some reason.
The dev that wrote the code is not available for questioning today
@AwalGarg That's basically what I've got written. I'm looking for a cleaner solution.
I'd like to prove that a GUID is not unique in a simple test program.
I expected the following code to run for hours, but it's not working. How can I make it work?
BigInteger begin = new BigInteger((long)0);
BigInteger end = new BigInteger("340282366920938463463374607431768211456",10); //2^128
...
4 threads on a quad core processor would make it run in 20 billion times the age of the universe - so yeah, that would help a lot. — rjmunroNov 10 '09 at 1:10
function isLinkClick(ev){
var path = ev.path;
if (!path){
path = [];
for (var tar = ev.target; tar !== window.document; tar = tar.parentNode){
path.push(tar);
}
}
// TODO: Upgrade to ES6
return [].filter.call(path, function(node){
return node.tagName === "A" && node.href && node.href !== "#";
}).length;
}
I have a set of directives that share a scope
todo-item:
app.directive("todoItem",function(DeleteTodo,$log){
var dirDefObj = {
restrict:'E',
templateUrl:'app/templates/todo.html',
scope:{
todo:'=value'
},
controller:function($scope){},
replace:true
};
return dir...
object Resource. It can be reserved by Reservation. But before it gets reserved, it has to be "pre-reserved", that i can check other resources. If all resources are OK: give the result to Reservation, which makes the resources reversed.
@SomeKittens just wanted to ensure that I can provide all the information I can,the scopes interact with each other and they inherit from the first scope
@vamsiampolu what you ask can be compared as " here is a book with 1000 pages, existing of 4 chapters of 250 pages . People says that there is a gramatical error in chapter 4. Please resolve that "
having a donate feature is fine. allowing them to enforce a paywall just engenders a slippery slope to DRM for community-built mods that might get broken on a patch
@KendallFrey Yeah, that's why everyone's got their own ebook these days. If I charge $3 for the ebook, I'm actually making more than if you paid a publisher $20+ for it.
Mods have a tendancy to break/not play nice together. There is no obligation to fix them or make them compatible putting them behind a paywall makes people weary of other "good" mods
@KendallFrey yea same here for the most part. I mean I wont deny I had fun with Dayz.. but I expected it to be done at some point I wanted to help out and pay, thats on my of course.
The issue IMO lies entirely with the companies taking part of the profit. Modders charging for their mods is not a bad thing to me, provided they actually do provide some support.
same discussion in the webdesign room lol
I agree with that stance pretty much
If you make a great mod and want to charge I don't really care personally, as long as some sort of support is provided.