at some point you're going to have simpler code with less dependencies, less code paths, less loading time if you just do it in a compatible way... even non-legacy browsers still need to to evaluate whether they need to load the shims, or the server could do that but that's unreliable
the value of abstractions like this are pretty clear when you look at how stuff like inserting style or script nodes works with the various dom implementations
In Ubuntu, once a release is out, the packages in its repositories recieve security updates only, but in Windows, new features also keep coming. How can Windows do this and why can't Ubuntu?
var i, ownProperty = Object.hasOwnProperty, o = {man : 1, women : 2}; for(i in o) if (ownProperty(o, i)) {console.log(i, ':', o[i])} //output: undefined
the Iterators can have aggregate functions as well as functions that act on individual members... that's really why i made ArrayIterator, so i'd have a place to put aggregate functions for arrays, since there's no clean way to just extend Array
and i'm just extending the concept to ElementIterator
function recursivelyWalk(nodes, cb) {
for (var i = 0, len = nodes.length; i < len; i++) {
var node = nodes[i];
var ret = cb(node);
if (ret) {
return ret;
}
if (node.childNodes && node.childNodes.length) {
var ret = recursivelyWalk(node.childNodes, cb);
if (ret) {
return ret;
}
}
}
}
hmm, what do you guys think of this for a client side require
function require (url) {
var xhr = window.XMLHttpRequest ? new XMLHttpRequest() :
new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
xhr.open("GET", url, false);
xhr.send(null);
return new new Function('var externs=this;\n' + xhr.responseText);
}
and then say your module is util.js, you'd write: var util = typeof externs != 'undefined' ? externs : {};
server side require implementation would also be expected to use a closure, and provide externs
so i don't know what you mean by this doesn't have the advantages of require. it is supposed to be require, in the commonjs sense. a client side implementation.
I'm currently having trouble showing images in a table.
The images all have different aspect ratios. The different aspect ratios of the images make the table of images look cluttered.
To solve this i would like to crop the part that needs cropping to have the image be exactly square. i already ...
why cant i use Array.sort.call([3,4,6,3,1,7,9]) instead of Array.prototype.sort.call([3,4,6,3,1,7,9]) ... isn't sort a method of the array object and dont we use prototype to insert or push new methods or properties to object constructors
I have done C, C++, html, some CSS and now doing PHP. I am also doing my Systems Engineering course. I am a bit confused about the combination of languages to learn next.
Here is a list I created (but I am not limited to it):
Java Script
JQuery
XML
Perl
Python
Now I do not want to be a ja...
1 jquery doubt $('#mydiv').load('somepage.htm', function() { // 1. when does this function load? // 2. when it executes do we have access to elements in that page via the DOM? });
@anonymouslyanonymous Array.prototype.sort is defined by es5, Array.sort isn't. something.prototype is just another property, which happens to be what new instances of something use as their DNA.
.call is used for calling a function with a pre-set this variable, and a set of arguments: func.call( thisArg, arg0, arg1, arg2... )
.apply is like call, except the arguments are an array: func.apply( thisArg, [arg0, arg1, arg2...] )
Trimmed and rephrased from source to match your usage:
jQuery.each = jQuery.fn.each = function( object, callback ) {
for ( var i = 0, length = object.length ; i < length; i++ ) {
if ( callback.call( object[ i ], i, object[ i ] ) === false ) {
break;
}
}
...
Disregard the part about jQuery, the answer's really about the this variable.
ie8 - sometimes window.console is undefined - even if we bring the Developer Tools window by hitting f12 key. - any kb articles or fixes regarding this?
Because if there was a common class, it would be simple. Set an index, when enter is clicked increment index, focus on the index-th element with that class.
Let's say you have several people lined up in a row.
There's a robot which mocks a person with a random Yo Mama joke, and it works when the Boss Man presses a button. The Boss-Man, being a kind and gentle person, doesn't want the same person to be offended twice.
How would you find the next person who should be mocked? Or, more precisely, what's the best system to do it?
What you're currently doing is lining up the people every time Boss-Man wants to be amused, instead of just letting them stay where they are, and then going forward one at a time.
A truly kind and gentle boss would understand that by sacrificing one person to suffer all the mockings, he is sparing all other employees. Therefore, the answer is return Milton;
People do crazy stuff in JavaScript. But for 3D, it seems that Google is trying to push Native Client (NaCl). Essentially by offering a portability layer to make it easier to bring classic 3d games to the browser.
Did you have success with Google Maps 3D? It only killed my browser...
I wonder when the first JS minimizer comes out that uses a built-in decompression routine... (not that this would be sensible with servers that can do gzip, but people do crazy stuff).
@Raynos: as far as I can tell it only does minimization, but not actual compression (as in, data compression. Not as in "renaming variables"). But again, I wouldn't be surprised if it already exists. And if actually is non-sensical, since likely gzip compression by the web server and browser offers better ratio on minimized-only js.