I've been reading about jQuery deferreds and promises and I can't see the difference between using .then() & .done() for successful callbacks. I know Eric Hynds mentions that .done() and .success() map to the same functionality but I'm guessing so does .then() as all the callbacks are all invoked...
Well, I found the syntax error in my JSON fle (keep forgetting that its not 1:1 to general JS syntax), so that's why it never got resolved, and I kept thinking that done will fire regardless of success or fail, when in fact it's always() that does that.
perfect, so hey all, I've a question, using mongoose, I'm trying to to use find() function to get specific row by a field that is Schema.ObjectId typed. I tried to use the function objectid.fromstring but nothing seems to be working, any clue ?
the only real problem is that I want it to show. Tbh I think it's the third party library I am using. Doing serverside validation though so it should be fine.
Python is function scoped like JS with var - but it's not as big deal as it was in JS because the type of programming JS is used for is not as common in Python (event driven)
I'm looking for some special script (maybe JS is a great solution) which downloads automatically from a FTP server if it is possible. I have no access to that ftp, but I have the link.
@MadaraUchiha First off, they're looking for every element with the same class name as the current one, in a way that breaks if the current element has multiple classes, then they assign five different backgrounds in turn (overwriting one another) to each of the elements.
@Neoareso it's not a must to do via client side.. I need a way of doing it:P At least, first thing in my mind was to checkout JavaScript channel. The closest channel for this kind of solutions :D
@MadaraUchiha well.. I'm trying to grab some files from a website. Actually is a public FTP server (as I've seen so far). And, I need a simple solution (not using explicitly some difficult solutions), so I wonder how it can be done using a simple js script.:D (just for my knowledge)
correct me if I'm wrong, but adding to an array using arr[n] where n is greater than the current array length just sets the .length of the array to that number and populates the value there?