I am working on the base for a simple Russian roulette simulator. Here's the code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>RR</title>
</head>
<body>
<button onclick=load()>Load</button>
<button onclick=fire()>trigger</button>
<script>
var slot=0;
var load=fu...
i have the following code:
var doFiles = function(files) {
Promise.map(files, function(file) {
// do something
return file
}, { concurrency: 3000 });
}
var module.exports = function(MAP) {
MAP = {
files: doFiles(MAP.files)
}
};
This is causing the output MAP.files be like this...
I work in the largest building by square feet on the west coast... and for some reason this team is having their standup less than a meter from my desk...
Actually on topic; has anyone used jq? (no relation to jquery, I swear) It looks like it could be useful but I'm not sure it's worth the time of learning it.
else if(nameThatDistribution.moreDataCount(moreData) === 0){
alert(1);
}
This is the piece of my code. I just need to add a keydown function to be triggered as the else if completes. any suggestions
I am writing a CLI app which depends on inferred system state. The information required from the state is not something which changes often, unless closely related software is updated. Should I infer the state on each invocation of the program, or infer and save in appdir at install time and expose a reconfigure command for the user to do so manually when he changes stuff? environment is unixy only.
@ssube don't know. haven't measured. consider reading 5+ conf files, and executing couple of shell commands to get software version info + checking the PATH (which sounds cheapish)
being snappy is really crucial for this thing, though
I wish someone writes a bit stripped down version of Excel (and probably other MS Office apps as well). All the feature bloat makes me want to never open them ever.