Hey guys, I've got a question: does anyone know how to visualize oscillator with Audio API? I read Mozilla's Audio API Reference - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Audio_API/Using_Web_Audio_API, but the problem is just in the line
@Mahadevan what errors do you see in console? Have you tried adding breakpoints and seeing if the values for the variables are what you expected them to be?
I'm trying the MutationObserver object, and I can't udnerstand why it doesn't work: pastebin.com/iDQurBgQ . I would expext to read an output in the console every time I change the input with id "foo", but doesn't work... What's wrong??
@Mosho You're publishing company code on GitHub as a public repo without permission when your contract says you can't and then documenting it there when you don't document internal code.
@ErroreFatale The mutation observers listen for changes of the DOM. The current state of form elements, however, is not reflected by the DOM. Use the Events given by the form element (change, blur, etc)
@PDKnight If you look at the fourth bullet under Creating an audio source, you'll see "Taken directly from a WebRTC MediaStream such as from a webcam or microphone. See AudioContext.createMediaStreamSource()." If you're not using WebRTC, that's probably the wrong function to use
@rlemon I must intercepta change of the "value" attribute of the input. When the user modify the input by hand the event "change" is thrown, but when the "value" attribute is changed programmatically as far as I know there is no event fired. That's why I want to use MutationObserver...
@ErroreFatale then listen for attributes observer.observe(target, {attributes:true});, but I am still not convinced you need to do this. every other website manages to listen for values changes without MutationObservers
I'm also not convinced this will work in every browser
@rlemon a button must be enabled only when a certain input is not empty. To check if the button can be enabled each time the input state is changed according to me would be the most elegant solution. But if you have an other solution...
.... sorry, a little detail: one input that must be checked is updated programmatically (the user can search something using a number, but not necessarily the data will be find)
@ErroreFatale change/blur/paste/etc events still should work fine. we've been picking up form changes for a long time before MutationObservers existed in JS
@tereško this is for a beagle bone black, they keep changing how their uboot is configured, and they're making it increasingly difficult to force boot from the microsd by default.
Yes, in different part of codes... that's why a centralization would be more elegant... enablig and disabling the button in different parts of codes is error-prone and not mantainable
@ErroreFatale adding in more cruft via mutationobservers probably isn't the most elegant :/ but ohh well. use the attribute option and hope for the best
@apsillers I propably explained it bad... I've got the visualization code and code to create an oscillator, but I can visualize audio only with source like something.mp3, not oscillator variable :(
AngularJS Q. I currently have hard-coded HTML for some directive inputs that look like this: <div definition="Account.Account_Name".. But I want to ng-repeat the properties after Account, such as <div ng-repeat="a in acsvm.fieldsToShow track by $index" definition="[acsvm.fieldsToShow[{{$index}}]]".. I keep getting syntax errors as I cannot get my [acsvm.fieldsToShow[{{$index}}]] to interpolate back into the variable such as Account_Name. acsvm.fieldsToShow is a string array with the property names.
for example 123456 if i focused out it will 3 zeros 123456.000 -- true 123445.00 -- false 1234.0 --false 12345.12 then zero should at the end 12345.1 then two zero should at the end
Oh sweet. One thing I still don't get: after webpack/babel creates all the assets and everything, how are they hooked into an index.html? Do you just assign an arbitrary path, concat all the files, then include that one script?
Is there a good explain like I'm 5 what lexical binding is? I've always had issues understanding binds, and lexicality when it comes to like element binding this and whatnot
Basically, this gets decided by "who calls the function" and you can't deduce it based on the source code of the function alone unlike every other variable in JavaScript (well, except arguments and other quirky stuff).