Philosophy as in why things are the way they are. They give you a question, you solve it and then you discuss what you both learned from it and what deeper meaning it has.
Good courses in the university (not bad courses, and there are both) teach you how to think - they don't teach you a specific algorithm. When they do - it's fundamental. @AwalGarg
@BenjaminGruenbaum I highly doubt this happens at even prominent unis around the world. Lets exclude places like MIT etc. Would you say this happens at, lets say, huji university as well? :P
@AwalGarg No, it's a bad example because it's particularly good, it's not MIT but it's good enough that presented with a choice I chose not to go all the way to MIT. I get to learn from Turing award and Fields medal recipients in either case.
@AwalGarg having done MIT courses - it's definitely that way too. You are expected to have already solved the problems and gone through the lesson when you get in class. You can pass just fine even if you didn't but you won't benefit nearly as much.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ahh. well I have gone through some coursera material which is claimed to be the stuff taught in actual corresponding unis. Harvard/stanford etc. didn't particularly impress me. Obviously this is a very limited experience to form an opinion out off, but it does give me a vague picture.
Uganda (/juːˈɡændə/ yew-GAN-də or /juːˈɡɑːndə/ yew-GAHN-də), officially the Republic of Uganda, is a landlocked country in East Africa. It is bordered to the east by Kenya, to the north by South Sudan, to the west by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to the southwest by Rwanda, and to the south by Tanzania. Uganda is the world's second most populous landlocked country after Ethiopia. The southern part of the country includes a substantial portion of Lake Victoria, shared with Kenya and Tanzania, situating the country in the African Great Lakes region. Uganda also lies within the Nile basin...
here what SO does on the title document.title = document.title.replace(/^(\(\d*\*?\) )?(.*)( \| [^|]*)$/, "$1" + e.name.replace(/\$/g, "$$$$") + "$3")) how can I trick it so it stops to warn me?
@AwalGarg blow up doll the cheap substitute for a date, usually considered better in bed because they lie perfectly still and never get their partner and them selves caught by moaning loudly.*note biting the blow up doll on the shoulder during sex is not advised due to the chances that u will pop ur "partner"*
hey guys. I want to open source a JS library I built, but all of my JS libraries have cool names (like wildstring and moreon and dable) and I can't think of a cool name for this one...I'm literally only able to call it "KVData" It turns JS Objects to arrays of key-value pairs to make conversion back and forth easier for databases and to allow you to use something like angular without worrying about the controller knowing all the details of complex objects
function myvar(a, b){
var x = a + b;
var myfunc = function(){
return x+5;
}
return myfunc();
var myfunc = function(){
return x+3;
}
}
console.log(myvar(4,5));
// Here nested function expressions doesn't follow the load order.
Nobody is active? Please tag me as soon as someone shows up
@SomeKittens I'm not sure I like the arguments you make about a wip branch. The stash can have all the same issues with merging with someone else refactor and wip branches can be just as private as the stash (just don't push it).
Stash is more convenient for the use case you are using, though, I agree there.
@BerndErnst Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
I think I have a question regarding "Headless Browser" or maybe "JSDOM". I click on an input submit field via jsdom and want to catch the redirect. How can I do that? Is that possible with JSDOM or do I have to use something like PhantomJS?
I'm really uncertain about how it is handled in general.
To explain it easy: I want to login in a website. And of course I get a redirect - but how can I handle it with JS?
Huh.. any idea how long it takes for most questions to get answered? I'm used to the wait five minutes and get a response that I've enjoyed on angular and rails questions.
I'm trying to create a modal for my users to signin, so I have this link:
<li><a {{action "signin"}}>Sign In</a></li>
in a {{planhw-navbar}} component.
{{planhw-navbar signin=(action "showModal" name="signin-modal")}}
But when I open my browser, I get the error:
An action named 'showMod...
Winners Don't Use Drugs is an anti-drug slogan that was included on all arcade games imported into North America for 11 years from 1989 to 2000. The slogan appears on a screen that is shown during a game's attract mode.
The messages are credited to FBI Director William S. Sessions, whose name appears alongside the slogan. Sessions reached a deal with American Amusement Machine Association president Robert Fay through which 20 arcade manufacturers agreed to include the slogan in their games. The slogan made its official debut on January 10, 1989, when three major games that included the slogan were...
In computing, protected mode, also called protected virtual address mode, is an operational mode of x86-compatible central processing units (CPUs). It allows system software to use features such as virtual memory, paging and safe multi-tasking designed to increase an operating system's control over application software.
When a processor that supports x86 protected mode is powered on, it begins executing instructions in real mode, in order to maintain backward compatibility with earlier x86 processors. Protected mode may only be entered after the system software sets up several descriptor tables...