User Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 6.1; Trident/4.0; SLCC2; .NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.5.30729; .NET CLR 3.0.30729; Media Center PC 6.0; .NET4.0C; InfoPath.2) Timestamp: Thu, 27 Jan 2011 00:47:43 UTC
Message: Object doesn't support this property or method Line: 5 Char: 452 Code: 0 URI: http://www.typeofnan.com/js/supply.min.js?v=5 "
Although bracket does consistantly have more ops. so its slightly more efficient to write jQuery("selector")["css"]("foo", "bar")["attr"]("id", "foobar")["hide"]()
friend and I were just talking about it, and I was under the assumption that bracket notation was a sort of eval :? so then I read the spec and realized i was wrong, and its really just a matter of preference. Oh well got some other good info out of the discussion.
@Loktar bracket notation to me is a property getter on associative arrays so object["key"]. It just so happens everything is an object and every object is an "associative array"
@Raynos so you're saying i'm using it wrong by being consistent? o_O would you prefer mixing and matching dot and bracket notation, and adding in comments to deal with closure?
@david not for the same object. you shouldnt do x.a and x["a"] but passing in variables to x[var] or using ["string"] in some parts of the code on some objects and .field on other parts is fine. You should handle closure's aggresiveness differently. Having to resort to using ["string"] everytwhere is painful
you can create extern files yeah, you need to use them for stuff like jquery to stop it shortening those methods
but that's still a stupid way to go about it, because it means closure can't shrink your code as much as it would otherwise be able to. It's easier, and more efficient to just use dot notation.
one last thing, I think I found the error, at the moment, my h1 is position:absolute, if I delete this, the css works, but not with position being absolute, is there a work around is? or is this another error in my part? thanks
Let's say I have a page with a large amount of data on. The data is in state X and if the user makes a change (A) then the page will tell the server by ajax and the server will return the new state X + A to the user. If another user makes a change (B) then the server will return the new state X + B to them. The server is now in X + A + B and neither user is aware of this. How do you handle such situations?
I have a web page that shows a large amount of data from the server. The communication is done via ajax.
Every time the user interacts and changes this data (Say user A renames something) it tells the server to do the action and the server returns the new changed data.
If user B accesses the pa...
@gsnedders for the rest I assume the engine can inline optimise foo["bar"] better then foo.bar by a very minimal change. Something like requiring one less Opcode?
Hi,
Im trying to replace each textnode of the DOM tree using the next method (jquery + javascript):
//Replace each word objective with reposition in each controll of the actual jquery object
jQuery.fn.replaceEachOne = function (objective, reposition) {
var regExp = new RegExp('([\\s]'+obj...
@Shikiryu meh. you shouldnt need to use hasOwnProperty on native objects. That's like checking undefined === true in case someone overwritten undefined
almight @IvoWetzel It's wrong to enforce .hasOwnProperty on native objects. If we never assume the enviroment then we should check for undefined and we should check other paranioa aswell.
@Raynos I know I am beating this to death, but check out the jsperf now, jsperf.com/dot-vs-bracket-technique safari is over 90% when using bracket notation vs dot. Just thought that was pretty interesting, on the flipside, IE9 is slower when using dot notation.
@Loktar I commented on that already :) Caring about the difference for reasons other then style, readability or maintenance is a horrible micro optimisation and thus evil. From a purely academic approach it is interesting to see the differences.
@jAndy make a runTest button that triggers both one after the other and prints our browser / os / performance. Like 2 minutes to code and the easier it is the more data you get :)
@Raynos: hard to do. none of those libs can load images or stylesheets afaik
I'm creating only a library for transfering data, thats actually a different "layer" from what normal script-loaders do
on mobile phones it has an even bigger impact using mxhr, really cool stuff
The thing that really annoys is that IE < 9 does not support base64 data images. There is a workaround using MHTML / CSS trickery, but whooaa really tricky
@IvoWetzel specifically, how you achieve links that change the URL, without reloading the page? I have only managed to do that with window.location.hash
@MarkRogers using OO helps. I have a plugin that feature detects for pages specific javascript functionality and loads the classes that I need on that page. Also inlining page specific javascript cleans up some smaller files
@Raynos - Sure I use plenty of OO, but server side languages have Domain driven design, 2/3 tier design, and a number of other overarching architectural styles. It just doesn't seem like javascript has a larger style like that, but javascript applications are getting larger and more plentiful all the time.
@MarkRogers Another good thing to do is seperate your dev code from your production code. Use lots of little files, use namespaces, packages. Seperate them logically and then use a packager/minifier to dump them all into one big file.
@MarkRogers then your going to have to do your own architecture. There is no in build thing. Look at what people do with node.js and emulate it in the browser
oh lol, it's a server-side javascript framework, that's funny. I guess it makes integration easier, but javascript isn't always the best tool for everything