For coping to the clipboard I'm using Zero Clipboard, recommended by this answer.
The code works perfectly fine when used in this form.
<div id="d_clip_button" style="background: #FFFFCC;">
Click to copy
</div>
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript">
...
data: function( elem, name, data ) {
if ( !jQuery.acceptData( elem ) ) {
return;
}
elem = elem == window ? windowData : elem;
Copied directly from the jQuery source.
Why is it not safe to use elem === window?
Why does jQuery use type coercion on the window object?
For coping to the clipboard I'm using Zero Clipboard, recommended by this answer.
The code works perfectly fine when used in this form.
<div id="d_clip_button" style="background: #FFFFCC;">
Click to copy
</div>
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript">
...
@yijiang im trying to before ajax request $('.removeAlbum').unbind('click'); and in the success of ajax request, $('.removeAlbum').bind('click');.. but then it doesnt run the function that its inside
Yet another installment of the weekly code-bowling game as the previous incarnation is over a week old and fairly well explored by now. As a refresher:
Code-Bowling is a challenge for
writing the most obscure, unoptimized,
horrific and bastardized code
possible. Basically, the exact
o...
I've recently discovered that there is a const keyword in JS. Is this a new ES5 thing? It seems to be the same as var, but triggers a TypeError if the variable is already declared. In non-strict mode, it only triggers on built-in variables, but in strict mode, you can even check for jQuery, like this:
Hey all, this may sound like a stupid question, but why is the slice method only a method of an Array object. The reason why I ask is because if you want to use it for the arguments property of function object, or a string, or an object, or a number, you are forced to use Array.prototype.slice.call(). And by doing that, you can pass in any type of primitive or object into it. So why not just default it as a method of all primitive and objects?
function Core(){
var obj = {a : 'a', b : 'b'}; var num = 1; var string = 'aff';
console.log(typeof arguments);//Object console.log(arguments instanceof Array);//false var args1 = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments); console.log(args1); var args2 = Array.prototype.slice.call(obj); console.log(args2); var args3 = Array.prototype.slice.call(num); console.log(args3); var args4 = Array.prototype.slice.call(string); console.log(args4);
var args = arguments.slice(0); //arguments.slice is not a function
I mean I know that primitives can't have methods, but I know behind the scenes when you call a method on primitive, there's a corresponding object for that primitive that has a bunch of methods prototypes. So why not just add it to those prototype methods by default rather than forcing somoeone to use prototype.slice.call?
If my understanding of apply is correct, the fact that alien is local scope and not global scope now, and there's the sayHi method within that scope, it should work.
I need a 4 character Hash. At the Moment I am substr'ing first 4 characters of md5() hash. I am hashing a <= 80 characters long string. would that lead to collision ? or how much is teh chance of collision ? assuming I'll hash < 65,536 (16^4) different elements.
It's under the section titled Function Application (Currying)
His point is that by using sayHi.apply(alien, ['hello']) - that there is a sayHi method of the alien object and since we specify alien as the scope using apply, then the method should be repointed to this object where it would be found.
Is his interpretation of the apply() method incorrect?
Because this does not work in Firefox at all and I haven't tested it in any other browser.
I think the idea was that alien is an object in the global scope and that apply method is called in the global scope, so that it can see alien and then force "this" to refer to alien, and therefore the sayHi method would refer to the alien object, where it is defined.
I copy and paste this from a website: The apply method allows you to call a function and specify what the keyword this will refer to within the context of that function. The thisArg argument should be an object. Within the context of the function being called, this will refer to thisArg. The second argument to the apply method is an array.
So based on that definition, Soyan Stefanov's code block should indeed work. But like you saw, none of the browsers support it.
Also, to the first topic I mentioned earlier, I think the reason why slice is not a default method of all object instances (Array, Number, String, etc) is because the designers of the language wanted to make the code consise and figured that if you want to access the method for another instance, then you just have to use call rather than having them duplicate the same method in multiple constructors - forcing the language itself to be larger.
Hmm. If I'm using SEChatModifications, I need to delete the `$.livequery.run()`part and call that function manually, this way, the chat works properly.
@coure06 You can use screen.availHeight, though it's better to use window.innerHeight. But you should make it 5 or 10 pixels smaller anyway, to avoid unneccessary scrollbars. Though it's better to use
> When you search for help online, one of the first results is often W3Schools (which I'm explicitly not linking to here). The short version is that it sucks. It's full of errors, it's missing information, and while it's not 100% useless it isn't a good resource. Avoid it. For the long version, visit W3Fools, a site put together by the jQuery team (and some other helpers).