Basically I have a list that is serving as a playlist, and within the list items they have a 'song' attribute. Thats the title of my song. I'm trying to define a function that starts playing the audio that corresponds to the list item that was clicked
so would it be like $(#playlist li attr('song').val();
I didn't mean to say title, the song attribute is the file name. sorry I know I'm being confusing
@AlexGray Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com or pastie.org
$('#playlist li').click(function(){
//Create AUDIO OBJECT
audio = new Audio('http://localhost/beats/wp-content/themes/AG_1/html_5_audio_player/media/' +
this.val()); // Not sure what the actual value is here, but you need to update what the file that is playing is.
audio.play();
$('#play').hide();
$('#pause').show();
$('#duration').fadeIn(400);
showDuration();
});
its jquery. the $(this)...is that what I can look up to understand that function? I mean I knew what i needed to do I just didnt know the syntax I guess
so what can I search to get abetter understanding if that question makes sens
So right now when I click on song titles, they will play over each other, and little things like the song title/artist name doesnt change. I just need to add those things into my function the same as they are in my 'previous' and 'next' functions correct?
@rlemon I think my mutation observer is firing something twice, or at least I'm getting the same element updated twice sometimes. Do you know anything about this offhand?
yeah, figured there might be something triggering it and playing off conditionals. but I suppose I might not really have a full grasp of the js that he's using,
Hello everyone, I was wondering if there's a way to get information from the web console into a file? Basically there is a list of URLs i want to extract. I know what js code to run and I see a few links from the web console. Can I save this information?
@GregBorbonus Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com or pastie.org
$('#playlist li').click(function(){
//Create AUDIO OBJECT
if(typeof audio !== "undefined" ) audio.src='http://localhost/beats/wp-content/themes/AG_1/html_5_audio_player/media/' +
$(this).attr('song'); // Not sure what the actual value is here, but you need to update what the file that is playing is.
audio.play();
$('#play').hide();
$('#pause').show();
$('#duration').fadeIn(400);
showDuration();
});
hey @Greg Borbonus thank you so much man! Your help got me to a point where I could add all the rest of the functionality my self and now I have a very, very nice HTML5/CSS/JS/JQ audio player.
You rock man!
now if I can add some advanced stuff like a UI for adding the songs instead of manually editing the code, turn it to a wordpress plugin, add sales/download options and email capture and it's gonna be a beat lol
I'm having a weird problem and can't make it to work. I managed to attach mousedown, mousemove and mouseup to my canvas, when I trigger mousedown, it creates a startpoint for a line to be drawn on my canvas, and when mousemove is triggered, it should erase the block that it is writing it and redrawn with the new values.
The problem is that when I trigger mousemove, the block doesn't get redrawn
but it keeps drawing itself on top of each new drawing.
so when I use $(this) inside a function, $(this) refers to the original thing that I targeted in the function correct? and the $() just makes it jquery so I can use jquery functions?
Yeah, I'll just have to learn how to not allow the user to draw outside of a box and if he manages to start drawing inside the box and leaves the box with the mouse, to stop the drawing from going outside
Two weeks ago we released Atom 1.1.0 which was first stable release to pass through the new Atom beta channel. We’d like to keep up the release cadence and get new things into your hands as quickly as we can. Today, we’re proud to announce Atom 1.2 stable and 1.3.0-beta0.
To celebrate our 1.0 release at the end of June this year, we produced a limited-edition patch for people that contributed to the editor leading up to this important milestone.
Since the beginning of Electron, starting way back when it used to be called Atom-Shell, we have been experimenting with providing a nice cross-platform JavaScript API for Chromium’s content module and native GUI components. The APIs started very organically, and over time we have made several changes to improve the initial designs.
Building an Electron application means you only need to create one codebase and design for one browser, which is pretty handy. But because Electron stays up to date with Node.js and Chromium as they release, you also get to make use of the great features they ship with. In some cases this eliminates dependencies you might have previously needed to include in a web app.
Decorations are a cornerstone of Atom’s hackable core. With a simple API, they provide ways to deeply customize the editor and build awesome user experiences on top of it. Up until now, however, there was no way to display arbitrary content between lines of text, affecting the positions of subsequent lines.
A little over one year ago, we announced The Atom Flight Manual. Intended as an introduction to using the Atom editor, it provides information on installing packages, navigating around the editor, and developing your first extension.
Electron 0.37 was recently released and included a major upgrade from Chrome 47 to Chrome 49 and also several new core APIs. This latest release brings in all the new features shipped in Chrome 48 and Chrome 49. This includes CSS custom properties, increased ES6 support, KeyboardEvent improvements, Promise improvements, and many other new features now available in your Electron app.
We have reached an exciting milestone: one million people have launched some version of Atom in the last month. That’s three times the number of active users we had under a year ago at the one-year anniversary of Atom becoming completely open-source.
is javascript capable of storing form information in a database and opening a new link on the press of a button, or is something like PHP a better option
I don't want to sound too philosophical but the way I see it; We live in an imperfect world. A lot of imperfect things are actually beautiful and, even within misery beauty will always be there.
my goal is fairly simple...store email adresses from a form in a database I can look at later to send out 'mass emails', and when the user presses submit a download starts from my s3 server