function json(url, callback) {
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest
xhr.addEventListener("load", function () {
callback(JSON.parse(this.responseText))
})
xhr.open("GET", url)
xhr.send()
}
I'm not a fanboy, I avoid jQuery if I don't need it, but sometimes it's just a library that allows you to be extremely productive without worrying about cross browsers inconcistencies. Of course, it means performance loss, so you just have to know when or when not to use it...
So out of curiosity, if you're doing web development and not using jQuery, do you use something else to deal with cross-browser incompatibilities, or do you deal with that youself?
The issues are not jQuery inherently sucking (which it does for a number of reasons, but it also has it's wins too) but "jQuery Developers" inherently not knowing anything about javascript (and usually web for that matter)
@Delarn i'm just pointing out that once you understand more javascript you will open up this, cry a bit, maybe go lay down for a while, cry a bit more, then never open it again.
On this page, I'm using the jQuery Isotope plugin to layout the artists in a festival's lineup. I want the artists to be sorted by their performance date. I've followed the instructions and added sortBy and getSortDate properties to the Isotope options object. The code (in common.js) that creates...
so with this Javascript: The Good Parts what should I get for CSS (I got the peach pit book and it is an introduction) and html5 ? (and for android dev)
when I was four, I fell down the stairs and landed on the corner of a table which sacked me something awful. Which nut did the table make contact with first?
> The plaintiff, Varia Holdings Inc., claims it owns the concept of allowing users to choose emoticons from a menu of options rather than typing them out one character at a time.
A different stylesheet for each menu style. Set a localStorage or cookie when the user selects a style, activate/disable stylesheets. Or, simply a class name for each style of menu: #menu.style1 ..., #menu.style2 ... and so on