@DarshanChaudhary Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
Well, I tell you how I started. I spent 3 weeks learning JS via CodeCademy.com, then I landed a dev job that I spent about a year and a half at, then I moved to a new job that I've been at for about a year. I'm more advanced than most JS devs, but I have a long ways to master the language, and this is after 2.5 years
@SJD 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, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
@StephanMuller So. I have a PDF which has a tabular structure. I need to parse each line into my array. As you may notice, it is a matrix actually. However, I'd like to have the code working for any number of columns (if I change the pdf that contains another number of columns for each line)
hm.. okay.. but I'm having trouble when trying to assign values to my columns. For instance I have this:
for(var i = 0; i < rows; ++i)
{
for(var j = 0; j < cols; ++j)
{
myArray[i][j] = "random val";
}
}
Is this possible?
Anyway @SJD this is why programmers practice "rubber ducking". Explain the problem in very simple steps, and often a partial solution will already come to you :)
I love using checkboxes for selections, it's easy to hide them and just show the label without having to re-invent their native functionality and events
When we last left off, we had a handy-dandy algorithm that used dynamic programming to find the optimal solution to a Calculords level in a sane amount of time. The biggest downside was that I still needed to manually transfer a bunch of numbers from the screen to the algorithm, and then painstakingly tap the results back into the phone, one by one. Since there was a puny meatbag involved, t…
Say I visit a website which has the following code:
<input type="text" name="enter">
<input type="submit name="button">
<a id="confirm">Confirm</a>
I need a script which I can run in the Chrome console to press the <a> element then type the text 'hello' into the input field and then click sub...