I'm a little confused with how immutable js treats keys of different types. If you use fromJS() it converts the int to a string but if you use set() it doesn't seem to. Example: jsfiddle.net/1onh8b8s
Wouldn't it make sense to follow javascript and make either work? What am I missing?
pretty much immutable map !== object. Map lets you use whatever as a key but when immutable imports from an object it only imports it as a string because objects only allow strings
I have got a client object that takes the socket.id when a client connects (pushes to a client array) and I'm trying to figure out an efficient way to remove the client when they disconnect, other than for looping over everything and removing once I find a match
Okay so I've set up a socket.io server and I'm calling socket.id which gives me a id for the client, I'm saving that into the map and then when the user disconnects I'm trying to remove that user from the map by id
The above is what my sever is printing out, It doesn't delete the entry from the map because it can't find the id, I'm guessing this is because it changes it to a string? not sure
I've set out an if loop to try and reason as to why this is happening, but I must admit my troubleshooting knowledge in js isn't great :/
I wish the chat had some way of rewarding people for there answers, like I know you can always open a question for the points. But I feel bad always asking questions :/
@lix Sounds like a good plan. 100k loc is not bad, and putting it down for a year of study and then come back to re-read it would give you more experience.
If I have my files inside /src/something.js and I call it on my client index.html being run by node is that likely to cause a mime mismatch and block the call?
yeah I'm not really sure what it means either, I'm considering just having all my logic in a single file, but the PHP developer inside of me wants to abstract shit
oh I agree, like the error I'm getting atm. It's more than likely because I don't understand enough about how files are distributed from the sever I made
Okay I think I found out where the issue is coming from, In node when you create a http server and server an a page the mime type gets read by the server using what I presume to be a regular expression and tells the browser what it's expecting. Because I'm loading in a resource without a get hanlder in my server when it goes to retrieve it there's no handler to send the correct mimetype so the browser knows how to compile the code.
With some tweaking to how I was approaching my express sever and serving the directory as a static component of my app, the files were correctly sniffed. thanks for the advice @Shane
var name = "Jesse"; var habit = "Reading"; var website = "www.antwistom.com"; var stringTemp = `My name is ${name}, I like ${habit}. My website is ${website}`; console.log(stringTemp); name = "Lisa"; console.log(stringTemp);
Why I change the variable, the template does not change it output?
Guys there is a help regarding Object modelling is required : i.e. for the first time i am working on a NodeJS project which is a very simple module wherein we are reading from a queue and Dumping the same in MongoDB, & the currently existing code is a MESS.
So for the starters I have started to differentiate the Business layer and the Data access layer with a Data model entity. Now, I am looking for further betterment. Any idea ?
jQuery v1.7.2
I have this funcion that is giving me the following error while executing :
Uncaught TypeError: Illegal invocation
Here's the function :
$('form[name="twp-tool-distance-form"]').on('submit', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var from = $('form[name="twp-tool-distance-f...
@MadaraUchiha What do you use for the setup? I currently use namecheap.me's "one click" setup from their domain panel, but that forces me to use their DNS, so I can't easily point the domains to my VPS.
@towc since you are virtually the only one I know who visits awalgarg.tk from this room: I have migrated everything to awalgarg.me instead (shared/git domains too). .tk still works, but it soon won't. the email redirection on awalgarg.me works too.
I'm trying to find a cross browser way to store data locally in HTML5. I have generated a chunk of data in a Blob (see MDN). Now I want to move this Blob to the actual filesystem and save it locally. I've found the following ways to achieve this;
Use the <a download> attribute. This works only ...
@Jesse File download is one of the few features that I'd recommend using a library. Different versions of different browsers do it differently and is a headache to support. If you say you only want to support one version of one browser you are free to take apart the library and see how it works for you.
agree with you, I want to import library, but my archtect does not agree, he is very careful for adding library. my code supports Chrome, Firefox, IE. but for Safari, it failed :/
I'm designing an API to go over HTTP and I am wondering if using the HTTP POST command, but with URL query parameters only and no request body, is a good way to go.
Considerations:
"Good Web design" requires non-idempotent actions to be sent via POST. This is a non-idempotent action.
It is eas...
@zeddex 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.