A VA loan is a mortgage loan in the United States guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The loan may be issued by qualified lenders. The VA loan was designed to offer long-term financing to eligible American veterans or their surviving spouses (provided they do not remarry).
I also got the GI Bill as well which I still need to use
@LeoGasparrini 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.
it('should return a proxied function when mocking a function of an unknown type', () => {
let hero = ineeda<Hero>({ proxy: true });
expect(() => {
hero.holdOut.then()
}).to.throw('"Hero.holdOut.then" is not implemented.');
});
I am inputting a Show/hide span tag on my page, in which when clicked will display the paragraph below it, and hide it again when clicked again.
I have previously done this before by setting multiple ID's on the elements i.e:
function pageLoad() {
display();
noDisplay();
}
function ...
@Ricky 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
well you for sure are getting your error now because you're trying to change .style.display on an HTMLCollection. it doesn't have a .style, so you get that error
so to loop through getElementsByClassNames you need to use a querySelector in a for loop incrementing, so I would need to input another for show?, similar to the clicker variable?
@towc this is where i am lost on where to input the loop for "show"... Do i do inside the "for" loop for clicker or seperate it as a seperate function and call back to it inside "clicker" "for" loop?
oh, and I kind of thought about my enjoyment in reinventing wheels: if I make enough frameworks/libraries, companies will surely start coming after me asking if I can reinvent the wheel for them as well, contributing to their base stuff
was thinking of making a library to be used very similarly to the current 2d context canvas syntax, but quite optimized because it can use webgl in the background, albeit quite simple
The first man who, having fenced in a piece of land, said 'This is mine', and found people naïve enough to believe him, that man was the true founder of civil society - Rousseau
@Allenph 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.
Hey all. I'm a back-end PHP and front-end dev. I'm building a service for my PHP API to consume which is a long running process with multiple queues inside of it...all over a cluster of multiple servers (AWS Beanstalk), with an HTTP server as an interface.
I tried to do this with REACT PHP and finally bit the bullet and conceded to use NodeJS.
I was wondering if Node is stable enough as a long running process to run all of my queues and HTTP server as one process, or if I should have one HTTP process which spawns and controls worker processes.
@Allenph depends on what you're trying to do really. If it's stateless then spinning up cluster works great for perf but if your app has to share state then might be more headache to keep passing state from ipc.