interesting. That switch between passthrough video once the machine boots is cool, it means I can plug my monitor into both the real card and the onboard and use the onboard video to control the host.
There is a website where you make a widget and then you click "Generate Code" and it gives you the HTML code to include the JS file. The code it gives you is <script type="text/javascript" src="..."></script>. Do you guys think that including the type attribute in this situation is pointless or do you think it makes it look classier?
@Alesana You're using a shitty WYSIWYG interface to generate code, and you're concerned if you should apply a proper mime type to your script tag? You have bigger issues to worry about.
also, application/javascript is the correct mime type now
> The type attribute gives the language of the script or format of the data. If the attribute is present, its value must be a valid MIME type. The charset parameter must not be specified. The default, which is used if the attribute is absent, is "text/javascript".
I don't really get this. What this guy has: iter.map(item => item * 1).sort((a, b) => a - b).map(item => item + ""). Can't you just do iter.sort((a, b) => parseInt(a, 10) - parseInt(b, 10))?
My students are doing a git tutorial, they're trying to commit and vim is singing them the song of its people - their frustrated reactions are priceless
@rlemon sort defaults to sort alphabetically IIRC.
Next thing you know, mods will get super butthurt and remove my RO--they've already threatened to do it recently
@bi4nchi I'm familiar with the fact that it's a bit of a joke. It's yet another view library with nothing new to bring to the table. It says it's faster than react, but react is pretty fast as-is, and has much better support. Vue is just one guy.
I have yet to see somebody say "so Vue wants me to add inline event handlers with inline html with inline JS to run event handlers," so it's beating jQ and Angular