In programming languages, closures (also lexical closures or function closures) are techniques for implementing lexically scoped name binding in languages with first-class functions. Operationally, a closure is a record storing a function together with an environment: a mapping associating each free variable of the function (variables that are used locally, but defined in an enclosing scope) with the value or reference to which the name was bound when the closure was created. A closure—unlike a plain function—allows the function to access those captured variables through the closure's copies of...
the reason i say out is because of your wording "closed over", which i think i'm confusing by thinking the variables are closed over. and those variables are those of the outer function. but it is those variables, and the inner function that comprise the closures content, i am understanding.
{
"//": "Some browsers will use this to enable push notifications.",
"//": "It is the same for all projects, this is not your project's sender ID",
"gcm_sender_id": "103953800507"
}
When window is loading IP will generate I want to call the IP in Code Behind page load
JavaScript
<script type="text/javascript">
window.onload = function () {
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.type = "text/javascript";
script.sr...
is there a general name in databases for single arbitrary data?
imagine I was defining a user in facebook's database. Sure, you'd have stuff like "posts", "friends", "photos" and all, but then you'd just have random strings like "fullNames" (plural because facebook keeps every one you've defined), "placesLivedIn" and similar, which should definitely be in their own namespace
settings should be another namespace, although they're technically visual settings, I guess
maybe something like visualData?
(I'm just trying to graph out facebook's database as an exercise)
@Englandismycity Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. Pleasedon'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.
but any function can be a constructor. You usually don't want prototypes to be constructors
this is the common usage
function A() {
this.x = 1;
}
A.prototype.b = function(){
console.log( this.x );
}
const c = new A();
c.b();
however this is allowed, although extremely discouraged:
const d = new c.b();
@Englandismycity have you informed yourself on the XY problem?
yes, you can, but you really really don't want that. If you do, you shouldn't be using a constructor regardless, unless there are some very very specific edge cases, which someone who needs to ask that question wouldn't encounter
are you just ignoring what I'm saying because it doesn't fit in with your ideal vision of an answer?
asking "is everyone else afk" to people who you say might be afk, is not a great idea
can you provide more context to your question?
yet here we are
I might stop typing soon too, if you continue like this
what am I supposed to do with that?
yes, apparently they're afk. Apparently it's saturday, and they have a life
most of them are actually just creepily watching over us over a bowl of popcorn
@towc That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: welcome
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ob.nested is not a thing. Did you mean new ob1.nested?
ok
I'm not sure if this is still around as it's kind of a hack but try logging arguments in .nested
@Englandismycity I did before as well, it just seems like something nobody would want to do
chances are there's a much better way to do it
and if not, you'd have a complex enough system to be able to easily assign the other thing
the other very easy way is just passing ob1 as an argument
@Englandismycity this one in particular is really really bad
whatever you have is already really sloppy
then check if arguments provides you with what you want, but I doubt it
you can always choose not to use new, and implement inheritance yourself, which is discouraged, but again, what you're doing is heavily discouraged as well
he can always just keep 5 accounts at a time and give himself 4 upvotes. At that point, clicking on all of the upvoters/upvotes to find out what accounts they are won't even be the least bit enjoyable
I'm loving it, but mostly because I'm a fanboy and doesn't know what he's doing most of the time when it comes to linux
@MadaraUchiha quite a few native applications expect to be kept at their initial size, which doesn't happen in tiling managers unless you add specific rules
or rather, put the first script in the html, then put the contents of second script in the componentDidMount (or something) hook of the component in which that div would be
@LWChris Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. Pleasedon'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.