not being able to see the maze doesn't allow you to make nearly as many heuristic decisions, and you need to rely on a very different part of your intellect to solve a problem that seemed trivial
in a way, this is what a depth-first search looks like in a program: you only have access to information you already had, and the tiles around you
it gets interesting when you consider that humans are a lot worse than robots when accessing information they already had, so this turns into a memory test/exercise for humans
which was the point when I made it
but most people I've seen tend to spam random keys in the first attempts trying to get through. It's not an action game
I probably should have made the timer much smaller than the other number
I find it fascinating though
a part of me guesses that blind people are going to be extremely good at it. Like, never rehitting a wal after the first try, but I dunno
i'm using primefaces.org ...i want to modify their js functions/methods ... how it can be done ? can someone guide me to right direction ... i'm interested learning this not only for primefaces library but for any
As my first answer is already very long and contains valid information, I decided to open a new answer presenting my final approach.
Im now using Primefaces inheritance pattern making the code alot cleaner. Also I noticed that replacing/overwriting the whole bindEvents function isnt necessary, a...
i'im not looking for the solution of my problem ... more interested in knowing about how they extend it
I am trying to enable a check box when the textbox has data and uncheck the checkbox when there is not data in the textbox. $(document).ready(function () {
$("#ContentPlaceHolder1_MainContent_txtPhysicalAddressLine1").keyup(function() {
if ($(this).val() == '') {
$(".ContentPlaceHolder1_MainContent_ckPhysicalAddressReturned").prop('checked', false);
}
else {