I have this fiddle. https://jsfiddle.net/humanware/ztfnzf5b/2/ I want to apply a condition. If user select under 18 radio button and selects something from dropdown I want to create a variable and assign a value to it.
I probably wouldn't use radio buttons here. I'd just make a standard checkbox that says "over 18" or "under 18"....either way, when it's checked, you can use
I need to check the checked property of a checkbox and perform an action based on the checked property using jQuery.
For example, if the age checkbox is checked, then I need to show a textbox to enter age, else hide the textbox.
But the following code returns false by default:
if ($('#isAgeSel...
I have used this code for radio buttons to show and hide div:
$('input[name="selectYourAge"]').click(function() {
var inputValue = $(this).attr("value");
var targetBox = $("." + inputValue);
$(".age").not(targetBox).hide();
$(targetBox).show();
});
I think I can modify it to fulfill my requirement.
I have even assigned both radio buttons to variables like:
var inputUnderEighteen = $('#inputUnderEighteen');
var inputOverEighteen = $('#inputOverEighteen');
@Maciej21592 Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
@Maciej21592 I would use angular-material and you should get a new set of components you can use out of the box that has many (probably not all) of those animations
As far as making them yourself, not sure, I think that would be more in the realm of CSS animations but I'm not sure
@forresthopkinsa yeah I don't really speak it and am not around many native speakers
One question. Does the client get a "detailed" requirement analysis document (use cases, technical, funktional, non functional requirements etc) together with the contract?
I'd say understanding how it animates, when I tried recreating it myself the content that I placed within the circle div just scaled together with the circle
hmm I don't have any resources like that up my sleeve but I'd suggest sharpening your Google-fu skills, I don't know why that would be difficult to find
@Neil you set fire to both ends of #1, and at the same time, to one end of #2, when #1 finished burning, you start counting, and set fire to the other end of #2, #2 will finish after exactly 15 minutes.
Unix time (also known as POSIX time[citation needed] or UNIX Epoch time[1]) is a system for describing a point in time, defined as the number of seconds that have elapsed since 00:00:00 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), Thursday, 1 January 1970,[2].
A computer doesn't magically know the current "moment" in time, right? It must be using something as a reference to get the current time. What is that "something"?
Some guidelines I'd love to see follow below. I know I'm guilty for some of them too, when I'm in a hurry, but maybe we can call people out for it when we see it. I don't think we can get them implemented in code, but we could call people out for not following:
If you close vote a question fr...
The code you share obviously belongs to your company, and you obviously have a policy there that you aren't allowed to share the code in public
You're violating your company's policy (and possibly breaking the law) by posting company code here, in a public chat.
Seriously, narrow down your case, make a small example that demonstrates the problem that you wrote for the purpose of debugging for the bigger problem, and isn't using real parts from your real code.
Basically here is the scenario:
In the JavaScript chat room user A is talking about dummy text (keep in mind the room was pretty stagnant at the time) so I posted links to 7/8 lorem ipsum services (not the text within, just the links) and user B says stop after the first 5/6, so I finish with my ...