function getCPUInfo() { return new Promise((resolve) => { resolve(); console.log("Gathering CPU information..."); return si.cpu() // .then(data => cpuInfo = data) - no need for this, the promise will resolve with "data" .catch(err => console.log(err)); // note, doing this will mean on error, this function will return a RESOLVED (not rejected) value of `undefined` }) .then(() => { return si.cpuTemperature().catch(err => console.log(err)); }); } // the resolved value
I'm stuck on an AngularJS 1.7.x application; trying to do something I haven't ever managed before (possibly because not possible) -- can you intercept isolated scope changes to a directive? Given scope: { x: '<' } is there a way to run an interceptor/filter on x so that you don't end up with the directive constructor initialized with invalid state?
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Indeed. The idea has been around since gevent,twisted and the idea of green threads
Every thing revolves around context switching which is done by the event loop. So when you asyn.sleep you suspend execution and another coroutine gets a chance to execute
This way you can get as many coroutines to execute concurrently
haha, i agree. I heard async behaviour in java can be done using CompletableFuture but that has more disclaimers than the 26,911 words of European Union regulation on the sale of cabbage
I need help with naming custom events. The events are about tracking an element's position relative to viewport. So they follows as this: peek -> enter -> ? -> exit
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Hi! I am making a small API for my business landing page to collect emails. I want to protect the post endpoint so that it is not abused. How is it possible to make a post request via JavaScript so that the authentication password does not show up in the sources of a web page?
Does it make sense to read the username and password from a file in javascript? Would that come up in sources in the web-page?
Nobody will be logging in. There is literally one field on the page that is an email field. I want to make a post request to my API service with authentication. But I do not want people to see pwd in the javascript sources.
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@neil Sorry if I did not make it clear. Here is the set up:
There is a website. And there is a single field, which is an e-mail field. Anyone can go there and write their email. Javascript on that page will be making a POST request to an AWS Python service to store that email into the DB. But I do not want for anyone to go into sources and then be able to see where the request is made to and then them making requests to that endpoint programmatially. And messing up my db. To stop that, I thought I needed authentication.
I'm not sure what this guy means by declaring var $detailDiv here on the marked answer. Can someone please help. Thanks (stackoverflow.com/questions/1570127/…)
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I understand that in space, temperature is a real issue for circuitry
here, the lowest temperature it'd probably ever get is -10°C, but in space, it can get far lower, and it actually impacts proper functioning of the circuits
// Which is better to get two digit month?
new Intl.NumberFormat("de-DE", {minimumIntegerDigits:2}).format(new Date().getUTCMonth());
// Or:
String(new Date().getUTCMonth()).length < 2 ? "0" + new Date().getUTCMonth() : new Date().getUTCMonth()
// Or am I missing an easier way?
[{"user_id": 586, "username": "jimmy"}]
var allListingDataStr = pageData[i][objkeys[j]];
if(typeof allListingDataStr == "number"){
var resultantData = allListingDataStr.toString();
tr.append("<td>" + resultantData + "</td>");
} else {
tr.append("<td>" + allListingDataStr + "</td>");
}
pageData[i][objkeys[j]] - this is being executed in a for loop and in middle of for loop I am checking the above condition...
whatsoever, I do... even if I change to .toString()... I am getting as undefined only... in fact, while getting the data, the ra…
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I am struggling with a javascript code. 000719751186416140289 << 32 Due to large value it is not returning appropriate result rather it gives 16777216.
I just want to be able to integrate speech to text service that can send commands to a server, It being a watch just looks fashionable something like these services. azure.microsoft.com/en-ca/services/cognitive-services