@geisterfurz007 yea , checking if timer have reached a certain time @Neil that is possible but what if when a user stop the stopwatch it didnt stop for whatever reason and the setTImeout kept running , that would screw everything up
ok let me make it simipler , lets say im making an extention that is based on google's stopwatch ( just so we both can check it out) what function i use to keep checking if the stopwatch is working and time haven't hit the target yet ( lets say target = 20 sec ) ?
@geisterfurz007 of course , the problem with the code that if user have paused ( the stop watch ) the function will keep going regardless
so i kinda need to loop over the value of the timer to see if user hit the target or not
You can throw an additional listener on the pause button for example.
Alternatively you can use the same setInterval thing on the element displaying the current stopwatch time to check every second or every 100ms, read and parse the content of said element and use that value.
that would work but only if the stopwatch stopped and worked once user click on the pause and continue buttons on the stopwatch but what if there was a bug ?
@JRick Good, we'll use mine then, because your link doesn't show a stopwatch to me.
:D
Using your devtools (F12 in Firefox; unsure about Chrome, but I think it might be the same), you can select the element on the page that displays the time:
Ideally, it has an id already ("disp") in this case. Otherwise you gotta figure out some way to access that specific element (like certain css classes, etc). Once you've done that, you can go ahead and do the following (might take a moment, hang on)
@Neil that is amazing , thank you so much but I don't think it will be safe using this method , as the extension may stop but the online stopwatch might keep going or the vise versa if internet connection interupted or something
we must keep using some sort of a loop to keep checking the value
@geisterfurz007 thank you so much , sure take your time
@Neil dude that is not the point , we can stop the function in the extension during the internet interruption or server down or something then but we can't stop the hosted stop watch
so one of them might screw up
i rather keep checking the time every 100 ms or soemthing locally
setInterval(() => {
const element = document.getElementById("disp");
const time = element.value;
//get the part we want
const match = /(?:\d+:){2}(\d+).*/;
const seconds = Number(match.exec(time)[1]);
console.log(seconds); //Or check if >20 seconds
}, 1000);
Does anyone know if its possible to run a specific Javascript snippet if a public IP is what I specify? Like I want the server to only run specific JS if my Public IP joins.
@KarelG Is that really more efficient? If you only want seconds for example, you don't need a MutationObserver telling you something's changed in the last millisecond.
@BenFortune Checked for x-forwarded-for and client-ip in the command list / function list built into chrome. Only thing I could see was clientInformation
I want to detect if the client-ip is "blah.blah.blah" or whatever to run a script (basically I want to detect if the owner of the page is on so only I have access to debug areas of the site)
nothing I make is passionately built to do its job to the best extent, like the few anticheats I made were like I said, Just show of concept, and were easily burnt through
Most of my stuff is on github pages, so people can just view its source in the first place lol
I need to somehow retrieve the client's IP address using JavaScript; no server side code, not even SSI.
However, I'm not against using a free 3rd party script/service.
That answer is very interesting, alot of options, EXCEPT... All do about 2 requests per second OR WAY MORE... and pull out wayy more info than i need, I only need the IP address.
lol that still makes 0 sense, im sorry. For some reason I have a hard time understanding the simple "definitions of things" and rather I try looking at actual code
@KarelG Can you help me out here? Sorry if im rather slow, like I said I dont understand the parsing and responsing, rather I just go off of actual code...
So uhh, do you perhaps maybe have an example code?
Parents call me a tactile learner, they say I learn by seeing what others make and editing it myself..
Hmm for some reason it doesnt identify, im no longer getting fetch errors, but its not showing the HTTPS request in the console, and isnt logging the 'my ip is ${ip}!' piece.
Javascript can be quite vague sometimes. It works on some occasions, and other times doesnt work and has NO rendering problems or console errors, making it seem like it doesnt exist.
@KarelG Am I missing something or am I too slow to get why it isnt logging lol
I find it useful for making websites/github pages. having it as the main editor, along with github desktop, and your repo / github page open in chrome. its the perfect editing solution honestly.
it has that awesome plus feature of the folder structures... Its unfortunate it doesnt have built in formatting features for squished code
PowerShell... honestly I dont even have it on my computer, I thought its supposed to be built in, but isnt it like a "better" version of the original shell cmd.exe for windows? I find cmd.exe easier to use
Hey I was wondering if anyone knows how to append css filters to images in a way that allows them to be saved WITH the filters on them?
Like this bookmarklet allows you to invert the colors of websites and iframes. Problem is, if you try to save any of the images without using a snipping tool, it doesnt really save them correctly. hatebin.com/dfmadkqlrb
@0xPrateek 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.
I only do basic bash/shell commands for my personal use (Python/php mini webservers, large scale website shortcuts, large scale .bat runnings (useful when using decryption programs on multiple folders))
If your wondering about the decryption stuff, I work with some cemu (wiiu emulator) files and tend to find game files encrypted as useless .h3 and .app files (You cant emulate straight from those, more or less you require a wiiu executable (rpx, iso, etc))
So in shell, should I move to using python rather than JS
@KarelG Is it possible to run a website purely off of Python? Honestly Ive only really ever seen python being used in browsers when in 3D Scenes or things relative to rendering
similar to how I only see JSON as a rendering tool in websites
I dont really notice python or json in website code often nowadays
mostly JS based
Like is python able to render text and colors and such things as html elements? or is it just another rendering tool.
@KarelG Well it ought to then make docker creation faster. Instead of either doing things in shell, or first installing python, running the scripts, uninstalling python you could do it directly in python. So it's one less "language" you have to take into account.
Well atleast I got a little progress, I managed to get that IP retreiver working, but now I have to figure out how to make it work with IF statements (I already tried and it didnt work too well) codepen.io/SkylerSpark/pen/RzLVKg
I wrote var ip as a public variable to make it global. And then after that i have the getip script. It gets the ip and tags it to variable ip. but when i try to detect it with an IF statement, it fails and says the value is 0 or 1
do I have to set the variable to string to it recognizes values such as 12.12.123.12
...
.then(ip => {
document.getElementById("thing").textContent = ip
//code here, "ip" is set as function parameter
//this code is ran after the promise has retrieved data
})
//this code might run before the promise has finished (will probably if it's retrieving data from a website
oh sorry, my console wasnt open in my editor, it takes up a bit of space
@paul23 so how do I change that to detect a string? Because obviously that fetch command is SOMEHOW able to write the variable as an Ip, yet I cant detect that same very value
sadly this is more of a hobby, and my brain doesnt have the patience to tongue a book or a course on coding. Ive been teaching myself to code for the last 2 years. If I started an actual course now, it would be below my standards, but also too hard for me in areas because I think of it in a completely different manner
i wish people would rather give me direct answers to my problems, rather than trying to teach me what I did wrong, if i made a mistake, id compare the two and see the differences
The problem is: you come with really mundane things, and consistently come with the simple faults and announce them as "major dealbreakers, crimes of the world".
It's quite tiresome to constantly explain simple things, and when you ask some more involved things it comes back to explaining the simple things again.
But to just finish it while I have to rush to the grocery store:
it wouldnt be tiresome if you didnt explain it to me, simply dont explain things to me, in a way, I learn by looking at things. So explaining to me to figure things out myself or give me "hints" really breaks me down mentally
Well the problem is (again): those things are explained in any programming book/online tutorial. So the explanation/answer shouldn't even be necessary (especially since console gives the exact line where the problem occurs).
@TaylorSpark Aside from the fact that I'm on Windows, not Unix, I use PowerShell because cmd is inadequate (e.g. the same reason anyone uses a full scripting language vs a subset of one). PS has access to the full WinAPI and .NET library and is required for some things, like if you want to manage something in SharePoint, for example.