I’d like to add some context to the “why” we are doing it. Tim, kindly, wanted to shield me from ire, however, in taking this job I signed up for this. I'd like to come here, own my decision, and deliver this feedback.
Stack Overflow Employees have panic attacks and nightmares when they know th...
@user400654 Hmm, but if I store the file paths to jpeg images in my json file, doesn't that mean I need to use some kind of Node API like reading a file, which might not work on the client side?
@user400654 By "manually", do you mean making a json file with all the information(like the file path to the jpeg images) directly before putting it in the web application?
Some links suggested I convert to DataURI format, but the byte code doesn't look nice in the file. Is that even practical?
This is an app with mainly clinic locator features that will filter out nearby clinics based on postal code, and upon clicking on a clinic tab, you can see text elements such as Clinic Name and Addresses.
Now my client is interested in adding the feature such that for specific clinic tabs, there are also image elements to it.
I’m thinking of implementing a button to the old dialog that pops out, to redirect users to the image element when the clinic they click falls into the list of clinics that are provided with this additional data
I mean it depends on how you want to do it. If you are sure they aren't going to change than you can simply generate (or do it manually) css backgrounds or html img elements.
Paths to the images in a json file aren't going to help because they will refer to the path on the actual instance not the web path (url).
/Users/example/Desktop/image.png vs example.com/images/image.png
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Does anyone know how to fix the error by Line 113? It gives "expected assignment or function call: no-unused-expressions ReactJS". I know that it has something to do with putting return statements in arrow notations, but I can't seem to get rid of it because I want the button to redirect only if my boolean condition is true
I tried to abstract the logic inside the arrow notation by making another method, but it seems like the Link cannot be separated from the Button
This happens because you put bracket of return on the next line. That might be a common mistake if you write js without semicolons and use a style where you put opened braces on the next line.
Interpreter thinks that you return undefined and doesn't check your next line. That's the return operat...
@Wietlol Do you perhaps know of a way to abstract the logic better, I was forced to write it like this because the <Link> cannot exist in another method on its own without <Button>
Is there anything wrong with returning a <Link>? I did that to stop the compilation error , but now the routing link doesn't seem like its working. Don't know where else there could be problems
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$('[data-search]').on('keyup', function() {
//console.table("get into the first function")
var searchVal = $(this).val();
var filter = searchVal.toUpperCase();
//console.table(this)
//console.table(searchVal)
var filterItems = $('span.chevron__text').parent('span').parent('h4').parent('div').parent('div');
for (let i = 0; i < filterItems.length; i++) {
var a = filterItems[i].getElementsByTagName("span")[0];
If you have multiple conditions and you have a different process for each combination, is there anything better than `if(x){` ` if(y){...}else{...}` `}else{` ` if(y){...}else{...}` `}`
The DM is a psychiatrist and the game is actually in his office. The other players are his two daughters, one of which is 14. The other is 21 but has non-regular work hours. And my girlfriend who works 7:30 to 3:30.
But is off today anyway
I just joined this campaign and haven't been to an actual session yet.
Just as well because HeroForge mailed out my mini yesterday
I'm pretty sure I'm in an infinite loop somewhere. I keep getting "Maximum call stack size exceeded" errors but when I try to track where it's coming from, the whole page breaks.
I got it. This is in Vue and I should have had that array in data:{} and have it just generated once when I download the information for it instead of having it in computed:{}.
If I am generating HTML in js, is it still bad practice to use inline javascript event handlers? From my understanding the main reason that it is difficult to manage is because its difficult to manage and logic should be separate. However, this isn't an issue when the logic is generating the view, right?
James is having issues with google search I gotta look into it. I think Google is beta'ing something so the class changes messing up the request on some searches.
@user400654 What is the difference between fetching, which you have just mentioned, and the document Web API like document.getElementsByTagName(), which we commonly see in HTML code?
I'm still rather confused with this front end, server and client concept. Initially the application I'm working on already uses json files and png files in its repository, and by import statements, the application is able to use these resources which are constant and unaffected by the user's actions
Is this what is meant by "available in the front end"?
@PrashinJeevaganth You make a request to example.com. example.com has a server that responds with content. You are the client in this scenario, example.com is the server.
You need to make code for both the backend (the server) and the front end (the client). Both are located on the server because the server will deliver the front end code to the client so they can access your site.
it can be, because you're not really outside of the html file. but you generally don't want to use those methods with react, except for the first few lines where you're attaching react to the dom.
I got the “You may need an appropriate loader to handle this file type” error trying to use the document API inside the React Component, then I just realise I don't even have a webpack.config.js file
i don't understand how those things are related, that error comes from importing something.. but you don't need to import anything to use the document api, it's global.
yeah, you can't just import html files in javascript, you'd have to tell your build process how to handle that for you so that it can convert it into something that can be done in javascript.
I am using variable for find and replace.. like replace_str = new_html.replace(/\s+/g, " ") var find = String('fi_other'+(num)); var replace = String('fi_other'+(+num+ +1));
Hi guys, could cookie be set at front-end? As I tried to modify document.cookie, it doesn't change. It only works when I set up set-cookie header at backend
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I find the following code to be much simpler than anything else:
function setCookie(name,value,days) {
var expires = "";
if (days) {
var date = new Date();
date.setTime(date.getTime() + (days*24*60*60*1000));
expires = "; expires=" + date.toUTCString();
}
...