Yeah based on our convo and email looks like he's just getting into coding, not bad work considering his experience level, seeing as he's working on an app that I've kinda already made, wante dto try and nuture him along a bit
nurture*
Though apparently it involves his university in some capacity, so will make sure I don't let him cheat on a credit
I dont "nurture" people or help them with JS often because I know I learned it in like the worst way possible, and I dont want them to learn it that way too
I mean... seriously... I literally learned by opening inspect element 3 years ago, and copying other people's code until one day I stopped, and actually wanted to write my out
for example, the cors issue you started with, the op didn't say anything about that. That should have been something they were prodded about in comments so that they can come forward with that info themselves
ah down't worry about it, he literally joined a few days ago, and I did get all defensive and make an asss outta myself
if it weren't for the revenger the other week I probably wouldn't have cared as much :P
back in the day Taylor, the easiest way to do this new fancy thing called AJAX was jQuery
as it had one method that had cross-browser support, otherwise you had to do things like client-agent sniffing etc to format the XMLHttprequest for the right browser
i started with plain js, then my manager started this big initiative to find a library we would use going forward. Th efirst one we tried was YUI, which worked quite well and looked good, then we tried jQuery/jQueryUI, and that's what we went with
My first big boy job project was creating a database to store laws per state on different sexual assault statutes, and creating a form to update it, and then displaying them on the state by state site.
mine was a massive ToDo system that supported projects, departments, teams in each department, notifications, scheduled tasks, an approval process, and an entry form unique to each department
that's also the project i used to learn coldfusion
Im working on a Blazor app but want to know how it would be approached in JS. I need a way to cycle through pages when I have no interaction for X amount of seconds. How would that look?
mine worked great at the time, but it had growing pains due to me putting sql queries inside of loops. so as the number of things in the current view got more numerous, it got slower, and slower, and slower. unfortunately, we no longer have a need for that kind of system
wait so is jquery still relative? I mean, just make a custom version of JQ with only the couple things you need for a project.. rather than hooking that hunka junk to your webpage
take my situation for example, I have to maintain an ancient intranet system that uses jQuery already, no point in refactoring a decades for of code from various devs to drop 27Kb
jQuery still prevails in many government software, because the government is slow to update browsers and need to support a wide variety. jQuery is still the king of cross browser compatibility
the other major reason I still use jQuery is for jQuery DataTables, There's alternatives out there but considering I've already learnt the DataTables library, its much easier to keep using it whenever I'm asked to create another report
There are definitely some old machines in gov, but those are most likely hardwired intranet machines. Anything that can talk to the internet has to pass security protocols and those machines don't
> [Co-Worker] But I think I found a way to do it without changing the tab component Since that UI looks waay prettier but I'm not sure you're going to like it
> [Me] 12:40 PM I don't like anything this app does You can't scare me
Don't get me wrong Windows 7, after XP (which we all thought was glorious because of PnP etc) was like reaching the end of a desert after dragging yourself there on your stomach, only to find someone at the other end holding a pair of legs and saying "Why don't you try these?"
I meant to say after Vista lol whoops
got sidetracked by remembering we still have 1 XP machine on the network here
doesn't matter how I try to set it up, it will tell me forEach does not exist on type 'any[] | Custom_Type2 | Custom_Type1' always reversing my types how I've declared them. Lemme rewrite the other way I have done it to show you that error as well. I'm pretty sure it was the same.
Note to self: Don't let yourself get bogged down finishing a new class library that you don't do Exception Handling and code-cleanup until after its been deplyed xD
It's been sometimes since I've typescripted, but I would be surprised if FetchResponses is defined exactly like what comes after the : in the working snippet did not work
oh i'm going to rename the job_categories one, just been trying to get the interface thing so it doesn't look messy but about to just go for the messy but works solution @KevinB
at this point, I don't think typescript array interface work with multi-types for destructuring.
index can only be string or a number. I don't see any way to set each index to be its own type. When I try to do 0: type, 1: type, etc. Typescript doesn't recognize it as an array anymore.
if const [jobs, job_categories, pageProperties]: [Array<any>, Array<Job_Category>, PageProperties] = await Promise() works, then I find hard to believe that type FetchResponses = [Array<any>, Array<Job_Category>, PageProperties] would not work. (or however the syntax is to specify the type)
@jemiloii Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
@jemiloii Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
It doesn't work because PageProperties is an object without forEach property.
interface FetchResponses {
[index: number]: [Array<any>, Array<JobCategory>, PageProperties];
}
It doesn't work because it's not recognized as an array.
interface FetchResponses {
0: Array<any>;
1: Array<JobCategory>;
2: PageProperties];
}
ok, so I tried it summarily online, and if the other types are indeed defined, using type FetchResponses = [Array<any>, Array<Job_Category>, PageProperties] should compile properly
as in, the type FetchResponses, does not represent something that will be instantiated per se, but a collection (tuple, even) that contains other instances
One could think about an interface Responder { action(): Promise<FetchResponses, any> }, but that might not be useful at all. Simple types are often enough
I'm going to use this type for my array destructuring from now on. I have many const [...] = await Promise.all([...]);
most of the time I can infer their type later when I destructure one of the destructured elements. But this time around, since I was using the forEach, it would not allow me to.
They both solved the problem, one edited a bunch of code, the other was install a simple plugin that fixed the issue. I think the question was about disabling hot corners in gnome years back. I oddly keep going back to that question when I do fresh fedora installs for my family.