@paul23 depends on number of users needing to access, if more then a couple i'd do a db and then have a script run at 12am each night to update db of external changes
Or if it's unpacking but not logging (say to unpack into a function) - that's not possible, in javascript it's actually more common to use a single object argument for a function instead.
Hi, everyone! We've just released Chrome 83 (83.0.4103.96) for Android: it'll become available on Google Play over the next few weeks. This release includes stability and performance improvements. You can see a full list of the changes in the Git log. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. Ben Mason Google Chrome
Hi everyone, is there some kind of name for the web design characters that have been popular in recent years? Like these: https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/z/web-development-project-team-engineers-website-create-webpage-building-ui-ux-design-characters-concept-agency-template-136721707.jpg
or these: https://image.freepik.com/free-vector/flat-people-characters-buying-house-template-web-design_80358-23.jpg
IE: Currently trying to make a button that goes to the next page. If you reach the end of the list, the button then starts creating NEW pages and the icon changes
Turns out that sounds simple but its a piece of shit to do
so now Im screwing with my beautiful flexbox to make room for a new button
I really dont get that... I know some people can make up names and functions out of thin air. I appreciate the idea, but I might just dump this one and create something else
Im making this project way more overrated than it needs to be
@AndreChristoga Pramaditya 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.
Hi guys, I am trying to work something out using the chrome profiler. I am using AMCHARTS which basically takes a long time, but they are chunking the loads. Righ at the very end (as its being inserted in the dom) the whole page locks for a second.
I would like to see this in the profiler but I am not sure what I need to be focusing on. Does anyone have any experience?
@KarelG I've already checked that a year or so ago, did they really make progress? Right now it seems like they try to fix a non-problem. And in doing so create extra complexity
Hello, i'm trying to find divs that are above my current position in the page, but something's wrong and i don't know what This is how i thought it works:
$.fn.isHigherThanView = function() {
var elementTop = $(this).offset().top;
var elementBottom = elementTop + $(this).outerHeight();
var viewportTop = $(window).scrollTop();
console.log(viewportTop);
console.log(elementBottom);
return elementBottom < viewportTop;
};
I can call that using $("#mydiv").isHigherThanView() but it says everything is higher than view..
Basicly the idea is to scroll on a page and get the divs that are above my scroll position
I want to remove the divs that are higher than my current position in the document
I thought if i check for the bottom of the div if it's higher than my current top position then it's fine, but it's not :D Or i'm taking the wrong properties
That function is just to check if it's on top of the scroll, i don't want to remove with it
Does anyone know whether there's a different method required to create an image file in another directory? I'm using streams and pipes but for some reason the img file I recreated is extremely small(original is 1.15MB, copied is 20B)
Guys after a while of scrolling in page even if the dom element is still in the dom the offset will say 0 for all positions, anyway to get the actual position of the element in the dom?
@BernardoMarques 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.
@Permian The reason that we recommend Practical Javascript to people here is that when you're following a tutorial or course, there's a tendency to copy down the code and not think about why the code is the way it is. PJS is a good course for learning the language because it tries to stop you from doing that. Since you already know the language it clearly can't re-teach you; however, you can try to apply the idea to other tutorials as well.
Okay well I'd recommend that between steps, you try changing bits of the code. Try seeing if you can do the task a different way. There are always multiple ways to do things, see if you can figure it out.
The point is that you don't want to learn how to copy down code
Which is a trap that a lot of people fall into
I don't know that site so I can't say how good it is. I don't have any recommendations for a React course.
@BernardoMarques Thanks for fixing your formatting and being patient
The stable channel has been updated to 83.0.4103.97 for Windows, Mac, and Linux, which will roll out over the coming days/weeks. Security Fixes and Rewards Note: Access to bug details and links may be kept restricted until a majority of users are updated with a fix. We will also retain restrictions if the bug exists in a third party library that other projects similarly depend on, but hav…
Hey if you guys like to fiddle, what do you think is the best blendmode to generate a "background carousel" of images?
Where you have a background of images and then an overlay in the main theme color
I've already asked but apparently no one is online in the monring :P. You could check out: test.webasupport.com (and scroll down to see the select for changing).
pre manipulate won't really work, since the images will be dynamically (randomly) chosen from events in our database. (As long as they're marked to be able to get chosen).
I was "so which blend mode you want to blend the photo with?' - "Uh Idk, can you show the differences?"
@JBis They're just random things I found on the internet when googling for popular pictures for our main sports we support right now -- I can't even use those in production.
But yeah it's going to be a problem: the images are dynamically chosen out of a pool based on what the user has often searched for. (And what images are made public display by organizers of events).
Thought I'd just ask here too, since it went on a public facing website anyways. (Easier since we work from home nowadays - and it's "safe enough" anyways).
I have the following 2 files root/functions/util/constants.js and root/functions/handlers/images.js. The following are their source code
images.js
const path = require("path");
const os = require("os");
const sharp = require('sharp');
const fs = require('fs-extra');
const { uuid } = require("uu...
By adding a class to either the first tr or the subsequent trs. There is no crossbrowser way of selecting the rows you want with CSS alone.
However, if you don't care about Internet Explorer 6, 7 or 8:
tr:not(:first-child) {
color: red;
}