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when you are using js split into multiple scripts on a website, is there a "right way" to import all your js files, like pulling everything into a main.js file or etc.
feel like there's always so much to learn with js but every tutorial is deprecated in one way or another
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the problem im facing is that my trigger change on a dropdown i change the value of another dropdown but i am not able to show the value of that other dropdown
$('#icDropDown2').val(data.ir_icID).trigger('change');
$('#IsDropDown').val(data.ir_IcscID);
i am not able to show the value of IsDropDown the icDropDown2 change, changes the value of the IsDropDown
Hi guys,
since I'm new to using react with hooks I have some difficulties to rewrite this using them. Please help:
constructor() {
super()
this.state = {tags: []}
}
handleChange(tags) {
this.setState({tags})
}
render() {
return <TagsInput value={this.state.tags} onChange={::this.handleChange} />
}
I have tried this:
const [tags, setTags] = useState();
render() {
<TagsInput value={keyAspects} onChange={handleKeyAspects()}/>
}
But it does not work
<TagsInput value={tags} onChange={handleChange()}/> is the right one sorry
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hello ? what is the best way to read from a local JSON file ? I read a lot about it online but it doesn't seem to be straight forward at least with js vanilla
some interesting suggestions were to load it as a JS file script.
@LoopingDev Hm, I guess this is possible with an <input id="yourJSONUploader" type="file"/>. Then select the file with this input. In JS, something like this can be used (this gets the contents of the first file you upload):
@SebastianSimon ok I've tested like 5 methods, all of which are with errors but it could be a mistake from my side or because of the CORS Policy , its quite annoying ..
Yes, either "upload" the file (doesn't actually need to go to a server) or do a GET request for it. Option 1 is going to work but requires the user to do something. Option 2 can be automatic but might be limited by how you're serving the site.
@LoopingDev generic.json isn’t an identifier. This is a destructuring assignment, and yourJSONFile is a left-hand side identifier. That’s not the file name.
@LoopingDev ({target: {files: [jsonFile]}}) on the left-hand side means follow the target property (which is the <input> element), follow its files property (which is a FileList iterable), and get its first element (which is a File) and assign it to the variable jsonFile.
@JBis that was the right decision.. seems it's a "smoke bomb" from google pr, google does "stop individual tracking" but instead moves to behaviour based group tracking which is even harder to circumvent: eff.org/deeplinks/2021/03/googles-floc-terrible-idea
@MisterSirCode There are a few Flash games that were honestly amazing. "The Company of Myself", "No-one has to die", "There is no game", "The End of Us" for example are the type of games that elevate the video game medium.
"One Shot" had a very interesting premise - you're a scientist and you are working on a cure for some disease (so topical now...). You have limited time left. You can choose to spend them mostly in the lab desperately trying to find a cure or accept everybody is doomed and spend the time for yourself. The gimmick is that the saves are permanent - if you die and reload the game it just shows you the same ending screen. (unless you delete the cookies).
"Bindings of Isaac" started as a Flash game. "Plague Inc." did as well but it was called "Pandemic" back then. It got some boost of popularity back when there were concerns about avian/swine flu. Pandemic 2 is where we got this from.
So, there were Flash games worth playing. But I still see the loss of Flash as overall good thing.
Yes, there were some amazing flash games, however, they couldve been made in more modern mediums and would probably be way more performant, and way more compatible.
For example, a lot of flash games are already straight moving to WebGL and HTML5
but for some of the good old ones, like Reach the Core, and other such goodies.. theyll probably stay flash forever
its a good thing apps like JPEXS can compile a flash projector into a small exe with a flash SWF, and keep the games running
someone just needs to design a javascript based Flash projector thats sandboxed, and flash could work again
theoretically
I mean considering weve got raytracing renderers in webgl now... I think anything is possible
Its easier just packaging the Flash Debugging Projector (Which can still be downloaded from the adobe website) And then building it into an application with an SWF built into it
@BenFortune Really? Thats interesting, however, I dont see how that could be useful unless you had all the assets of a game and were willing to build it from scratch in canvass or something
Then again, there IS JPEXS again, which can almost completely decompile every form of Actionscript and almost every version of flash, giving you access to every script and resource
@Ashith you can see that it's pulled in by isomorphic-fetch package, which uses node-fetch on server side and whatwg-fetch (polyfill) on client side (as mentioned here: npmjs.com/package/node-fetch#motivation)
so whats JBis trying to tell you: if you don't run your ReactJS code on server side, especially with fetch, it's most likely not using node-fetch but whatwg-fetch or the browsers fetch implementation
React shouldn't be making any network requests anytime. It seems node-fetch and friends are used during building scripts which makes more sense. But even those implementations aren't using the size option on redirect, and even if they were it still probably wouldn't create an issue because they aren't fetching anything substantial in size.
@LoopingDev Generally, you would have a variable in a scope that contains the onload function (so that said variable is visible from within the function) AND the "elsewhere" scope. Then, when assigning the parsed json to that englobing variable, you would be able to use it in that "elsewhere" place.
I have weird grade contrasts... On one card it says "124" (lots of extra credit), and then the grade next to it says "0" (New semester and currently nothing turned in + late work)
Guess it just depends on what Im actually interested in doing
meh, I pass it, but Ive been doing electrical and woodwork in my off time in previous years (Me and my father built a 12x6x12 foot box out of concrete bricks and mortar, we built framework and layed down tar paper / roof tiles completely on our own
So Im already decent ahead in experience... This is just to fill in an extra term for my sophomore year, and learn some more definitions
Isnt that how highschool is for everyone?
just lazily picking the simplest courses and getting through them
Haha I was huge into AP Physics that what got me through HS, then I never took another physics course after I changed my major from Electrical Eng. to MIS
Honestly I think id take any position programming related
even if it just a low pay JS internship, Id take it
I did happen to find a very nice summer-contract position for 15-18 year olds with no degree and 1 or more years of experience in javascript... so we'll see how that goes
and it payed about 18 bucks an hour, far above minimum wage here (7 bucks an hour)
Its promising that I was even able to find a remote job for programmers that are under 18. My parents kept telling me my first job would 99% of the time NOT be what I want
Hmm, Ive actually taken a small training course for job information and application, so I know the basics of in-person-application, but what do remote jobs compare?
Do you know?
Im assuming its something done over a voicechat or a call, rather than a face-to-face application
They're mostly the same (I've only done 1 & got the job). Main differences is no hand shaking or anything like that, and you're in a different environment
They'll either use skype/zoom/MS Teams. The processes I went through was in the first tends to be a screening, then the follow up tends to be along the lines of a task-oriented/behavioral interview
So make sure everything in view of camera looks nice, no distractions for you behind the camera. Look at the camera when talking, leave longer breaks when people stop talking as network isn't as fast as in person, so you could cut them off
Have questions ready to ask when they ask you "Do you have any questions for us". Do some prior research see what you can find about company culture etc. to show them that you are displaying some sort of interest
General process will probably be similar to in person interviews for that company. Any programming-related questions/tasks just won't have someone there with you physically, of course.
@BeerusDev So essentially I should show that I know a lot about what the job entails, and show an interest in working there
@Cameron Hmm, well, considering a lot of these jobs are summer-long internships for people with no official degree in a specific language (and only one or more years of experience in using it) I think I could pass the knowledge screening.
I've been recently looking into getting certified for javascript anyways, so thatll just add to my resume
I guess I could understand that, but the certification organization Im looking into will actually provide and support people getting jobs if theyre certified
so essentially theyll test you, certify you if you succeed, and provide you with an on-the-spot job
Kinda unbelievable but my father's friend got into it, and now hes getting payed 20 bucks an hour
https://mistersircode.com/portfolio Well, thats kinda what I did with my mini-portfolio, but I guess I explained it more with text rather than with a number or a percentage.
@JoeSaad If youre clearing the previous API call, or replacing it with the new response, then it shouldnt be wasting memory at all
I see lots of applications that re-call a dynamic resource / api every 10-30 seconds
@JoeSaad If youre storing the API in a variable, then its as simple as setting the variable to the updated api call or undefined
@BeerusDev Thanks, I got reccomendations from friends on what I could use, and I kinda slapped that together in a few hours, but it works for its purpose
@JoeSaad 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.
30000 is a long time so you should be fine, but with network calls you never know. If fetching takes longer then you may have two network calls going out at once
That's what I usually use. I'm trying to learn grid at the moment. I know it depends on the application, but I think the idea of layout-first as opposed to content-first is very useful
most of the time, if I ever needed a grid feature, it was usually for something simple like a grid of content boxes
but again, flexbox can do that automatically with 3 rules
so hence Ive never had a specific use case where Id need grid
maybe one day I will
@JBis Like, could you provide an example?
For a second I thought he meant 1D like flexbox is like 1D noise, where the only thing you can control is the Y height. However, flexbox can control both axis' of the 2nd dimension
so Im not seeing where grid would be "more 2D" then flexbox
Hi, I have a question if I append files in a array and then upload that array with ajax to my controller, will my controller recognize that array as array of files or just as array of strings?
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@SantiagoRamirez well for one, that depends on your controller, but if the array is made of File Objects, then it should send object constructors in the same form as files
Correct. Files are not an exact "type" however, so itll probably just send an object, now how you parse that object exactly kinda depends, so youll have to do a little more research into it
General doubt about some wifi AP feature. Say we connect to a public wifi (for the first time) via an android phone. The act of connecting makes the phone open a webpage on the browser...I wanna know how that is done. What is the feature called so I can hit it up on google?
Usually these public wifi just have SSID, and no password. After connecting... the user is forced to do some kind of a signup...
@deostroll It's called Captive portal and it's done by taking advantage of the insecurities of DNS and HTTP
when a device connects a request is made to an HTTP site. For iPhones it's http://captive.apple.com. The router will intercept and redirect this request to the authentication page. The authentication page either asks you to pay or accept terms and conditions or whatever and adds the devices mac address to a list of authenticated devices. Once the device is on this list, the router will cease redirecting requests and allow you to access internet.
You can take advantage of this by simply changing your mac address to an already authenticated one. While it'll cause some issues, you'll be able to access the internet without paying/accepting terms.
A captive portal is a web page accessed with a web browser that is displayed to newly connected users of a Wi-Fi or wired network before they are granted broader access to network resources. Captive portals are commonly used to present a landing or log-in page which may require authentication, payment, acceptance of an end-user license agreement, acceptable use policy, survey completion, or other valid credentials that both the host and user agree to adhere by. Captive portals are used for a broad range of mobile and pedestrian broadband services – including cable and commercially provided Wi-Fi...
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user14736908
Is JS hard to learn?
user14736908
Can you import python in JS?
user14736908
Do you need a compiler for JS?
user14736908
JavaScript
user14736908
9:23 PM
Can anyone give me some tutorial where I can start learning JS?
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