@RoyiNamir you missed my point on this dude, i wasn't saying the questions were annoying or anything - I was just wondering what it was you were working on that produced such obscure questions
I'm trying to apply a gradient to a border, I thought it was as simple as doing this:
border-color: -moz-linear-gradient(top, #555555, #111111);
This does not work, does anyone know what the correct way to do border gradients is.
Thanks.
Answer:
http://caniuse.com/#feat=border-image
Neither did I; though I understood that CSS gradients are regarded as/are images, so it made sense to assume border-image, but it's nice to have something that corroborates the assumption
That depends on your markup, but the syntax looks fine. So long as your Ajax-loaded/generated content is loaded into a child element of the LessonDivButton element/node
> The .on() method attaches event handlers to the currently selected set of elements in the jQuery object. As of jQuery 1.7, the .on() method provides all functionality required for attaching event handlers. For help in converting from older jQuery event methods, see .bind(), .delegate(), and .live(). To remove events bound with .on(), see .off(). To attach an event that runs only once and then removes itself, see .one()
then you goto .live and you get this
> As of jQuery 1.7, the .live() method is deprecated. Use .on() to attach event handlers. Users of older versions of jQuery should use .delegate() in preference to .live().
I am using jQuery v.1.7.1 where the .live() method is apparently deprecated.
The problem I am having is that when dynamically loading html into an element using:
$('#parent').load("http://...");
If I try and add a click event afterwards it does not register the event using either of these m...
The live() method was deprecated in jQuery 1.7. The jQuery docs now recommend
Use .on() to attach event handlers. Users of older versions of jQuery should use .delegate() in preference to .live().
I understand how on and delegate work, but I don't understand why they are better. live() is s...
wow.... I just took off my shoes.... I really shouldn't have.. :(
ok so add another project to my list of never ending projects - learn about openVPN and setup a server + configure a couple hundred devices to be shipped to clients for plug and play network access.
Software Designer === Network Specialist // apparently this is TRUE.
One of my facebook friends just posted a status with "Someone buy me a little pom", and I did a double take. Is it dirty (with bad kerning) or an innocent dog lover?
because VanillaJS involves writing too much of code even for simple tasks and I shall be focusing more on OOPS concepts in JavaScript in my application
function clearChildren(node) {
while(node.hasChildNodes() ) {
node.removeChild(node.lastChild);
}
}
// bam, now I cna clear nodes like a bauce! no innerHTML no libraries. 5 lines of code that I can keep in a gist or something to use in all my projects.
function writeToBoth(element1, element2, value) {
function writeTo(element) {
if( "value" in element ) {
element.value = value;
} else {
element.textContent = value;
}
}
writeTo(element1);
writeTo(element2);
}
// now you SINGLE LINE is
writeToBoth(document.getElementById('somediv'), document.forms.someForm.elements.someInput, "FOO BAR!");
I just wanted jQuery because I already have it as a jQuery object, and my end result should be a jQuery object, so I was worried about performance of converting down then converting up.
just do it this way and pass the element itself to jQuery - point and case: $(document.getElementById('someID')); is actually 30% faster than $('#someID');
ahh well. @Vap0r either way, if you pass an HTMLElement as the selector, jQuery is quick at wrapping it up - you will not see any concernable performance differences here.
> The innerHTML property is quick and easy to use. But it’s also proprietary and heavy-handed. DOM methods like createElement and createTextNode, on the other hand, are precise and part of a standard but they can be finicky and repetitive to use.
function writeToBoth(element1, element2, value) {
function writeTo(element) {
if( "value" in element ) {
element.value = value;
} else {
element.textContent = value;
}
}
writeTo(element1);
writeTo(element2);
}
// now you SINGLE LINE is
writeToBoth(document.getElementById('somediv'), document.forms.someForm.elements.someInput, "FOO BAR!");
function updateElements(value) {
var elements = Array.prototype.splice.call(arguments, 1);
for( var i = 0, l = elements.length; i < l; i++ ) {
var k = "value" in elements[i] ? "value" : "textContent" in elements[i] ? "textContent" : "innerText";
elements[i][k] = value;
}
}
function updateElements(value) {
var elements = Array.prototype.splice.call(arguments, 1);
function getType(element) {
if ("value" in element) return "value";
if ("textContent" in element) return "textContent";
return "innerText";
}
for (var i = 0, l = elements.length; i < l; i++) {
elements[i][getType(elements[i])] = value;
}
}
One way to solve this is with a genetic algorithm. I happen to have a genetic solver laying around so I applied it to your problem with the following algorithm:
get the distinct tokens from the desired inputs as genes
add the Regex specials to the genes
for the fitness algorithm
make sure the ...
I want to do some work when the user first lands on my page (via a link or directly entering the URL). However, if the user goes off somewhere else and comes back to my page via back/forward buttons, I don't want to do the work again.
What's the best way to achieve this?
LocalStorage would be nice here. Works similar to cookies but only exists on the client side, Nothing is sent with the headers. Others have said the same or similar, I hope this example shows you how easy it all is to do.
So you will set the value of the variable to the identifier for the curre...