Why does this code throw?
// global non-strict code
(function eval () { 'use strict'; });
Live demo: http://jsfiddle.net/SE3eX/1/
So, what we have here is a named function expression. I'd like to explicitly point out that this function expression appears in non-strict code. As you can see, it...
Unless the sound is essential (which doesn't seem so, since you said you will add a control to disable it), I see no reason not to use <audio> and ignore the fact that older browsers named IE won't play it.
Even that he can do
var audio = new Audio();
audio.autoplay = false;
audio.onload = function(){
document.addEventListener('notify',function(e){
audio.play();
});
audio.addEventListener('oncomplete',function(e){
audio.seekTo(0);
});
}
audio.src = "blah.mp3";
and then just do document.triggerEvent('notify'); wherever he wants the audio
I think MS needs to stop pretending there's any good reason to couple their browsers to their OSes and hire a small talented team that expands laterally as-needed with one leader calling the shots reporting directly to somebody who has veto power over the rest of MS's layers of moro... I mean administration.
I'm using Node.js and am creating some models for my different objects. This is a simplified version of what they look like at the moment.
var Foo = module.exports = function () {
var values = { type: 'foo', prop1: '', prop2: '' };
function model() {}
model.init = function(val) {...
IMO, anybody not going with phonegap-like approaches to mobile is going to feel very stupid in a year or two.
A lot of C# devs sure liked Silverlight though. What is with so many Java and .net guys not wanting to suck it up and learn client-side web technology proficiently. <-- observation of a phenomenon, not a blanket statement.
phonegap is a shim imo its not native development atall if u want exhaustive apps go native u have no other option BUT with increasing power of html5 in mobile its stupid as hell not to use it
i mean iOS 6.0 has webAudio .. the friken awesomness
@Abhishek I think it will be longer before people get used to the idea of the same app for smartphone, tablet, and desktop/laptop but at the very least people will feel stupid for not taking a phonegap approach to mobile.
^unless there was something about a given native implementation that simply isn't possible or as easily done cross-platform.
@Olli It depends on what you're doing with them I guess. I don't know what math is being done. How the results are arrived at, or what the results are ultimately used for.
@FlorianMargaine Je m'insurge. AngularJS is a nice way to structure very simple codebases too, and should IMHO be avoided only if the AngularJS code is too big for your requirements. — Cygal3 hours ago
@Olli context is everything with numbers. I don't know what you're counting or how you're counting. If you were doing something with animation coords and pixels I'd do something totally different than if those had something to do with amount of time users spent looking at something, etc...
Hi. I have an ajax service which returns an array of json objects...In my UI i have a html table I have to update. Is it better I do an instant for loop to update the html table rows...or should I do a setInterval and call a function which takes care of reading the array (one element at a time) and then updating the html table...?
@FlorianMargaine If you think that's bad, I can't get my boss to recognize the severity of the issue of having ID's that look like this: 'rate.list.123.rateval'