Yeah, I'm using Hana-Code to add PHP code into pages. I'm doing something like that, but its not the same thing. I unenqueue the default jquery, then I enqueue my version and jqueryui and then register them, but for some weird reason it never hits my jQuery($) function.
The thing to remember is WordPress uses noConflict
So any jQuery function you have to use jQuery to call
Basically this code is for an upvote/downvote system and I'm basically
Incrementing the count by 1 when voting up
Decrementing the count by 1 when voting down
If the number of downvotes > upvotes, we'll assume it's a negative score, so the count stays 0
Reverting the count back to what it origi...
A colleague and I were speaking about browsers (using a browser control object in a project), and it appears as plain as day that all browsers (Firefox, Chrome, IE, Opera) display the same characteristic or side-effect from their usage and that being 'Leaking Memory'.
Can someone explain why tha...
I want to make familytree like image uploaded here. Can any one tell me how can I set left and top of div so, It will not overlap on div? I want javascript to set left and top so, It will not overlap on each other and perfectly display.
Please help me.
Thanks in advance.
Actually, I want to...
Okay, well it's a beginning, modify it to your needs? Anyways you should really have tried something and asked a specific question instead of "I need xxx, How can i do that", the ladder way of asking questions is frowned upon here @ StackOverflow, because it makes you look lazy
There is a static (not CGI, not PHP) HTML page (in fact, many such pages, residing in different directories).
I need to store and read cookies for that pages (one cookies for all pages).
I guess, this can be done using JavaScript, right?
I am using Gravity Forms on my Wordpress site, and so far so good. The problem is I have made the page secure (https/SSL), and this is making the form not to work.
It looks like the issue is how the site is trying to load jQuery. There are 23 JS errors on the page, which seem to be due to a fail...
I'll make a confession: I'm not so great with regexes either.
How about splitting up using split? Less concise, but easier to understand.
var myStr = "/private_images/last-edit/image-work-med.png";
var strs = myStr.split('-');
// Change the last element.
...
Florian when you are doing something like a "feed" so you get items in json and makes it into HTML elements. Do you then do it something like this:pastebin.com/DsS4YKPT
I need a confirmation box for Item Adding event on a custom document library, can someone tell me what would be the best way of doing it using C# or I don't mind using jQuery/Javascript plugin either.
Ruby uses the case expression instead.
case a
when 1..5
puts "It's between 1 and 5"
when 6
puts "It's 6"
when String
puts "You passed a string"
else
puts "You gave me #{a} -- I have no idea what to do with that."
end
The comparison is done by comparing the object in the when-clause wit...
why am I getting exception for this code
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
sb.Append("<script language=\"javascript\">");
sb.Append("alert('hello')");
sb.Append("</script>");
HttpContext.Current.Response.Write(sb.ToString());
Holy crap, I think I just understood something about what is so wrong about var that = this; - am I right in saying that an object with that in it's constructor would not be deletable because the object always has a member that is a reference to itself?
So if I did this:
function Thing() {
var that = this;
}
var stuff = new Thing();
stuff = null;
...then the created object would never get garbage collected?
@FlorianMargaine Yes but what if there are methods defined in the constructor that use that? I'm no longer going to use the this.method = function() {}; approach but I want to know where my existing code that uses it stands. I'm just pulling a whole bunch of code over to a Firefox extension where the page reloading does not send code out of scope, and I'm trying to get my head around the potential side effects of various things.
function Cat() {
var that = this;
that.method = function() {
};
// the "that" identifier is destroyed once out of the stack, engine will use its reference: "this"
}
var meow = new Cat();
meow = null; // Destroys the object, garbage collected, no need to worry about "that"
basically, that is just another identifier actually
but it's the same reference as this, so there is no need to even think about it being garbage collected -- we should care whether this will be collected, and it will :)
I have a quandary with regard to exactly how the JavaScript scope chain works in a particular situation, and despite my searching and reading I am still mainly working on assumptions. I was wondering if anyone could shed some light on the following:
var randomCode = function(){
var ridiculousD...
@FlorianMargaine Yes I know, I'm not writing like that any more. I'm just worried about existing codebases. But from what you're saying, what I'm worried about here would only matter if there is a reference to the object outside the object's own members.
I'm having to destroy everything on page unload in FF, but since everything is self-contained - no references are created outside the objects instantiated in the bootstrap, which is in a closure - just setting all the variables created in the bootstrap to null should destroy everything. Right?
> am I right in saying that an object with that in it's constructor would not be deletable because the object always has a member that is a reference to itself?
@FlorianMargaine ...which I do. But they are all contained within the objects created in the bootstrap, so destroying all those objects should mitigate the problem (?)
var menu = document.getElementById('myMenu');
AttachEvent(menu);
function AttachEvent(element) {
element.attachEvent( "onmouseover", mouseHandler);
function mouseHandler(){ /* whatever */ }
}
So what, to mitigate this you'd have to do delete window.menu; (or whatever the parent object is) after the AttachEvent() call? (or just pass the result of document.getElementById() straight in to the argument)
HTMLCollection.prototype.filter = Array.prototype.filter;
var li = document.getElementById('your-li');
var siblings = li.parentNode.children.filter(function(e) {
return e !== li;
});
I like the first-line-trick.
@AndersMetnik depends on which browsers you want to support
@FlorianMargaine Yeh thanks for that. I must admit that a few place where I have removed jQ from my code I have just gone and lifted the replacement code out of jQuery. I know they do things very well, I know it's nice and easy, I just hate shipping all that bloat, and I hate the insane inefficiency of the $('stuff') constructor. Most of the places where it is still used is for animation effects that I haven't bothered to write properly yet.
Here is the most seen way:
if ( ~that.indexOf( 'hello' ) ) {
}
The ~ operator does some magic and transforms only -1 in 0, thus it's the only falsy value.
If you are looking for the active class I would do return ((e !== li) && ((' '+e.className+' ').indexOf(' active ')<0)); otherwise you might get false positives if it has e.g. interactive as well
HTMLCollection.prototype.filter = Array.prototype.filter; var menuBars = document.getElementsByClassName('menu').filter(function(e) { if (e.display === 'visible') { return e } }); should work?
somebody can help: i have to check whether a specific row is the last visible row in the table. where the table may have hidden rows $row.is(':visible:last-child') duz not work