I'm phenomnomnominal I'm a MMSE Major from Wellington, NZ. I'm 23, and like 89.6% (iftheworldcouldvote.com) of the world, I was praying (to no god in particular) that US would vote Obama. Also, I love JavaScript (see how I kept it relevant there)
tl-dr-update well some new guy showed up and made me bin some shit. we talked about loopholes in the system and helped some guy with his busted script. Vamps and Tramps if you want it in a nutshell. have a good day!
listen see here, I know the C# guys. I'm #5 on the star leader board. That gives me some imaginary internet pull on you. Enough to say you are wrong and I am now allowed to bully you out of this argument. I win! ALL HAIL RLEMON!
A lot of those abbreviations came from phones where you had to push the 'buttons' (That's what phones had back in the day) to get the letters. It made it faster to send a text message, and also allowed you to utilise the limited character number better.
Maybe a strange and green question, but
Is there anything C# can't do what javascript can...
And considering JQuery?
except for the fact that one is clientside, and the other serverside?
Or am I asking a very stupid question now?
EDIT:
to be more specific: I mean web programming, and indeed ma...
@user1739957 Clearly not... It means Let Me Google That For You because all I did was search Google for the damn answer, and you won't even take the time to look up LMGTFY... BYE!
my gf just came in, looked at my mustache and said, "can you shave this? I mean this with all the love in the world, but it looks fucking retarded! get rid of it!"
in your case, yes memory leak is possible, in two cases - bug in browser, or bug in doStuff() (say doStuff() add event listener to element each time when it called) or remove element using $(element).html('')
but for some reason i cant get it to work at one point in an app i am building here. select two adjacent red lines and command click on the canvas to get the dialog
i cant get it to focus on <input type="text" name="entry_mark" id="entry_mark">
even if i do $("#entry_mark").focus(); in the console after the dialog has loaded
@phenomnomnominal I have plenty of complaints about linux too but all of his complaints were so stupid..
He's right about the distros though. that's why Linux will never reach the majority of people. not that that is a bad thing, but it's true. Linux is for the 1%ers in computing lol. so basically that guy is just a n00b
tried to find this in the w3c spec & the MDN & some other places -- anyone know if you can dispatchEvent() the invalid event used in HTML5 input element validation?
@AndyPerlitch setTimeout(function(){ $('form #entry_mark').last().focus();console.log("aaa")},2000); will focus you to correct element, so $('form #entry_mark').last() is fast solution, but i really suggest you to use $(this).find() and close: ... destroy()
From now on, I (and I ask other owners to do as well) will bin any message containing unformatted code. Either learn the chat's markdown formatting, or shotgun with Ctrl+K before sending. Thank you, The Management
I've searched everything about something like "compress html javascript" in the Web, but found nothing to answer my question, but I cannot understand what's wrong. The problem: if you have something like <span>blah<span>blah</span>blah<span>blah</span></span> i...
@mmmshuddup I'd /never/ post a question with the intention of it being downvoted/close-voted O:) - but I mainly linked it to share that WTF moment since it's not the first time someone asked about doing compression/decompression in JS instead of letting the browser do it
@ThiefMaster ha yeah I know what you mean. that's cool you don't ask for CVs and that, I do sometimes but sadly I think some people do it for the wrong reason