What happens to the JS object after they've been created? Is there a way to enumerate those? For example i've created object like this new MyObject. Is there a way to get it?
Dude, if you're just calling functions arbitrarily, their values don't get automagically stored somewhere. I mean, they do, but you don't have access to it, because see last message.
Because its not me who creating it, i'm just writing some functionality for already existing class that is widely used in system and i don't even know all those places where its used
public void InsertFolder(string name)
{
TreeNode node = new TreeNode(name);
node.Tag = node.ImageKey = node.SelectedImageKey = "folder";
if (treeView1.SelectedNode == null) // no selection so add to root
{
treeView1.Nodes.Add(node);
}
else if (treeView1.SelectedNode.Tag != "folder") // selection is a file
{
if (treeView1.SelectedNode.Parent != null) // can we add to parent?
{
treeView1.SelectedNode.Parent.Nodes.Add(node); // yes
(function(lover) {
var programming_language = this;
// but i'm not in love with a window? wtf is up here? we must look deeper!
// the next 300 lines are poking fun at js with an inception like feel all the while professing my undying love for the language
return null; // why not?
}(me));
We have two downsides to the web. One is that it can't drive the hardware as well as the native platforms. The other one is that web applications aren't installed alongside other default programs making it easier to remember what you have access to.
I think shorter URLs can help with the latter. The former it depends on the platform's goals.
How does shorter URLs have anything to do with that point?
> A fat class is a useful class that can have more code than just to do just one thing at a time. So a fat class can and should do more than just one thing at a time, making it more useful than otherwise. It should keep you from duplicating code so you after you have a fat class, you better start using it for everything that it does.
@RyanKinal this guy does not seem to agree with you: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5139618 I do not understand why people don't just comment on the actual blog lol
I just noticed that you have an "a" at the beginning and the end of your alphabet array.. since you don't break out of your inner loop, you end up assigning tempChar to the position of the last "a" + 1.
@rlemon yea I appreciate it I just don't understand how j+1 returns undefined. seems pretty straight forward that if the tempChar = alpha[j] then set tempChar = alpha[j+1]
I keep trying to rely on interesting articles and continually-improving writing skills, when all I really needed was someone to post the link everywhere and spam up the room
@FlorianMargaine this sounds effing crazy man, is this true?
> France's radical Muslim problem is getting out of control in a hurry. There are now entire areas of certain cities (751 to be exact) called Zones Urbaines Sensibles (Sensitive Urban Zones) where even the police can't go so it's basically Sharia law, the native French are violently attacked if they enter without one of the local residents escorting them.