a couple of questions: 1- what about other elements ... 2- what about other values ... I might have the attribute data-food on many elements: div's, img's and a td's, where each has a different value. — dsdsdsdsd10 mins ago
Evening. Anybody know what's up with chrome dev tools console sometimes just showing a red <error> and a stack trace, but no more specific error message?
Howler.js was just released this week and it looks like a nice way to control audio playback from your JavaScript application or game. It defaults to using the Web Audio API over the HTML5 audio element for performance and control reasons. For a game, the Web Audio API is really important for precise timing and effects, as compared with the HTML5 audio element which is more suited towards cas…
ahhh today I received my fine because I used my cellphone while driving.. ok alright, no problem.. But this so for the LULZ. penalty = 40€ and fees = 20€ ... ROFL!==!=!=!=!=!=!=!
setInterval(function() {
clear(); // clears the console.
var rows = $('div.user-container'); // all rows
rows.filter(':lt(' + parseInt(rows.length-10,10) + ')').remove(); // remove all but last ten
}, 36E5);
var does not exist in order to provide encapsulation, the module pattern uses the way function closures work to provide functionality similar to private members
Update: As of November 6, 2012, console.clear() is now available in Chrome Canary.
If you type clear() into the console it clears it.
I don't think there is a way to programmatically do it, as it could be misused. (console is cleared by some web page, end user can't access error informati...
what I was wondering is if there was a way to access a closure from outside of it, other languages let you do that through reflection, in java or C# I can access private members through reflection
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't have the heart to argue on the trivialities. Closures are a way of creating a scope. You do not have raw scope manipulation abilities.
@Zirak functions closure are the only way to create scope (well, maybe except the global scope and node.js domains and vm modules), I was wondering if there was a way to bypass scoping in a hacky manner like there is in pretty much every other language I know through reflection
@BenjaminGruenbaum What does reflection have to do with it? Reflection doesn't give you access to inner scopes, it gives you access to class/object bullshit. I do not know of a language that allows you to fuck with scopes.