Often (that's obviously not the whole story) ruby developers feel superior to python developers and python developers think ruby developers are stupid and not practical
How would I go about combining multiple CSS files and concatenating my scripts if they're being enqueued as WordPress recommends? My site is pretty slow and would like to optimize for performance.
@FlorianMargaine Your suggestion about the order of my functions (if you remember), I wanted to explain my reasoning and see what you think.
I started with some functions that summarize the flow of the script.
So, there's "run" that get's things started and load's the feeds, then "feedCallback" that run's next and does a bunch of stuff, and then a final callback when all the feed's are ready
looking at those, you can quickly tell everything that will happen....and the functions that run within them are then orderered from then on.
That being, does it still make the most sense to put each main function's sub-functions underneath them instead?
Also, is there a better way to refer to a "main" function and functions that get called by it (sub-function). Surely someone has better terminology lol.
I just wrote a small program that validates calculator syntax in JavaScript (ie, returns true for 3+5 and returns false for 3+) jsbin.com/omubiz/4 It's pretty bad but it's worth looking at if you've never seen a parser before
This is based (somewhat loosely) on the code written in this railscast. I'm planning to re-use it in different places throughout the site, so I made it a bit more generic rather than based on IDs. However, I'm certain there's probably room for improvement. Written in CoffeeScript.
jQuery ->
...
I'm so upset and disgusted :( My widgets panel has completely broken. Drag & drop features not working anymore. Even i updated 3.4.1 to 3.5.1 but results remain same any suggestions for me would be appropriated :( see the following image........
Plugins i'm using:
BJ Lazy Load//Google XML ...
Guys I tried to convert GLSL fragment shaders to javascript with canvas but it appears to be slow when the canvas gets bigger. I want to understand that why is this happening. Here is the demo:jsfiddle.net/licson0729/eBjQ8
@JanDvorak I expect that the performance won't be vary greatly but when I try to enlarge the preview area frame skips are happening. Is there something I can do for it?
I don't observe any skips. I only observe reduced framerate, and framerate dropping to one half when you double the amount of pixels to render is... quite... not surprising.
i made a app using javascript with jquery....when i click a book image it goes to chapter quickly but when i click chapter then its loading slow as 2sec... iwant it to quick load.......i am loadind data from sdcard from mobile....can anybody help me
If you are creating new DOM nodes or appending them to the document, the browser will need to render them first. Try appending them in advance so that they can be rendered (technically, reflown) by the browser off-screen.
@sam786 The speed depends on the connection speed, server bandwidth, script execution time and many others. As mentioned by @JanDvorak , you need to account for that. Maybe you can try to optimize your script first and see the result.
If you're doing heavy DOM manipulation you might need to switch from jQuery to native DOM methods. They have longer names, but otherwise they're not bad (unless you need to support IE8))
There's no generic algorithm to optimisation that I know of, just a lot of advices and intuition
If you are doing lots of redundant selection, cache the jQuery objects you use.
really, underscore.js just for the memoize function? :P
@m59 did you read the pastebin? it allows you to set different options in the object and thus run it with different parameters several times (for youtube then for vimeo)
Ember, Angular, Knockout I all like since I love the concept of data binding. A lot of people don't and there are other of frameworks, anything but backbone works :P
I mostly use require.js in the browser, I like browserify (and component.js) a lot though, makes a lot of sense
@JanDvorak It makes your write a lot more code, it doesn't provide much organization over vanilla js. It's not as flexible as it should be and it's pretty un-expressive.
Hi @TemporaryNickName I was trying to run your sample program to learn it. Can you please look and tell what error I am doing here.. jsfiddle.net/puXNV/5
To just select it:
$('#class #cost')
As others have pointed out, $('#cost') should be enough, as ids are supposed to be unique on the page. However, if your script is in an external file that can be included in several pages, this nesting of #id selectors allows to target exactly this div on t...