I have two elements, <div class="price">420.29</div> <div class="priceafter"></div> and I have two toggles that onclick toggle the class toggle-active. I'd like it so one of the toggles removes 8% off the price and the other removes 10% off the price and puts it in .priceafter and if they're both active, I want to remove 18%.
I have the math right, I just don't have the jQuery to put the values in .priceafter when the parent class has .active
In our workplace we use simple ajax library for getting page data and submitting changes to server ,on certain occasions we do need to change the forms fields values ,now we know that fields can be of any type (dropdown , textbox and radiobuttons etc) and one of the most annoying and tedious task...
@Zirak Yeah, that's a dumb post, I think even he agrees later in the comments that typing isn't a big part of software development iirc
Also, it doesn't teach anything, chances are that if you read a programming blog, you can type
@FlorianMargaine Dude... He wrote (still is) an amazing series on Monads. Is it possible you just still have the old blog? He changed blogs when he left Microsoft a few months ago
@AmaanCheval 20$ is ok if the project is really interesting, or that you learn a lot from working with a better programmer on it. Otherwise 20$ is really being underpaid for high-quality freelance work
I've been teaching myself a bit of web design and development over the past month or so, coming from an CG/VFX background with no prior experience so it's been a bit alien to me to say the least.
I found the excellent Javascript is Sexy guide and have been going through it, but today was project...
Is it correct/ok to call a regular Jscript function within Jquery. I know that it works but I want to make sure that I am using best practice. for example:
$(function(){
$('.click1').click(function(){
dofunction();
}
$('.click2').click(function(){
dofunction();
...
I think I'm done after editing every single answer ^_^
Except the accepted one, which is actually good
And the unsalvagable one
I don't get why people would even think that. I mean the front page of jQuery starts with
> jQuery is a fast, small, and feature-rich JavaScript library. It makes things like HTML document traversal and manipulation, event handling, animation, and Ajax much simpler with an easy-to-use API that works across a multitude of browsers.
@dystroy I think it's funny, more often than not I give good answers and get only a +10, but when I give an answer like "jQuery's .width() accepts a parameter that lets you set the width" it's an instant +60 :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's the same for everybody. Most of my rep comes from the easiest questions that somebody's else would have answered one minute later...
People seem to up-vote answers they understand, usually the simpler the answer is the more up-votes it gets except for rare cases. I think that it's a big problem with SO
The fact is that when you answer something trivial, more people can understand and relate. And maybe it can help more persons even if it doesn't mean you're better...
Up-votes are in direct correlation to exposure. The more people see your answer, the greater the chance of up-voting. Stupid (but common) questions get attention because more people search for them.
@Zirak that doesn't explain the surge of upvotes you gain in the minute following your answer to a trivial question. People are more like "Oh, I know that, he's right, better show that he's right"
@dystroy Point is there's a surge of people in the minute following your answer. There won't be a surge of people coming in on a niche question, because it's a niche.
The only reason I get upvotes for answers like this is because of this room
I have always wished that my computer would be as easy to use as my telephone. My wish has come true. I no longer know how to use my telephone. — Bjarne Stroustrup
@BenjaminGruenbaum After all I didn't really need it like that anyway. I put the element in a var and give the var a width, so that worked. Unfortunately your answer is not really what I need. You explain the basic usage of width() but I understand that. The thing that I didn't get to work was to set the width through a var. Thanks anyway. — Bram Vanroy12 mins ago
@Zirak The hard part is, in the pop song there is a string part, purcussion part, and voice part. I don't know how I can divvy up those accross all the instruments in a band
There's the same theme and direction, but the cover went in a different way. You can take the essence of the song, the harmony and melody, and use them differently.
@CCInc Having it sound the same is an impossibility. Listen to the instruments you have, look at what they're good at. For instance, you can take a particularly smooth singing part and give it to the sax; you can take the melody and give it to the piano (some rewriting needed, of course)
It's not easy work at all, so decide whether you actually care first
The question itself is not much differently from "give me a list of good accordion plugins", it is only upvoted because instead of accordions it is asking about SO's tagging system which is asked on a weekly basis at least
@AmaanCheval It's probably the best cover I've heard. It'd be awesome to combine it with this one: youtube.com/watch?v=lYg_6p1zybc (can't find the album version)
Eatliz are (were) surprisingly good. "Violently Delicate" is a wonderful album.
And I tried listening to some Israeli bands, was sourly disappointed. Asaf Avidan had some gems, especially in Reckoning, but other than that (and Eatliz), couldn't find anything noteworthy.