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14:00
is there var_dump() version of javascript available?
@TheSnooker setTimeout(function() { eval('Array = [];'); }, 0); <--- best way
@kranzdot console.log
@FlorianMargaine doesn't that work on firebug only?
@TheSnooker Array = []; or Array = new Array(); will probably break a lot of stuff.
@FlorianMargaine lol, don't pull that thread. I'm sure he's not going to use Array as his variable name.
14:01
@kranzdot and chrome. And firefox. And opera. And safari. And Chromium. And Konqueror. And...
everything except ie <=8
@OctavianDamiean I don't know, I read it and I don't understand what I should take from it
IE9 is fine.
it was an example..
it works in ie8
thanks
14:02
as long as you have the console opened
someArraynotCalledArray = [];
:D
@TheSnooker anyway, arr = [] is fine, yes
arr = []
[]
arr2 = arr
[]
arr = []
[]
arr === arr2
false
@GNi33 oh that's right...
yeah, it's one of those things that makes you facepalm pretty bad
14:03
-1
A: Is MVC just the SEO of PHP programming?

NatA goatherd or goatherder is a person who herds goats as a vocational activity. It is similar to a shepherd who herds sheep. Goatherds are popular in countries where goat populations are significant; for instance, in Africa and South Asia. Goats are typically bred as dairy or meat animals, with so...

?????????????????
@BenjaminGruenbaum In essence, that most of the time simple and clean is better than faking all kinds of interfaces.
How can I assign for example keyword 83 to x in this code?
<script type="text/javascript">
function displayunicode(e){
var unicode=e.keyCode? e.keyCode : e.charCode
document.getElementById("op").innerHTML += unicode;
}
</script>
<form>
<textarea onkeyup="displayunicode(event);" ></textarea>

<div id="op"></div>
</form>
I did
if(unicode == 83){
unicode === '7';
}
But, not working
@OctavianDamiean That I know, but I don't understand the terminology like 'dishonest'
!!/choose python node ruby C# C++ C
@GNi33 python
14:05
well thank you
gotta get into some more languages
@FlorianMargaine LMFAO
All, I want is, if user types s for example, just to show x instead of 83
@BenjaminGruenbaum You mean in general or in that context?
@FlorianMargaine uhm... wat?
Hello everyone.
14:07
@OctavianDamiean in that context. Keeping things simple and clean is obvious
goatherders
@JamieTreworgy Hey Jamie! What's up? How have you been?
@TheSnooker arr.length = 0
-3
A: Using sounds on distributable app - Copyright issue

Nat"The Lonely Goatherd" is a show tune from the musical The Sound of Music that makes use of yodelling. This song tells the whimsical story of a goatherd whose yodelling is heard from far off and by passers-by, until he falls in love with a girl who wears a pale-pink coat, with her mother joining i...

goatherding issues?
Been good, learning to exist on even less sleep!
14:08
someone's account has been hacked ?
probably
@GNi33 lisp
@JamieTreworgy How's the baby?
:first-child (someone's joke from a month ago ;) is great
@FlorianMargaine i knew you'd say that ;) but I'm fine with python
14:09
#zoey
Can I get a little help here?
Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot.
@GNi33 ^
@BenjaminGruenbaum Dishonesty in terms of, you are creating something in a medium that wasn't made to act like that.
The best reference was the drop shadow.
@OctavianDamiean That's half of programming and computing in general. HTTP requests and documents are not supposed to have state, so is AJAX dishonest ?
@Anton Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
14:13
@BenjaminGruenbaum you use selenium for web scraping right? Do you also use it for testing javascript? Starting a new project, and thinking about stepping up our game on front end testing, and just read about this new stack: theintern.io was wondering if you or anyone had thoughts.
Do I have an invincible account?
My programming language path went from BASIC to C++ to Java, with slight dabbling in C and Pascal along the way. As such, I thought that concepts like “everything is an object“, “every variable is really pointer to an object”, garbage collection, and running on a virtual machine were all brand new concepts in Java.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Depends on perspective and context, but sometimes it can be.
And just recently I’ve been amazed at the power of concepts like closures and first-class functions in Javascript. And now I learn that Lisp was doing all this and more a decade before I was born?? Mind. Blown.
Laters guys.
14:18
@JamieTreworgy I read on intern, I haven't used it much yet though because I don't get what it offers over existing stacks
Sounds like a lot of buzz words
@BenjaminGruenbaum What it seemed to offer to me was convenience versus building everything on my own. We don't currently do automated front end integration testing and I am want to start it on this project but it seems like a substantial effort. Since I am starting from scratch I'm trying to figure out the most sensible way to do it.
@JamieTreworgy If your JavaScript has unit testing to begin with (with Jasmine or Mocha) that abstracts the DOM the integration testing is fairly simple. Selenium works well and lets me test all browsers easily at once, I can execute JS on the page and get the results, I can even pull the HTML and parse it with CsQuery to check for stuff :)
@JamieTreworgy I can ask our testers what they think though, I'm not the guy who does most of the integration testing.
Most browsers like firefox or chrome do a decent enough job to provide debugging info that formal testing is not really ever needed
@Neil That's a bunch of bullshit.
@BenjaminGruenbaum In what way, sorry?
14:28
@Neil If you take your product seriously you must have integration testing. Applications on the web are continuously updated instead of developed and shipped. You must make sure you don't break your program when updating.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I didn't mean publishing web applications without testing
@BenjaminGruenbaum what do you use to make the leap from simple unit testing to automating the test suites across browsers with Selenium? Honestly I'm also trying to figure out if it's worth the effort. We are a very small IT shop at a non-IT company (3 devs) and while there are certainly a lot of times I wish we did better integration testing, our releases are infrequent and most of our complex code has a fairly limited audience.
formal testing is not really ever needed
@Neil that's not true
I meant that you don't need unit testing on a web page
@JamieTreworgy I've got to go but we'll talk about this later
14:30
@BenjaminGruenbaum cool thx.
@Neil of course you do -_-, large code bases in JavaScript must have tests
is there something like inArray for JS?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Let me rephrase.. When I write my own web application, I don't write unit testing in javascript, I use the built-in debuggers only
Then.. perhaps everyone else apparently does use unit testing, I find it unnecessary
indexof?
indexOf is like inArray
14:33
yeah just found it
ty
@DZone So, that was bait, right? We're supposed to get all flamey now? http://blog.javascriptroom.com/2013/02/11/javascript-a-love-letter/
whats the advantage of Jquery's $.inArray() vs indexOf()?
or is there one?
indexOf is absent from IE<9
Actually I would avoid $.inArray
14:37
ah.
it's like $.trim
it tests its target for the presence of indexOf on the prototype and uses it, if there
it's the same as String.prototype.trim, but absent in IE<9
got it
the problem with this is that if you use $.inArray from within an object that has a property called "indexOf" it will fail recursively
14:38
thanks
which kind of defeats the purpose of using it
@JamieTreworgy I don't really get your point, why would you use $.inArray on something else than an array?
If you create an arraylike object, with a prototype member indexOf, and use $.inArray within that property to test the internal array
it doesn't work
why would you use $.inArray on something else than an array?
It is an array
MyObj.prototype.indexOf = function(id) { return $.inArray(id,this); }
14:41
why would you do such a thing:

var o = {};
o.indexOf = 1;
o['0'] = 1;
o['1'] = 2;
o.length = 2;
0
Q: Javascript modules loading with eval()

David FariñaRecently i asked to use eval() for a module function. Now i ended up doing a very weird function which does what i want. I like the idea i made it but im not so sure if this is state of the art, or more, good to build an application on. index.html: <script src="module.js"></script> <script> r...

@JamieTreworgy yeah... why would you do that
Because you are creating an array-like object and want it to have an indexOf method
oh
in this case, using $.inArray is bad indeed
why don't you simply use an array though? :P
Because it's something that has more features than an array, like an ordered list
14:44
what do you call an ordered list exactly?
Forgive me, I find myself moving back and forth between .net data structures & javascript a lot. Yeah an array is pretty much an ordered list. I create data structures in JS a lot for specific purposes that are array-like. If it were in .NET, it would implement the IList interface. Instead I implement the "javascript array" interface by implementing the common array prototype methods on the object.
e.g. the jQuery object is an "array-like" object, it functions as an array but is not actually an instance of Array
@FlorianMargaine this is in my file under "javascript you should never do"
@FlorianMargaine BUT IT GETS WORSE:
@JamieTreworgy yeah but honestly, except for rare cases (I think jQuery is not a good one, because it mixes so many things, i.e. god object), I wouldn't see the use for this kind of "object"
@SimonSarris you have this kind of file?
@FlorianMargaine yes its a collection of things you should never do in JavaScript
@SimonSarris I CAN'T STAND THE SUSPENSE
14:51
that I wrote but never published
Thinking only of the jQuery object as a result set (not the god object part of it)
@FlorianMargaine Isn't that like the Java or C# equivalent of overriding equals and hashCode methods to return random values?
it's an array of dom elements, but also has additional methods to act on the array
var x = { get 1() {return 'lalala';} };

x.1 // this is a syntax error

x['1'] // this returns 'lalala'
that was my entry for that
@JamieTreworgy it wouldn't need an object, a simple array would've been enough
14:52
If you need somethign that is basically an array with a couple extra features, why wouldn't you want to create an object that encapsulates that functionality?
A prototype
@JamieTreworgy then again, I'm rather on the functional side of things :P github.com/Ralt/dom-manipulations
var _3 = { get 14() {return 3.14;} };
_3['14'] // this is spartaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
@JamieTreworgy which makes me wonder if you can do stuff like var o = Object.create(Array.prototype);
gtg meeting. thanks for the conversation...
hi there
is there an other jquery library that does the same as does colResisable ?
14:57
...wat?
oh.
i mean...
i want to make column of my html table resizable
more entries from JavaScript You Should Never Do:
Never use null for the value of a yet-to-determine number. Always use NaN.

Why?
var determineLater = NaN;
var blah = 5;
blah += determineLater; // blah is now NaN because (5 + NaN) is NaN. We want this because we want to know if there's been some kind of error in the making of blah

var determineLater = null;
var blah = 5;
blah += determineLater; // blah is now 5 because (5 + null) is 5. We do not want this because it doesn't let us know that there's been an error (the error typically being that determineLater was never determined!)
(see full text)
but colResizable not a good one for me
@Drwhite why?
@SimonSarris I usually use var blah;
or I don't know, I've never had your use case
@Florian Because it will not resize the full width of the table
15:01
@FlorianMargaine yeah, that should do the same, right?
it resize just columns
5 + undefined //NaN
user image
4
just so fun every time I see it
Where have I seen that guy before?
@KendallFrey Which one?
15:04
The bottom one.
thats david mitchell
comedian
David James Stuart Mitchell (born 14 July 1974) is a British actor, comedian and writer. He is half of the comedy duo Mitchell and Webb, alongside Robert Webb, whom he met at Cambridge University. There they were both part of the Cambridge Footlights, of which Mitchell became President. Together the duo star in the Channel 4 sitcom Peep Show in which Mitchell plays Mark Corrigan. Mitchell won the British Academy Television Award for Best Comedy Performance in 2009 for his performance in the show. The duo have written and starred in several sketch shows including The Mitchell and Webb Situa...
Indeed.
@FlorianMargaine yes undefined works just as well as NaN for numbers
15:06
Would I Lie To You? it is.
@Eugene Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
How does removing a one letter from a string work in Javascript?
var foo = 'text';
say, I need to remove the last "t"
I used s = s.substring(0, foo.length - 4)
but not working
:? so new guy working on an app
@kranzdot don't you mean length - 1?
15:13
asks me if I use libraries to handle timers
@canon yea, I meant -1
im like... dude.. just subtract some dates.. you dont need a library for that
but still not working
have a close look at what you did there
@kranzdot then you're doing something else wrong. For instance, it looks like you set foo = 'text'... but tried to get a substring from s -which probably isn't even set.
15:15
you're probably going to realise pretty fast what's wrong
@kranzdot show us the whole snippet
s is the string, substring uses the length of foo .... whistle
but why don't you just use foo = foo.slice(0,-1)
@kranzdot length - 1 is the index of the last char. If you want to take one more off, use length - 2
or better, use slice(0, -1), as @GNi33 says.
this fiddle pretty much sums it up
When a user presses the backspace, I need the letters to get deleted
that, is the problem here.
I injected s = s.substring(0, foo.length - 1)
Nope, I was wrong... stupid sql substring...
15:19
But, no effects
@kranzdot what is s, and what is foo
@kranzdot var x = 'test'; x = x.slice(0,-1); console.log(x);
@kranzdot or var x = 'test'; x = x.substring(0,x.length-1); console.log(x);
@canon same result.
wait, trying the second one
@kranzdot are you not trying to clip the last letter?
I get 'tes' which I thought was what you wanted
probably the last 2, when looking at his fiddle
15:22
@kranzdot He said "I need to remove the last 't'"
But maybe that was just his sample
Yea, if I was to type abc, and press backspace once, I need to c to be deleted. pretty much, how it works in the real world
but, not from the input, from the DOM, that is outputting it into the html format too
can only twig the fiddle and show me a sample?
you'd need to take the textContent from there, use slice on it, and replace it again
why is this question very hard?
I don't get it
@Loktar LOL
I need to convert every type letters into let's say.. other unicode types like chinese characters, but the backspace is important because, if a person made a mistake, he can erase the letter
15:28
I see
what's 83 for?
backspace?
@FlorianMargaine no, that is just to make sure, converting works
very quick and dirty
@GNi33 === Legend!!
thanks a million man.
not really, this is just a very quick demo
15:30
:*)
do not use this
it's very ugly code
@GNi33 try hitting shift or alt :>
hehe, yeah
@GNi33 it is a bit cracky though, because It deletes two characters so if you were to type sas it will delete everything withing two backspace strokes
@GNi33 == Legend!!
or hitting '
or 4
15:34
as i said, it's a really quick demo to show how you splice a string and get it to display on the DOM
Wow, that is y he is downgraded from === to ==
@kranzdot you need to handle a lot of cases
thanks anyway though
there are a lot of cases that you'll have to consider to make this work correctly
and without us knowing exactly what you want...
15:35
@f
I'd use a new span for every letter, with its keycode as data- attribute tbh
I need help figuring out how to group my form errors all together in one section
yeah, or keep track of unicode-length
this way you can easily check out the last "letter" and delete it ($('...:last-child').remove())
in a array or something, slicing both array and string
15:35
actually...
just using a span for each new letter is good enough
@FlorianMargaine do you know other jquery library like colResizable ?
when you type backspace, you just remove the last child
@Drwhite no
thanks guys, I will do this tomorrow. Can you help me, which I need to learn about JS to manipulate user inputs
@kranzdot something you have to handle is the alt, shift and ctrl keys, for which you don't want to do anything
@GNi33 what about you ? do you know it ?
15:37
@user1897690 Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
how do I do this
@Drwhite Don't ask everyone. If someone knows, they'll answer.
10
Q: Resizable table columns with jQuery

user686605This is the only jQuery plugin I could find to resize table column widths, but it does not integrate well with my table, and has unnecessary bloat (saves in cookies). Are there any other plugins for just resizing columns? (NOT datagrid plugins, please don't suggest those). If not, I'll write my ...

maybe you'll find something there
@GNi33 accepted answer is "colResizable" :D
i.imgur.com/E9fI3.gif (very fun gif)
posted on May 07, 2013

var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); try { var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-3727700-1"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {} Hey constitutional law/philosophy geeks, my older brother has a few

15:41
Someone put me out of my Java misery...
not the accepted one ;)
@GNi33 hah, true
but yeah, there are some alternatives mentioned. I don't know why he wants something different
wow, i feel like dying today
???
dude dont do it
we love you
we all want to have sex with your pinkie
@FlorianMargaine Wow, I can't even substitute a word of that to make it sound worse
15:43
haha, guess that came out wrong :D
nah, I just feel sick
Tag in error: null
headache and whatnot, better go home a little earlier today
THANKS A LOT, TEAM!
!!>j=[o=1]; j++
@GNi33 Drugs. Lots, and many kinds.
15:43
sooo
@Shmiddty 0
I don't have anything to do at work right now
@Shmiddty 1
and it's week end until next monday
sooooo
cya people.
oh, nice. have a great week then!
15:45
How do I do custom error placement with jquery validation on a form
If I create a CodeGolf question, can I specify what people should upvote? (i.e. "Upvote answers that are aesthetically appealing")
@copy for(n=readline(i=-1);i++^n;print(o))for(o=i,j=0;j++^n;)o+=(' '+j*(i||1)).slice(-4) so close, stupid padding.
Error placement for jQuery validation:
0
Q: jQuery Validate plugin Multiple error placement

AdrianPlease help me with jQuery Validate plugin. It is possible to display the error message on custom place? <div class="row"> <div class="cell label"> <?php echo $entry_name; ?> <div> <!-- .cell.label --> <div class="cell input"> <input type="text" id="Username" name="name" value="" tabindex="1" cl...

@SomeKittens No, but you can clearly state the criteria and make sure the answers show that criteria.. if it is in the form of a number (number of characters in program), then most people will vote the best criteria automatically
@lightswitch05 Let me take a look, thanks
15:47
@Neil Ah, ok.
@user1386579 you are the most annoying type of help vampire possible.
in PhoneGap, 12 hours ago, by user1386579
Hi my problem is I am unable to create a simple plugin to echo the value returned from the java; please help me I am getting Falling back on PROMPT mode since _cordovaNative is missing. at file:///android_asset/www/js/cordova-2.3.0.js:1112
in PhoneGap, 12 hours ago, by user1386579
please send me a invitation when u come up with a solution my email id is kavinnashi@gmail.com
don't ping me to join the room randomly either.
troll.
gallery++
wouldn't help.
user2157210
mornin
@copy for(n=readline(i=-1);i++^n;print(o))for(o=i,j=0;j++^n;)o=(o+' ').slice(0,4*j)+(j*i||j) alternate form of the same answer
15:55
Alright, I'm heading home. See you guys!
@GNi33 but it's 10am
user2157210
6pm!
9:28 PM
@Shmiddty I've found some more already
But no indication that 86 would be possible with this strategy
@copy his bytecount would suggest an alternate method.
(unless he's trolling us)
16:03
Guys, how long have you been on this codegolf?
@FlorianMargaine roughly 8 days
I think I started around the time when Zirak made his js1k game
Don't you ever get bored?
@FlorianMargaine don't you enjoy problem solving?
What does it have to do btw?
@copy Which one?
the column padding is what makes the challenge tricky
The coloured balls?
Yes
Hi Friends i am facing a problem with JQuery and fancybox
can any one look into the below issue posted
16:06
we would have been satisfied and done a while ago, but @0mg keeps finding shorter answers
0
Q: Unable to set height dynamically for a DIV inside a fancy Box v 1.0.0 in IE 8 +

Purushotham Reddy PI have a FancyBox version 1.0.0 where certain portion of the content will vary based on the search data. For that I am calling resize() java script method in which I calculate the height of the Div by tracking the respective ID's using $(window).height() and $(document).height() as follows. func...

I was fine with stopping at 90 chars when he was at 89, but then he went to 86
//q='for(a=-~readline(i=0);i<a;i++)for(j=0;j<a;putstr(r+(++j-a?r>99?" ":r>9?"  ":"   ":"\\n")))r=j?(!i+i)*j:i';
//q='for(a=-~readline(i=0);i<a;i++)for(j=0;j<a;)putstr(((i*j||i||j)+(++j-a?"   ":"\\n")).slice(0,4))';
//q='for(a=readline(i=-1);i++^a;print(o))for(o=i*a||a,j=a;j--;)o=((i*j||i|j)+"   ").slice(0,4)+o';
//q='for(a=readline(i=-1);i++^a;print(o))for(o=j="";j<a;)o+=((i*j||i|j)+(j++?"   ":"")).slice(0,4)';
//q='for(a=readline(i=-1);i++^a;)for(j=0;j^a;)putstr(((i*j++||i|0)+(j^a?"   ":"\\n")).slice(0,4))';
(see full text)
All my attempts
the only thing we know (fairly certainly) is that his answer contains " " and .slice(...)
I think with negative slice you always get the wrong padding
16:09
yeah
theoretically you can base the (negative) padding on the next iteration, but the formula required is too long
what if we build it in reverse, then print after both loops are done?
Not sure if that saves space
But try
workin on it
Some problems are so complex that you have to be highly intelligent and well informed just to be undecided about them. — Laurence J. Peter
@copy no progress
16:27
I'm still stuck on how to style my form errors
@benlevywebdesign care to elaborate?
@benlevywebdesign show some code etc..??
Here is my form validation script:
`(function($,W,D)
{
var JQUERY4mval = {};

JQUERY4mval.UTIL =
{
setupFormValidation: function()
{
//form validation rules
$("#form1").validate({
rules: {
name: "required",
email: {
required: true,
email: true
},
subject: "required",
message: "required",
},
messages: {
name: "Please enter your name",
email: "Please enter a valid email address",
subject: "Please enter a subject ",
message: "Please enter a message"
},
submitHandler: function(form1) {
form.submit();
}
});
}
}`
Capitaliza all the jqueries
And the form errors show below each field but I want to group them all together in one place
Here is where my form is live. Just hit send to see the errors
Hi Please help me to solve this issue
0
Q: Unable to set height dynamically for a DIV inside a fancy Box v 1.0.0 in IE 8 +

Purushotham Reddy PI have a FancyBox version 1.0.0 where certain portion of the content will vary based on the search data. For that I am calling resize() java script method in which I calculate the height of the Div by tracking the respective ID's using $(window).height() and $(document).height() as follows. func...

16:36
@benlevywebdesign Just using jQuery.validate?
@DyllenJamesOwens can you please help me to resolve the above issue,....
@Shmiddty Yes
@benlevywebdesign can you give me an example mark-up? The validation script isn't going to be where you're styling your form errors.
There should be a help vampire flag and when a person gets flagged with that several times, he can only see the messages of other help vampires (like cheaters in some games)
@DyllenJamesOwens do you want it here or should I do a pastebin or fiddle?
16:38
@benlevywebdesign do a fiddle (:
ok
let me set it u[
up
@benlevywebdesign errorLabelContainer is an option. Did you read the documentation?
@Shmiddty I don't know if I saw that
either errorContainer or errorLabelContainer should suit your needs.
ok hold on
16:42
I'm going to ignore you now because you asked a question before RTFM. Good luck.
I used to eat ribs with this dude and whatnot.
Mostly, when you see programmers, they aren’t doing anything. One of the attractive things about programmers is that you cannot tell whether or not they are working simply by looking at them. Very often they’re sitting there seemingly drinking coffee and gossiping, or just staring into space. What the programmer is trying to do is get a handle on all the individual and unrelated ideas that are scampering around in his head. [Charles M. Strauss]
is there an easy way in JS to pause a loop and wait for an event before going through the loop again?
kinda like a .step() or something?
@TheSnooker In ES5? no, in ES6? yes
16:52
@TheSnooker 99% of the time you shouldn't do that though, it means lack of understanding of how the language works
@SOChatBot So true man...
I want to make a bunch of Ajax posts but I don't want them to happen until after the user has a chance to look at what's being posted.
so have the user click a button to continue
problem solved.
@TheSnooker So code it exactly like you described it to me, using events and event emitters.
thats what I mean.. but the ajax is in in a loop of items from an array .. so I want to step through the array 1 item at a time.
16:55
So do that, using an event emitter
(or just a callback, but you described it using events, so that should be your implementation too probably)
@DyllenJamesOwens here is the fiddle
but I couldn't figure out how to add the jquery.validate.min.js script
@benlevywebdesign fiddle's not a big fan of pulling in scripts.
outside of what is offered.
so what should I do?

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