That follows the standard rules of @blah conflicts, I'm afraid. You would also have got a highlight inside chat for that.
That was a reply; if they had just used the explicit reply (rather than adding the @Mark), it would have known who it meant, but that @Mark was ambiguous so all the "Mark*" w...
"Backbone supplies structure to JavaScript-heavy applications by providing models with key-value binding and custom events, collections with a rich API of enumerable functions, views with declarative event handling, and connects it all to your existing application over a RESTful JSON interface."
The following works as expected:
$(".foo").first().text("hi!")
...because first() returns a jQuery object.
However, if I want to work with the text() method for all matches, I need to do:
$(".foo").each( function(idx, obj) {
$(obj).text("hi!")
}
)
...because each() gives you DOM object...
Hi all,
I'm just a noob when it comes to regexp ..
I know Perl is amazing with regexp..and i dont know much Perl.
Recently started learning JavaScript and came across regex for
validating user inputs..haven't used them much.
Just curious to know how JavaScript regexp compare with perl regexp...
There's the obvious performance hit that would be taken per iteration. Creating a new jQuery object each iteration would be much slower and probably noticeable over large collections. Quite often, you don't need the added convenience of the wrapped object, especially when accessing single attri...
I think $(this).prevObject would be the same the set
and I'm not quite sure why / if context would change
@NickCraver Ok now I think I'm starting to understand what your talking about in reference to .prevObject and .context. Can you think of any reasons why it would be bad to have those to variables point to the same set?
@Ballsacian1 it's not that it would be bad to set them, just that it would he heavy, since I would think 99.99% of the time they wouldn't be used. Also given $(this) is the absolute cheapest way to make the object (ignore the original set)...well that's how they left it. Plenty of times I don't need a jQuery object in the loop, just DOM properties will do, e.g. this.id, etc.
I've implemented bubbling but I've hit an issue (which I knew I would) and I'm wondering if there's a "jQuery way" of fixing it. When binding to multiple elements in the same tree, a propertychange event is attached to the input element for each ancestor that is being bound. So the event fires multiple times
I was considering using event.stopImmediatePropagation(), but this would interfere with handlers that weren't set by my plugin.
This is the fiddle I'm working with at the moment: jsfiddle.net/XKVdt/13 (test it in IE to see what I mean)
@NickCraver I was thinking something like that. The only problem is if the event is unbound from one of the elements later, it would be unbound for all.
> sorry for the delay, NC State/ECU game is on, overtime
no worries, I'm gonna mull it over for a while anyway. Thanks again :-)