@MauricioFidalgo 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.
@dylanmaxey you can't detect every single event on an element unless you subscribe them all yourself, or if theoretically you have access to the page first. In practice, just keep track of them
@SomeKittens tl;dr two different occasions I got screwed by a seller. Once was because he tried to over charge me on shipping (agreed to send in a single package, charged me for two packages shipping) and then refused to send the item if I didn't pay the extra. the second time I got a DOA item and contacted the seller who refused to refund the item (guaranteed to work my ass)
@drch 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.
@xcx If you're talking about websites, you're doing everything wrong. Taxi driving is a cool job though, you get to meet many interesting people. If you're writing web applications (like gmail), you're probably doing it wrong, as phenonomnomnomnomnominal says
@user1832483 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 you convert a bytes value to 8 bit binary values? I have >> & << | operators available so for example I have an unsigned byte value 129 then I want binary values in an array like 1000 0001
@xcx let's say you have an app that generates reports on the server, it creates a nice HTML containing all the review data. You can load it on the client side, that might make more sense than loading the actual data and doing the lifting on the client side. It's just loaded once in this example. Using AJAX+HTML is a legitimate choice.
When writing applications it's not.
@O0oO0oOO0ooO .toString(2) , next time use google.
commented would be better. i'm not aware of anything saying that there won't be a browser out there that does something with x-my-old-css-property later on
hi , i want to load an entire page from a url. it will work like an iframe but i dont wnt to use the iframe tag because of the overflow problem. instead, i want to use a div. i thought of using ajax but how to make the scripts of that loaded page work?
If you don't use an iFrame, you'll have an issue with your CSS spilling into the page
also, with preserving the original page CSS
Not to mention that you'd need to prevent the page CSS from spilling onto yours.
Also, you can't load a cross-domain page without using a server proxy. You can open a cross-domain iFrame, however (but not talk to it)
If you're loading a cross-domain iFrame, you can't adapt to its size. Period. That would be a security risk.
If it's a same-domain iFrame, adapting to its size is probably much easier than reseting your CSS inside the content and mangling the content CSS to not affect your page. The latter can be done with scoped styles, and the former can probably be done with shadow DOM. The problem is, the shadow DOM spec is not done yet.
@alexche8 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.
@mikedidthis besides, "Khana" which is similar to "Cena"(if u pronunce it wrong but that could be result of 100s of years of language changes) means food aswell
@mikedidthis To be fair, the real sense of the Trojan Horse story is probably lost. I suppose this was a kind of metaphor, it's not possible to imagine soldiers being so dumb in this practical situation.
A wooden horse with breathing holes and a door and which says "Ouch be careful" when you move it ? You'd let it just next to the conveniently easy to open doors of your city guarded by soldiers only facing outside and not noticing the door is opening ?
It's just like... do you imagine people opening a PPT file sent by their father as attachment to a mail titled "Funny" ? Do you think people are so dumb ?
It's just like... do you imagine people opening a PPT file sent by their father as attachment to a mail titled "Funny" ? Do you think people are so dumb ?
@AAA 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.
Hi, how do I get a "permanent" access token for FB's Graph API? We used to be to able to get anything from a public Page but now it's changed so that you need an access token for anything. I have already used the Graph API Explorer but I think I need a way to refresh the token in JS (?) if I'm going to get JSON data.
Sorry if this is a silly question, but how do you normally generate HTML content for Ajax requests? Do you directly return HTML, or do you return JSON and generate the HTML in JS?
This is the only query I need for the Graph: /feed?fields=message,application,picture&access_token= Now, how would I, in Javascript, refresh my token? It seems the token lasts an hour... also, seems a bit overkill to get a new token every hour.