@RonaldUlyssesSwanson we have that as well... also we have something to check fancy like return boolean... isthisset? and it returns a boolean compared to shitty isset()
Use it for simple expressions only:
int a = (b > 10) ? c : d;
Don't chain or nest ternary operators as it hard to read and confusing:
int a = b > 10 ? c < 20 ? 50 : 80 : e == 2 ? 4 : 8;
Moreover, when using ternary operator, consider formatting the code in a way that improve readability:
i...
if you can't understand a Ternary operator, that is not because it is too difficult. you are not trying hard enough. There are people who don't understand if/elseif/else, but we don't concede they are 'difficult' or 'confusing' -- we learned them.
I need to hang out with more smart programmers man...
When you choose to learn code straight off the web and have no code reviews or code partners or mentors, things can get quite messy - evidence in my Javascript.
I thought good javascript just needed to be easy to comprehend.
I was trying to learn node.js for handling a database for a website.
I am working on a website for a resort so what I want are
This is the website I am working on
http://chrissunny94.github.io
queries from customers to be emailed to the clients (resort owner)email id
create a sign in and sign...
var a = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1234567890.',
i = 18, j = 0,
b = [a[i++],a[++i],a[++j],a[--i-1],a[i],a[--i-1],a[++j*(j+j)],a[--i-(j+j)],a[j*j+j]].join(''),
f = function(x,y) { switch(x){case(1):o=y;break;case(0):l=y;break;} return y; }, o,l,
c = [a[b](i+j)[0], a[b](i++,i), f(1,a[b](--i-(++j),i-(--j))), f(0,a[b](--i-((j++)+j), (i++)-(--j+j))) ].join(''),
e = o + l,
d = c+Array(++j+j).join(e);
console.log(d);