of course I'll have to abide by whatever the meta consensus is for that community but frankly I think the moderator's reaction was way overblown and personally that her stance was incorrect
"This content should be unique to the document, excluding any content that is repeated across a set of documents such as sidebars, navigation links, copyright information, site logos, and search forms (unless the document's main function is as a search form)." Source
@Micaela change the class then? I'm not sure how you expect anyone to be able to help you when you don't even have an example that demonstrates the problem
I keep reading everywhere that CSS is not case sensitive, but I have this selector
.holiday-type.Selfcatering
which when I use in my HTML, like this, gets picked up
<div class="holiday-type Selfcatering">
If I change the above selector like this
.holiday-type.SelfCatering
Then the style ...
@rlemon so I have an array of ~17,000 objects in JS. They are sorted by their time stamps and the time stamps come in 33ms intervals. But sometimes there are multiple objects with the same time stamp and sometimes there are none. Have any ideas on how to efficiently iterate through this type of structure in JS?
My current thinking is have a var to store the last checked, keep going until the next time stamp is in the future then stop, saving that new time. Once the draw function is called again iterate from that location until the next time stamp in the future is reached
is there a better way with JS that I don't know of?
so the solution looks could be simply inverting the order of the array @ZachSaucier then iterating with for(x = arr.length - 1; x > 0; x--) and remove old timestamps in order using array.pop()
* x >= 0
@ZachSaucier will you need random access on that array?
if you need to just iterate over it, you could use a linked list
function Node(value){ this.value = value; } var element1 = new Node('one'); var element2 = new Node('two'); element1.next = element2; element2.previous = element1; ... and continue
As seen in this example, basic advantage of applying selectors based on relationships, is to avoid the need to specify class or id attributes on so many tags in your document. Is that correct?
The marching ants effect is an animation technique often found in selection tools of computer graphics programs. It helps the user to distinguish the selection border from the image background by animating the border. The border is a dotted or dashed line where the dashes seem to walk slowly sideways and up and down. This creates an illusion of ants marching in line as the black and white parts of the line start to move. Some prefer the term marquee selection, as the effect resembles the chaser lights of a marquee, and this term can be considered a synonym. Popular graphics programs, such as the...
@Neil: You can play around with those ants a bit, here: rossscrivener.co.uk/projects/langtons-ants Try to nest 2 growing squares so they grow > collapse > grow -> repeat ;-)
hi, I have been thinking.. for a responsiveness instead of lets say setting the margin-top in px explicitly for different screen sizes.. can the px be written in terms of em/rem and then for different screen sizes I only adjust the body font-size's?
here, What is the issue, if I add one more property color:blue in #first selector instead of adding new rule p { color: blue; }? This is what, that came to my mind to solve that question
because id will be used for one element in the document.
tag selector p can be applied anywhere in the document
i guess you can do that ... they have said "possibe solution" ... if the style color blue is applied to p then the style from #second can be removed .. since p > #second precedence ..
yeah thinking object oriented way is a little more difficult than it appears to be..
in javascript although I like the prototypal thing .. but its easier when I don't think everything the prototypal way .. Object.create simplifies a a lot of thing
what is with functional programming ... all I see is functions for everything ... and they say it was inevitable for multi core processors .. but how so?
Any LESS wizard can point me in the right direction on how to put the ".zmdi" selector that appears on each line in a variable or otherwise optimize this code?
div.menu-bar ul ul { } Does it mean, Any ul element that is a descendant of an div element(having menu-bar selector) and ul element(that is: ul a child, or a child of a child of div or ul)?
Other than the fact that it's basically option:checked, but why would I ever want to use :selected or :checked by itself if I cared what sort of elements were checked/selected?
I would post a question, but I've probably had more than enough questions picking apart jQuery's selector quirks already
"checked": function( elem ) { // In CSS3, :checked should return both checked and selected elements // http://www.w3.org/TR/2011/REC-css3-selectors-20110929/#checked var nodeName = elem.nodeName.toLowerCase(); return (nodeName === "input" && !!elem.checked) || (nodeName === "option" && !!elem.selected); },
"selected": function( elem ) { // Accessing this property makes selected-by-default // options in Safari work properly if ( elem.parentNode ) { elem.parentNode.selectedIndex; }
return elem.selected === true;
Does this mean :checked is buggy in Safari??? That workaround is completely absent in the :checked impl
(Not that any version of Safari supported by jQuery doesn't already use the selectors API)
Oh, right, Selectors API becomes irrelevant once the entire selector string is invalidated by a jQuery selector. So we can continue assuming selectors-api is not used
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/10/02/can-you-you-sit-in-therell-be-technical-questions/ CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers Can you you sit in? There’ll be technical questions CommitStrip 1443808114
> Judging by your profile I'm finding it easier to believe you have a habit of asking first rather than researching first, than to believe you couldn't find the duplicate question using any three of the keywords css, class, selector, without, space.
I've been working with a lot of frameworks, but, until recently, I've faced ASP technologies and cloud development in different SAAS and PAAS services.
Nodejs is a great tool for a server and web applications.
Play Framework is good too.
Ruby on Rails is excellent.
Django es pretty cool.
ASP looks like ASP.
But, a question came to my mind. Isn't there any sort of automated tool to render the content onto a static website?
Call it, mere Javascript and HTML.
No server side, just plain and static content for the user to interact, thus, publishing the website, and polishing the elements that truly need server side, like logins and queries.
This is something that came to my mind due to automated HTML tools and extensions like Jekyll, Scala or Jade.