:first-child is better or :nth-child(1)? Which one is better in old browsers? — Sajad9 hours ago
@Sajad: :first-child is better. However if you have styles that depend on other :nth-child() values, use :nth-child(1) so it degrades consistently. (I might post a self-answered question about this.) — BoltClock ♦53 secs ago
@Abe Say you have :nth-child(1), :nth-child(2), :nth-child(3), etc. If you replaced the first with :first-child, some browsers will display just that rule and ignore the others, and it might look funny
> 4:30 and i haven't finished some new form it's supposed to be online at 9 am and all of this is clearly my fault. i was all like meh, easy peasy. will do it tomorrow
I've become increasingly pessimistic over the years that this problem can be solved by a close reason. No, pessimistic is misleading; I'm straight-up convinced that closing is the wrong tool for the job here. Trying to solve this problem by closing these questions is like trying to defend against...
Shog and I were actually just talking about this a couple of days ago
People are closing useful typo questions because they see the word "typo" in the close reason and ignore the "not likely to help future readers" bit
To riff on Shog9's answer, what if we didn't look at close votes as the way to stop terrible questions like this? What else could we do?
James presented an interesting proposal on Meta.SE last year: what if we automatically closed any question that got below a net score of -5? Give something lik...
I am developing an application with Kinect SDK v2. When User has shiny black trouser foot and knee points of skeletons moving so fast randomly to up and down although user does not move. I can not tell the users to wear non black trousers.
How can I solve this problem?
Thank you for everyone.
Hey guys. Nightly grind around here, stuck for hours on something. Someone was already awesome enough to help me out on SO, but seems like I omitted to specify something, because his answer doesn't work fully for me. Would anyone maybe mind giving it a look? :
@ZachSaucier I asked about use cases - WHY/WHEN to use Web Storage, which is something that's covered very poorly, similarly to many topics out there. Not HOW, which is everywhere. I don't have an use case right now nor I'm in a situation where I'm contemplating using Web Storage.
@StephanMuller Suffice to say, if you are having to follow instructions that carefully that you'd have to copy and paste "vi template.js" into the command line, you're pretty much fucked
@async use localstorage for one domain only over time, sessionstorage for storage for a session (across domains at the same time I think? I've never used sessionstorage), and things like Chrome storage for cross domain and cross device history over time
sessionStorage works only on one domain afaik, but as long as you stay in the same tab it will remember the value when you go to a different domain and back
yup, just set a sessionStorage item while on this page, then went to barbie.com and it wasn't present. then went to this page again and it was there
localStorage and sessionStorage both extend Storage. There is no difference between them except for the intended "non-persistence" of sessionStorage.
That is, the data stored in localStorage persists until explicitly deleted. Changes made are saved and available for all current and future visits...
gotcha
What's the purpose in sessionstorage? Why not just keep something in JS?
@Kitler testndtv (http://stackoverflow.com/users/485743/testndtv) has 11736 reputation, earned -11 rep today, asked 669 questions, gave 35 answers, for a q:a ratio of 669:35. avg. rep/post: 16.67. Badges: 52g 189s 309b
Handlebars template concatenate field attribute value with static & dynamic values
I have the following field in my Handlebars template
<input type="radio" name='myRadio_" + {{model.someId}}' />
How do I set the "name" attribute of my radio button as myRadio_ + {{model.someId}}
when i joined SO, i've been invited by a friend stating "you should join SO! there is a whole community doing the work for you and they only want to get paid in upvotes [laughter]"
@Kitler And this is the problem with help vampires who got started before the question ban became a thing. They have waaaaaay too many questions (lucking out on some no less) for the question ban to even be a threat
When you think of Q&A sites, you think of a place where you come to get answers to your questions. But, where do those answers come from? What doesn't immediately stand out for many folks is that it's not our software that's giving them answers, it's other people that are taking the time to share...
I've been quite vocal about the fact that we're overhauling post blocks, and dropped some hints as to how we're contemplating improving them. The last few weeks of my professional existence has gone into analyzing what we don't like about them, re-visiting what we hoped to accomplish using them, ...
You could use this.get('model') instead of this.attrs.model to get the behavior you expect.
However if you would like to keep using this.attrs.model you need to explicitly reference this.attrs.model.value to get model attribute value.
It's because model attribute is passed with both it's value ...
@Kitler jax (http://stackoverflow.com/users/248521/jax) has 12456 reputation, earned 5 rep today, asked 438 questions, gave 129 answers, for a q:a ratio of 146:43. avg. rep/post: 21.96. Badges: 26g 101s 193b