What does exactly happen if you add event handlers via assigning string values to their respective event attributes? e.g.onclick=someFnonclick="someFn ()"
Do they get evaluated, or wrapped or something similar?
Tau (uppercase Τ, lowercase τ; ) is the 19th letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 300.
The name in English is pronounced , but in modern Greek it is . This is because the pronunciation of the combination of Greek letters αυ has changed from ancient to modern times from one of to either or , depending on what follows (see Greek orthography).
Tau was derived from the Phoenician letter taw . Letters that arose from tau include Roman T and Cyrillic Te (Т, т).
The letter occupies the Unicode slots U+03C4 (lowercase) and U+03A4 (uppercase). I...
Nah its not that i think about using it, i wanted to explain why an OP shouldn't assign its handlers via string values. But then I deleted my [answer](http://stackoverflow.com/a/20218815/1487756) because I wasn't sure if it's correct or not
Also, it'll only send something, if you actually return it. So you don't need to worry about more than one message being sent, if you use args.reply, and return undefined.
The iOS 7 safari ships with a horrible bug. The timeouts and intervarls occur by time spent in active tab and NOT by actual time. On MDN since the delay parameter is not clear and the actual delay may vary. As per MDN
In (Firefox 5.0 / Thunderbird 5.0 / SeaMonkey 2.2) and Chrome 11, timeouts ...
I am trying to see if a piece of code works and to do so, I am trying to do console.log. It will log something if the php if function works. However, immediately after the function in which code exists is called, there is a header file that redirects somewhere else. since header is executed before javascript, how would i go about sending stuff to the console to check to see if it worked?
good home made fries in a fryer: cook for 4 minutes at 315, remove from fryer and let stand (or put in fridge), heat up fryer to 375-385 and fry for another 3-4 minutes source: I worked as a chef for a few years and this is how restaurants make them 'crispy' - works best with hand cut potatoes
@KendallFrey If you were a star trek geek, you'd remember the scene where captain kirk takes down an alien twice his size by kicking his knee because he remembers where that species has its "genitalia"