Nov 21, 2017 22:44
Don't worry. I too programmed with TC++ at university. Back in 1995 :-) -- No offense meant, we all just find it funny.
 
Jul 26, 2017 07:22
Wow... is SO Trump country? The guy who YELLS (bold) that "a constant deluge of garbage that crowds out useful and interesting content" gets highly upvoted. GUYS, one person's "garbage" is another person who doesn't know something and has a QUESTION. How dare they (ask questions)?
 
Mar 28, 2017 11:22
@EdCottrell Please note that I wrote in my question(!) this sentence: I already successfully loaded the icon file into Firefox through its URL --- So what RandomSeed says has NOTHING to do with this problem!! With the direct link I DID get the correct icon!! It didn't help, the browser still displayed the wrong favicon! See my edit to the question, big "IMPORTANT".
Mar 28, 2017 11:22
@RandomSeed This has been covered - please look at the accepted solution. So now we have yet another comment but nothing new was actually said... but hey, it's that spammer guy again! Your previous "answer" was already deleted, you now try the comments?
Mar 28, 2017 11:22
@eth0: Date Fri, 23 Dec 2011 12:53:22 GMT Server Apache/2.2.20 (Ubuntu) Last-Modified Fri, 23 Dec 2011 12:02:49 GMT Etag "12c07fe-c6-4b4c132190e30" Accept-Ranges bytes Content-Length 198 Content-Type image/x-icon
Mar 28, 2017 11:22
@eth0: i can't because as I said it is NEVER REQUESTED. Says the apache log (yes firebug too of course). Also, the CACHE IS EMPTY. I cleared it for the tests and checked with about:cache. Also, those requests may not show up in Firebug, at least they don't here even when the icon is displayed (with the added "?")
Mar 28, 2017 11:22
@Joop: yes, typo, I removed a lot of headers that don't change the outcome (of course I tried that version of the file too).
 
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
@adeneo WTF? Why are you inventing stuff I never said? Why do YOU enter this discussion when all you have to contribute is to invent things I allegedly said that I didn't? Or did I claim the answer was incorrect? It is INCOMPLETE and thereby possibly misleading. You SHOULD explain the difference in JS between when simple and when complex things are passed. Go away, you don't seem to be able to contribute anything constructive in this discussion.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
You are barking up the wrong tree. I reminded - now 7 times? - that you should explain better to the newbie. Instead you went off on a non-issue with ME.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
As I said (5 times?) the difference between passing simple values and complex ones is not mentioned in the comment. Period. And that is BAD. Explain the newbie, not me, and you do a BAD job at what you came to do.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
No (filler for minimum character requirement).
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
@adeneo If you declare a reference a value. But a reference is.. a reference! Hurra, what a surprise!
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
Only that you failed to mention the difference between passing of simple values and complex ones.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
Leaving out that little difference I mention is a BAD explanation esp. for newbies, end of story. I think you have no business telling me anything about what I should read, I seem to have a better grasp than you.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
I have no idea what stuff you now come up with to still have yet another response??? And by the way, a reference is a pointer to a location in memory.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
For complex objects it holds a reference, for simple ones it holds the actual value itself. I don't care how you call it (claiming the reference is a "value"), your explanation for a newbie is BAD if you do that. They will believe the object is the value and it is (deep) copied.
Jan 5, 2015 17:48
If it is a simple type, not objects (and arrays).
 
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
I'll leave it at that.
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
@Cerbrus Please leave the field to TJ. You are increasingly not making any sense. That is NOT the same error message, not by a long shot. Accessing a property is NOT the same as accessing the object! Who gave you that idea?
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
Edited the comment - Firefox
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
@Cerbrus I only get "a is undefined"! (Firefox)
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
Can you give me example code that provokes the error message Cannot read property XXX of undefined? Because I can't get that error no matter what I try.
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
@Cerbrus WHAT??? You just told my answer does not work (in fact it does not) - it is MY solution! My user id!
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
Again: The guy I gave the answer to selected it as "accepted". 12 people upvoted it. Why?
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
So why did they work? I certainly tested it (I did). The guy I gave the answer to selected it as "accepted". 12 people upvoted it.
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
I link to the two questions/answers that my post is about. Okay - edited: Now I added that looking at them is necessary.
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
Fair enough, I edited my Q.
Dec 10, 2014 11:20
This is NOT an answer. The question is why things that worked don't work any more. I link to TWO answers that were accepted and highly upvoted that don't work (any more)!
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Nov 24, 2013 22:50
I always declare all vars at the top of the function that's why my line was/is "for (i=0;..." :)
Nov 24, 2013 22:48
data.items[i]
Nov 24, 2013 22:48
yes
Nov 24, 2013 22:48
an array of objects to be precise
Nov 24, 2013 22:47
data.items=[] - an array
Nov 24, 2013 22:47
so data.items etc
Nov 24, 2013 22:47
data = {"items":... }
Nov 24, 2013 22:47
yes arrays are objects too, in this context I mean "a hash structure".
Nov 24, 2013 22:46
[] is an array
Nov 24, 2013 22:46
what si an array? data is an object {}
Nov 24, 2013 22:46
and use some each() or forEach() method, or a good old for(i=0; i<length;i++) loop
Nov 24, 2013 22:45
you don't want o loop over "data", it is an object {...}, you want one of the properties inside of it
Nov 24, 2013 22:44
yes, you need to see what's actually inside the object, the flat line print works but is a ahrd read.
Nov 24, 2013 22:43
the you ry to eval the object with an implied conversion toString()...
Nov 24, 2013 22:43
you already HAVE parsed JSON, i.e. an object, at the entrance of the function.
Nov 24, 2013 22:42
it isn't, you make it so :)
Nov 24, 2013 22:41
(I mean youtube not google)
Nov 24, 2013 22:41
To start: Go to Google and search for "Douglas Crockford" Watch all his videos in the Yahoo channel. 1hr long each, but man is it worth it! You won't find many (top) Javascript programmers who don't know them or at least the man. Don't worry, he is extremely entertaining even when lecturing about very dry subjects, it will be fun!
Nov 24, 2013 22:39
Remove eval from your vocabulary. There ARE uses for it, regardless of what some people may say, but it's for the top programmers who know everything to decide when it's okay to use. Everyone else: NEVER. :)
Nov 24, 2013 22:37
BE vs AE,, offense
Nov 24, 2013 22:36
No offense, but there are many, many blogs and videos that help you get an entry into JS programming, maybe start there? Chat and stackoverflow are good for specific problems, but this here is hard
Nov 24, 2013 22:35
you place the console.log(data) right at the entrance of the function so that you get the log regardless of any subsequent errors