Search Results

Search found 27606 results on 1105 pages for 'javascript disabled'.

Page 61/1105 | < Previous Page | 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68  | Next Page >

  • Problem with type coercion and string concatenation in JavaScript in Greasemonkey script on Firefox

    - by Yi Jiang
    I'm creating a GreaseMonkey script to improve the user interface of the 10k tools Stack Overflow uses. I have encountered an unreproducible and frankly bizarre problem that has confounded me and the others in the JavaScript room on SO Chat. We have yet to find the cause after several lengthy debugging sessions. The problematic script can be found here. Source - Install The problem occurs at line 85, the line after the 'vodoo' comment: return (t + ' (' + +(+f.offensive + +f.spam) + ')'); It might look a little weird, but the + in front of the two variables and the inner bracket is for type coercion, the inner middle + is for addition, and the other ones are for concatenation. Nothing special, but observant reader might note that type coercion on the inner bracket is unnecessary, since both are already type coerced to numbers, and type coercing result is useless when they get concatenated into a string anyway. Not so! Removing the + breaks the script, causing f.offensive and f.spam to be concatenated instead of added together. Adding further console.log only makes things more confusing: console.log(f.offensive + f.spam); // 50 console.log('' + (+f.offensive + +f.spam)); // 5, but returning this yields 50 somehow console.log('' + (+f.offensive + +f.spam) + ''); // 50 Source: http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/203261#203261 The problem is that this is unreproducible - running scripts like console.log('a' + (+'3' + +'1') + 'b'); in the Firebug console yields the correct result, as does (function(){ return 'a' + (+'3' + +'1') + 'b'; })(); Even pulling out large chunks of the code and running them in the console does not reproduce this bug: $('.post-menu a[id^=flag-post-]').each(function(){ var f = {offensive: '4', spam: '1'}; if(f){ $(this).text(function(i, t){ // Vodoo - please do not remove the '+' in front of the inner bracket return (t + ' (' + +(+f.offensive + +f.spam) + ')'); }); } }); Tim Stone in the chatroom has reproduction instruction for those who are below 10k. This bug only appears in Firefox - Chrome does not appear to exhibit this problem, leading me to believe that this may be a problem with either Firefox's JavaScript engine, or the Greasemonkey add-on. Am I right? I can be found in the JavaScript room if you want more detail and/or want to discuss this.

    Read the article

  • stopping backspace on multiple browsers using jQuery

    - by jboyd
    I am attempting to stop a backspace keydown event from being handled by browsers, I'm using the jquery library, so I need to get the original event, but on some browsers (firefox at least) I get an error when trying to set the original events keyCode = 0, it gives and error saying that only a getter exists for that property. function blockBackspace(event) { var altKey = event.originalEvent.altKey; var srcElementType = event.originalEvent.srcElement; if( (altKey) || ((event.keyCode == 8) && (srcElementType != "text" && srcElementType != "textarea" && srcElementType != "password")) || ((event.ctrlKey) && ((event.keyCode == 78) || (event.keyCode == 82)) ) || (event.keyCode == 116) ) { event.keyCode = 0; event.returnValue = false; event.originalEvent.keyCode = 0; event.originalEvent.returnValue = false; //sets process backspaceFlag to keep multiple handlers from removing text processBackspace = true; } } so I'm not exactly sure what to do next, every solution I find yields more problems. There must be ways around this problem or else other text areas (that's kind of what I'm building) would not work

    Read the article

  • JavaScript multithreading

    - by Krzysztof Hasinski
    I'm working on comparison for several different methods of implementing (real or fake) multithreading in JavaScript. As far as I know only webworkers and Google Gears WorkerPool can give you real threads (ie. spread across multiple processors with real parallel execution). I've found the following methods: switch between tasks using yield() use setInterval() (or other non-blocking function) with threads waiting one for another use Google Gears WorkerPool threads (with plugin) use html5 web workers I read related questions and found several variations of the above methods, but most of those questions are old, so there might be a few new ideas. I'm wondering - how else can you achieve multithreading in JavaScript? Any other important methods? UPDATE: As pointed out in comments what I really meant was concurrency. UPDATE 2: I found information that Silverlight + JScript supports multithreading, but I'm unable to verify this. UPDATE 3: Google deprecated Gears: http://code.google.com/apis/gears/api_workerpool.html

    Read the article

  • Calling javascript without any action

    - by ayush
    i have the following lines of html code - <div class="twitters" id="cbd"> <p><a href="javascript:;" onClick="tweeet('<?php echo $c; ?>')">My Tweets!</a></p> </div> Now what i need to do is call the tweet() javascript function without any link being clicked or any button being clicked . i.e this function is called on its own whenever the page is loaded.

    Read the article

  • How do I rotate an image in Javascript or CSS

    - by Eric
    I am creating a simple game. I want to use jQUERY to rotate the joints making it move. I am using .animate ( http://api.jquery.com/animate/ ) to animate CSS properties but if it is also possible to use Javscript, I can make my own custom code. More TO-THE-POINT How do I rotate images in CSS or Javascript? I prefer CSS but Javascript is fine too. If it is impossible (which I am pretty sure it is but I am not giving up yet) is there any other possible way to do what i am trying to do without making a bunch of seperate images, each rotated a different way. Or can anyone at least give me an example of a site that does something similar. EDIT: I need 1 CSS property (no -something: rotation(500deg);) that works with FireFox, Safari and Chrome because those are the only browsers I really work with.

    Read the article

  • ANTLR, optional ';' in JavaScript

    - by vava
    I'm just playing with ANTLR and decided to try parsing JavaScript with it. But I hit the wall in dealing with optional ';' in it, where statement end is marked by newline instead. Can it be done in some straightforward way? Just a simple grammar example that doesn't work grammar optional_newline; def : statements ; statements : statement (statement)* ; statement : expression (';' | '\n') ; expression : ID | INT | 'var' ID '=' INT ; ID : ('a'..'z'|'A'..'Z'|'_') ('a'..'z'|'A'..'Z'|'0'..'9'|'_')* ; INT : '0'..'9'+ ; WS : ( ' ' | '\t' | '\r' | '\n') {$channel=HIDDEN;} ; and I want to be able to parse this (which can be parsed by JavaScript parsers) var i = 10 10; PS: I don't want to put WS in parser rules, I would be much happier if lexer just get rid of those.

    Read the article

  • Call click event on last clicked row in YUI datatable

    - by Javi
    Hello, I have a YUI datatable and I have a function which is invoked when I click on a row: ... YAHOO.keycoes.myDatatable = myDatatable; ... myDatatable.subscribe("rowClickEvent", oneventclickrow); var oneventclickrow = function( args ) { ... } I'd like to invoke the function subscribed to rowClickEvent on the row which is currently highlighted in the datatable (the row which was clicked for the last time). I've tried to do something like this: YAHOO.keycoes.myDatatable.getSelectedRows()[0].rowClickEvent() but getSelectedRows() doesn't return any row. How can I get the highlighted row in the datatable and then call the function associated with rowClickEvent? Thanks

    Read the article

  • Check if 'onload' would have fired already?

    - by thomasrutter
    Hello, I have a situation where I'd like to set an onload handler for a script element, but it is possible that the script element has already loaded before I do so. If it's already loaded, I'd like to detect that and run my handler immediately. What would be a reliable way of checking a script element's onload state after the fact? BTW I know that IE uses readyState instead of an onload event so I don't need help for that.

    Read the article

  • Django: tinyMCE and cross site javascript

    - by pistacchio
    Hi, follow this question, I was able to set some textareas in my admin page as richtext inputs. The most voted answer suggests to follow an example and is what i did. Also, it talks about a problem concerning "blank pages". I'm having the same problem and I'm not able to solve it. I have my media files served by a different server, so MEDIA_URL points to a different host with a different port. To simulate this in my dev environment, I also serve media files from a different port. Debugging the failing javascript, Chrome yelds: Unsafe JavaScript attempt to access frame with URL http://localhost:8000/admin/blog/post/add/ from frame with URL http://localhost:88/s3mangerie/js/tiny_mce/themes/advanced/image.htm. Domains, protocols and ports must match. How to solve this problem? Thanks

    Read the article

  • Prototypes Object.extend with multiple objects that contain there own functions.

    - by erickreutz
    How would I achieve something along the lines of this.. var Persistence = new Lawnchair('name'); Object.extend(Lawnchair.prototype, { UserDefaults: { setup: function(callback) { // "save" is a native Lawnchair function that doesnt //work because // "this" does not reference "Lawnchair" // but if I am one level up it does. Say if I defined // a function called UserDefaults_setup() it would work // but UserDefaults.setup does not work. this.save({key: 'key', value: 'value'}); // What is this functions scope? // How do I access Lawnchairs "this" } }, Schedule: { refresh: function(callback) { } } }); //this get called but doesnt work. Persistence.UserDefaults.setup();

    Read the article

  • Is there way to extend jQuery to handle a custom enter key event?

    - by Ken
    I write the following code all the time to handle when the enter key pressed: $("#selectorid").keypress(function (e) { if (e.keyCode == 13) { var targetType = e.originalTarget ? e.originalTarget.type.toLowerCase() : e.srcElement.tagName.toLowerCase(); if (targetType != "textarea") { e.preventDefault(); e.stopPropagation(); // code to handler enter key pressed } } }); Is there a way to extend jQuery so that I could just write: $("#selectorid").enterKeyPress(fn);

    Read the article

  • adding a js method

    - by Sorin Buturugeanu
    Hi! I have a js function that is named getID which is basically return document.getElementById(id) I want to make another function, getTag that would return getElementsByTagName. The part that I can't seem to manage is that I want to be able to call them like this: getID('myid').getTag('input') = so this would return all the input elements inside the element with the id myid Thanks! ps: getTag would also have to work if it's called by it's own, but then it would just return document.getElementsByTagName

    Read the article

  • javascript to launch only ONE window for a Java applet with a given URL

    - by Jonathan Dugan
    I need a javascript solution to launch only one window, with a Java Applet in it, for a given URL. I found a solution posted here on Stack Overflow - here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/528671/javascript-window-open-only-if-the-window-does-not-already-exist But it doesn't seem to work .. I get Error: launchApplication.winrefs is undefined Line: 29 I can't seem to post the code in this little box and make it look right below, so the code (my working code, plus the solution from above) is here: http://pastie.org/833879 Where is the error? As I understand it, the hash or array or whatever I use to store the called references to the windows opened this way will be lost if the calling window is closed. Is there a way to make this work even if the calling window is closed and reopened? To basically ask the browser: "Do you have a window open with the following URL?" and if so, "What is the reference to that window?" (so I can raise it).

    Read the article

  • mouseover producing multiple images works in Firefox, but not i.e.

    - by tcantrel
    The code below allows the user to hover over 1 object and it not only replaces the object but also shows an additional object between the buttons. It works great in Firefox, but does not in Internet Explorer. HELP webpage: http://www.isp.ucar.edu/ Thx, Terri if ( < ocument.images) { img1on = new Image(); img1on.src = "images/buttons/button-beachon-on.gif"; img1off = new Image(); img1off.src = "images/buttons/button-beachon.gif"; img2on = new Image(); img2on.src = "images/buttons/button-bgs-on.gif"; img2off = new Image(); img2off.src = "images/buttons/button-bgs.gif"; img3on = new Image(); img3on.src = "images/buttons/button-iam-on.gif"; img3off = new Image(); img3off.src = "images/buttons/button-iam.gif"; img4on = new Image(); img4on.src = "images/buttons/button-nvia-on.gif"; img4off = new Image(); img4off.src = "images/buttons/button-nvia.gif"; img5on = new Image(); img5on.src = "images/buttons/button-utls-on.gif"; img5off = new Image(); img5off.src = "images/buttons/button-utls.gif"; img6on = new Image(); img6on.src = "images/buttons/button-water-on.gif"; img6off = new Image(); img6off.src = "images/buttons/button-water.gif"; img7on = new Image(); img7on.src = "images/buttons/button-exploratory-on.gif"; img7off = new Image(); img7off.src = "images/buttons/button-exploratory.gif"; // second image that does not appear in original button space img1ad = new Image(); img1ad.src = "images/buttons/beachon-overview-sm.gif"; img2ad = new Image(); img2ad.src = "images/buttons/bgs-overview-sm.gif"; img3ad = new Image(); img3ad.src = "images/buttons/iam-overview-sm.gif"; img4ad = new Image(); img4ad.src = "images/buttons/nvia-overview-sm.gif"; img5ad = new Image(); img5ad.src = "images/buttons/utls-overview-sm.gif"; img6ad = new Image(); img6ad.src = "images/buttons/water-overview-sm.gif"; img7ad = new Image(); img7ad.src = "images/buttons/exploratory-overview-sm.gif"; } function imgOn(imgName) { if ( < ocument.images) { document[imgName].src = eval(imgName + "on.src"); document["holder"].src = eval(imgName + "ad.src"); } } function imgOff(imgName) { if ( < ocument.images) { document[imgName].src = eval(imgName + "off.src"); document["holder"].src = "images/buttons/isp-overview-sm.gif"; } }

    Read the article

  • Why is the event object different coming from jquery bind vs. addEventListener

    - by yodaisgreen
    Why is it when I use the jQuery bind the event object I get back is different from the event object I get back using addEventListener? The event object resulting from this jQuery bind does not have the targetTouches array (among other things) but the event from the addEventListener does. Is it me or is something not right here? $(document).ready (function () { $("#test").bind("touchmove", function (event) { console.log(event.targetTouches[0].pageX); // targetTouches is undefined }); }); vs. $(document).ready (function () { var foo = document.querySelectorAll('#test') foo[0].addEventListener('touchmove', function (event) { console.log(event.targetTouches[0].pageX); // returns the correct values }, false); });

    Read the article

  • organise javascript code based on page

    - by David
    Hi I am relatively new to javascript development. At the moment I have a single javascript file with lots of little misc bits of code that get called in different part of the website. For example I have an event handler for some google maps stuff that is only called on 1 single page, I have some validation stuff for my contact page etc etc. My question, is how best to organise this code - given that each page only requires very little code but its different and specific per page? Oh, I am using jquery if that makes a difference.

    Read the article

  • JavaScript data formatting/pretty printer

    - by Dan
    I'm trying to find a way to 'pretty print' a JavaScript data structure in a human-readable form for debugging. I have a rather big and complicated data structure being stored in JS and I need to write some code to manipulate it. In order to work out what I'm doing and where I'm going wrong, what I really need is to be able to see the data structure in its entirety, and update it whenever I make changes through the UI. All of this stuff I can handle myself, apart from finding a nice way to dump a JavaScript data structure to a human-readable string. JSON would do, but it really needs to be nicely formatted and indented. I'd usually use Firebug's excellent DOM dumping stuff for this, but I really need to be able to see the entire structure at once, which doesn't seem to be possible in Firebug. Any suggestions welcome, thanks in advance.

    Read the article

  • JS: capture a static snapshot of an object at a point in time with a method

    - by Barney
    I have a JS object I use to store DOM info for easy reference in an elaborate GUI. It starts like this: var dom = { m:{ old:{}, page:{x:0,y:0}, view:{x:0,y:0}, update:function(){ this.old = this; this.page.x = $(window).width(); this.page.y = $(window).height(); this.view.x = $(document).width(); this.view.y = window.innerHeight || $(window).height(); } I call the function on window resize: $(window).resize(function(){dom.m.update()}); The problem is with dom.m.old. I would have thought that by calling it in the dom.m.update() method before the new values for the other properties are assigned, at any point in time dom.m.old would contain a snapshot of the dom.m object as of the last update – but instead, it's always identical to dom.m. I've just got a pointless recursion method. Why isn't this working? How can I get a static snapshot of the object that won't update without being specifically told to? Comments explaining how I shouldn't even want to be doing anything remotely like this in the first place are very welcome :)

    Read the article

  • What is a good Javascript RDFa parser implementation?

    - by tremoloqui
    I am looking to implement a client side RDFa based formatting for a web application. This would be similar to Mark Birbeck's ubiquity-rdfa project. Mark's project looks fantastic but it has at least two drawbacks: It is slow. Adding RDFa formatting to a simple page causes a noticeable delay in page loading. It is complex. The ubiquity-rdfa project makes use of the w3c fresnel specification which is complex way to add simple annotations to client markup. I am looking for a lighter weight way of adding annotations through client code and I don't mind doing some work to get it. What I would like is a fast and reliable Javascript RDFa parser. Some implementations that I have found include: W3C RDFa bookmarklet parser Elias Torres RDFa extractor I am interested to know if you would recommend one of these, or another, RDFa Javascript implementation. Thanks!

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68  | Next Page >