Search Results

Search found 27312 results on 1093 pages for 'javascript execution'.

Page 89/1093 | < Previous Page | 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96  | Next Page >

  • adjusting table content with javascript by enumerating rows

    - by Tom
    I have a table row with 4 columns on my ecommerce site and I want to replace the content of 1st column if total amount in last column (TD class "total") is over 10 EUR. How can I do this with javascript only, I guess somehow to enumerate through the table rows and look for a correct row (one with the last column class as total) and then access the content of 1st column on this row but how?

    Read the article

  • Pick random property from a Javascript object

    - by Bemmu
    Suppose you have a Javascript object like {'cat':'meow','dog':'woof' ...} Is there a more concise way to pick a random property from the object than this long winded way I came up with: function pickRandomProperty(obj) { var prop, len = 0, randomPos, pos = 0; for (prop in obj) { if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) { len += 1; } } randomPos = Math.floor(Math.random() * len); for (prop in obj) { if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) { if (pos === randomPos) { return prop; } pos += 1; } } }

    Read the article

  • Image editor component in Flex / JavaScript

    - by nobby
    Hi everyone, I'm looking for a simple Flex or JavaScript based image editing component which can be embedded in a web application. It shouldn't be a web service but rather a component that I can download and customize (i18n etc.). I only need some basic features: most important is cropping, optional features would be rotating and adjusting brightness/contrast. Basically something like splashup.com, but as an open source application rather than a web-service. Thanks a lot in advance for any hints! -- Andreas

    Read the article

  • javascript simple object creation test: opera leaks?

    - by joe
    Hi, I am trying to figure out certain memory leak conditions in javascript on a few browsers. Currently I'm only testing FF 3.6, Opera 10.10, and Safari 4.0.3. I've started with a fairly simple test, and can confirm no memory leaks in Firefox and Safari. But Opera just takes memory and never gives it back. What gives? Here's the test: <html> <head> <script type="text/javascript"> window.onload = init; //window.onunload = cleanup; var a=[]; function init() { var d = document.createElement('div'); d.innerHTML = "page loading..."; document.body.appendChild(d); for (var i=0; i<400000; i++) { a[i] = new Obj("xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"); } d.innerHTML = "PAGE LOADED"; } function cleanup() { for (var i=0; i<400000; i++) { a[i] = null; } } function Obj(msg) { this.msg=msg; } </script> </head> <body> </body> </html> I shouldn't need the cleanup() call on window.unload, but tried that also. No luck. As you can see this is simple JS, no circular DOM links, no closures. I monitor the memory usage using 'top' on Mac 10.4.11. Memory usage spikes up on page load, as expected. In FF and Safari reloading the page does not use any further memory, and all memory is returned when the window (tab) is closed. In Opera, memory spikes on load, and seems to also spike further on each reload (but not always...). But regardless of reload, memory never goes back down below the initial load spike. I had hoped this was a no-brainer test that all browsers would pass, so I could move on to more "interesting" conditions. Am I doing something wrong here? Or is this a known Opera issue? Thanks! -joe

    Read the article

  • Javascript obfuscation and extreme situation in production solving

    - by faya
    Hello, I have a few questions regarding JavaScript obfuscation on client side. First question: What is the best tool or best three tools which ones you could suggest for this operation? Second question: How developers should debug such code (in example with firebug) when extreme situation appears in the production if the code is obfuscated? P.S. - I know that it's bad practice to debug in production, but we had some emergencies and experienced sometimes such situations. Thanks for any help!

    Read the article

  • how to resolve/normalize URLs in GWT/Javascript?

    - by Limbic System
    Given two URLs, how can I resolve one of them against the other? I'm trying to emulate Java's URI.resolve(), which does not exist in GWT's emulation library. I've had to implement this manually, which, as you might expect has been very error-prone. Is there a GWT or Javascript library for resolving or normalizing URLs?

    Read the article

  • jquery, mootools and javascript menus

    - by BibiBuBu
    Good Day! i am having problem in mixing mootools, sexy alerts, jquery and a javascript menu on one asp classic page, the error is jQuery.easing[jQuery.easing.def] is not a function Source File i have tried to implement noConflict of the jquery, but no avial, can somebody help me in this regards. please.... Thanks & regards

    Read the article

  • exclude javascript code from print function

    - by user228058
    I have a print function on a page in my website. the problem is, when it hits this line: <script type="text/javascript" src="http://cdn.powerreviews.com/repos/12564/pr/pwr/engine/js/full.js"></script>, it tries to load it, and just never finishes. Any ideas on how to get around that?

    Read the article

  • To get which function throwed exception in javascript

    - by uzay95
    I am trying to create a Exception class to get and send errors from client to server. I want to catch exception in javascript function and push the details to the web service to write to database. But i couldn't get how to get which function/line throwed this exception. Is there any way to solve this?

    Read the article

  • getting the "this" that a function's caller was called with in JavaScript

    - by David Morrissey
    Is it possible to get the this that a function's caller was called with in JavaScript without passing this to the arguments in a way which supports IE as well as Firefox/Chrome et al? For example: var ob = { callme: function() { doSomething() } } function doSomething() { alert(doSomething.caller.this === ob) // how can I make this work? } ob.callme() I'm starting to suspect it's not, but I thought I may as well ask as it'd make my code much shorter and easier to read. Thanks for any information!

    Read the article

  • close other HTML window by javascript function

    - by lusey
    hello i need a popup window to appear to the user but without parent widow ! but this is impossible so i think that I may have to make the popup close the parent apter it appear, but how ? i tried this in the popup: <BODY align="center" valign="center" onload="javascript:window.opener='x';window.close();"> but it closed the popup window itself ! any idea to make the popup close its parent ?

    Read the article

  • JavaScript Used As PHP

    - by Nathan Campos
    I'm now thinking to stabilish my code on Javascript, and begin to do all on it, but I want to know about it's security and flexibility compared to PHP. I want to know too, if it can be sucessfully used to develop things like forum boards, full web-sites and things like this, as PHP does.

    Read the article

  • measure rendered html in javascript without affecting the measurement

    - by drawnonward
    I am doing pagination in javascript. This is typographic pagination, not chopping up database results. For the most part it works, but I have run into a heisenberg issue where I cannot quite measure text without affecting it. I am not trying to measure text before it is rendered. I want the actual position it shows up at on screen, so I can paginate to where it is naturally wrapped. I am measuring the vertical position of characters, not the horizontal width of strings. The way I do this is similar to this answer in that I am applying a style to a block of text, then measuring the position of the newly created span. If the span does not reach the end of the page, I clear it and make a new span in a linear search. The problem is that the anti-aliased sub-pixel text layout is different when the span is applied. In rare cases, this causes the text to wrap differently when I measure it. I have only seen this when wrapping at a hyphen, and I assume it would not happen when wrapping at white space. As a concrete example, "prepared-he" is the string I am having trouble with. When I measure up to "prepare" it appears, as expected, to be within the current page. When I measure "prepared" the whole phrase wraps down to the next line, moving it to the next page, so it looks like the "d" is the character to break at. I break the text between "prepare" and "d-he" and that is wrong. Trying to evaluate individual characters opens a whole can of worms I would rather avoid. The wrapping changes because, with the new span, the line is 1 pixel wider. A solution to my problem could either be a better way to measure text using javascript, or a way to wrap text in a new element without affecting layout. I have tried setting margin-right:-1px for the class of the span being created to wrap the text. This had no noticeable effect. I am doing this in a UIWebView on the iPhone. There are some measurement related calls that are available in normal WebKit that are not available here. For example, Range does not have getBoundingClientRect or support setting an offset other than 0 in setStart or setEnd. Thank you

    Read the article

  • Javascript Detect All Images (Including Asynchronous)

    - by Zach
    Is there a way in javascript to detect all images in a document, including those that may be loaded asynchronously (and maybe after the DOM is ready)? I'm looking to create a function that can detect if Google Analytics has been loaded by searching through the DOM looking for "__utm.gif". document.images doesn't seem to hold this image as it's loaded asynchronously and not displayed.

    Read the article

  • Background Image comes up as white when displayed using Javascript

    - by AndroidNewbie
    I am trying to change the background image whenever the document is loaded, and when it hits this point: document.body.style.backgroundImage="url('../images/mobile-bckground.png')"; The page simply makes the background plain white. It is displayed like this in my javascript: $(function() { document.body.style.backgroundImage="url('../images/mobile-bckground.png')"; }); I have verified the image is in the right location, why is it doing this?

    Read the article

  • Push link inside html using javascript

    - by vetri
    I have a div tag <div id="img"> <div> and a script in page <script type="text/javascript"> function img(){ document.getElementById('img').innerHTML="<a href="/lime/link.html"><img src="/lime/img.png"></a>";} </script> how to put the image on the div with link on pageload.

    Read the article

  • Javascript fine grain performance tweaking

    - by thermal7
    I have been writing my first jQuery plugin and struggling to find a means to time how long different pieces of code take to run. I can use firebug and console.time/profile. However, it seems that because my code executes so fast I get no results with profile and with time it spits out 0ms. (http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2690697/firebug-profiling-issue-no-activity-to-profile/2690846#2690846) Is there a way to get the time at a greater level of detail that milliseconds in javascript?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96  | Next Page >