Search Results

Search found 31578 results on 1264 pages for 'javascript functions'.

Page 192/1264 | < Previous Page | 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199  | Next Page >

  • Extracting numbers from a url using javascript?

    - by stormist
    var exampleURL = '/example/url/345234/test/'; var numbersOnly = [?] The /url/ and /test portions of the path will always be the same. Note that I need the numbers between /url/ and /test. In the example URL above, the placeholder word example might be numbers too from time to time but in that case it shouldn't be matched. Only the numbers between /url/ and /test. Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Javascript delete cookie next day

    - by Clint
    Hi, I was wonder if you can delete a cookie at the beginning of the next day. Lets say I log in to a website at 1:30pm and use it again throughout the day but at midnight or 1 minute past, in the new day, the cookie is removed. Many thanks for any help, C

    Read the article

  • Problem with Firefox, javascript, and Canvas

    - by Rob
    I'm having a Firefox-specific issue with a script I wrote to create 3d layouts. The correct behavior is that the script pulls the background-color from an element and then uses that color to draw on the canvas. When a user mouses over a link and the background-color changes to the :hover rule, the color being drawn changes on the canvas changes as well. When the user mouses out, the color should revert back to non-hover color. This works as expected in Webkit browsers and Opera, but Firefox chokes on it if mouseout is triggered and no mouseover event follows it. This is easier to see than for me to describe, and it's too much code to post here, so here is a link: http://www.robnixondesigns.com/strangematter/

    Read the article

  • javascript - query object graph?

    - by Scott
    Given an object like this: var obj = { first:{ second:{ third:'hi there' } } }; And a key like this "first.second.third" How can I get the value of the nested object "hi there"? I think maybe the Array.reduce function could help, but not sure.

    Read the article

  • javascript / jQuery variable problem (possibly caching issue)

    - by waitinforatrain
    Standard AJAX query with jQuery: var globalTitle = ""; var pages = ["a", "b", "c"]; for (var i = 0; i < pages.length; i++) { createpage(pages[i]); } function createpage(title) { globalTitle=title; console.log (globalTitle); //All looks good here $.ajax({ url: "createpage.php?id=" + title, context: document.body, success: success }); } The success() function uses globaltitle which is why I had to declare it global. In the success() function though console.log (globalTitle); constantly gives me "a". It's like the variable is assigned but is then cached every time success() is called. Happens in FF 4 and Chrome 8. Any thoughts?

    Read the article

  • Sanitizing user input before adding it to the DOM in Javascript

    - by I GIVE TERRIBLE ADVICE
    I'm writing the JS for a chat application I'm working on in my free time, and I need to have HTML identifiers that change according to user submitted data. This is usually something conceptually shaky enough that I would not even attempt it, but I don't see myself having much of a choice this time. What I need to do then is to escape the HTML id to make sure it won't allow for XSS or breaking HTML. Here's the code: var user_id = escape(id) var txt = '<div class="chut">'+ '<div class="log" id="chut_'+user_id+'"></div>'+ '<textarea id="chut_'+user_id+'_msg"></textarea>'+ '<label for="chut_'+user_id+'_to">To:</label>'+ '<input type="text" id="chut_'+user_id+'_to" value='+user_id+' readonly="readonly" />'+ '<input type="submit" id="chut_'+user_id+'_send" value="Message"/>'+ '</div>'; What would be the best way to escape id to avoid any kind of problem mentioned above? As you can see, right now I'm using the built-in escape() function, but I'm not sure of how good this is supposed to be compared to other alternatives. I'm mostly used to sanitizing input before it goes in a text node, not an id itself.

    Read the article

  • Sending mail using Javascript

    - by user146780
    Here's what I'm trying to do. I want to use Java Script to send an email. I have created a form with a subject text field, a message field, and a send button. I want for when the person clicks Send that it sends the email, but I want to avoid server side scripting. Thanks

    Read the article

  • javascript regular expressions

    - by Zhasulan Berdybekov
    Help me with regular expressions. I need to check the text on the hour and minute. That is the first case, the text can be from 0 to 12. In the second case, the text can be from 1 to 60. this is my code: var hourRegEx = /^([0-9]{2})$/; //You can fix this line of code? $(document).ready( function(){ $('form.form').submit(function(){ if( $('input.hour').val().match(hourRegEx) ){ return true; } return false; }); }); In my case, the code says that, for example 52, too, the correct answer

    Read the article

  • Javascript serialization

    - by John
    Have I any chance to serialize meta (any format, so I can store it in DB)? var obj1 = {}; var obj2 = {}; obj1.link = obj2; obj2.link = obj1; var meta = [obj1, obj2]; As I understand the problem is that JSON serialize object`s links to objects.

    Read the article

  • A little javascript help needed here (easy).

    - by Camran
    function addOption(selectbox, val, txt){ ...... } addOption(list, "Cars", "Cars"); I need to add this in front of the text of the function: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So that there is space coming in before the option text...Never mind what it is for, it is just confusing... I just don't know how to insert it into the js code. If I do it like this: addOption(list, "Cars", "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cars"); Then the &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; comes into the text, so it gets displayed for the users. However I need it to be interpreted as "space"... If you don't understand let me know... How can I do this? Quotes, double quotes etc? Thanks

    Read the article

  • how to change two div-positions on click with javascript

    - by flp
    hi folks, i got a webpage with some "cards" (divs) layin on it. they are positioned in a star-like order, flowing to the background. i want to bring cards from the background to the middle-foreground bei clicking on it (to focus the card "contact" for instance). how can i realize this? is there any script which is already containing a function like this?

    Read the article

  • JavaScript OOP problem

    - by Danmark
    I create windows like this: var obj = document.createElement('div'); obj.className = 'window'; obj.style.width = 300 + 'px'; obj.style.height = 200 + 'px'; obj.style.left = 30 + 'px'; obj.style.top = 200 + 'px'; //and so on and what I need is to attach some data to each window. The data will be grabbed via Ajax and displayed in the windows. How should I do it so that each window hold its own unique data? I don't need to display the whole data every time and this data would need be organized before being displayed, so I can't just add it with innerHTML. I need a way to hold it somewhere else where I could easily get it and then display it with innerHTML.

    Read the article

  • javascript var declaration within loop

    - by Trouts
    hello, /*Test scope problem*/ for(var i=1; i<3; i++){ //declare variables var no = i; //verify no alert('setting '+no); //timeout to recheck setTimeout(function(){ alert('test '+no); }, 500); } it alerts "setting 1" and "setting 2" as expected, but after the timeout it outputs "test 2" twice - for some reason the variable "no" is not reset after the first loop... i've found only an "ugly" workaround... /*Test scope problem*/ var func=function(no){ //verify no alert('setting '+no); //timeout to recheck setTimeout(function(){ alert('test '+no); }, 500); } for(var i=1; i<3; i++){ func(i); } Any ideas on how to workaround this problem in a more direct way? or is this the only way?

    Read the article

  • Form validation in JAvascript with Regexp

    - by Nikita Barsukov
    I have a webpage with an input field where only digits are allowed. The input field has an onkeyup event that starts this validating function: function validate() { var uah_amount = document.getElementById("UAH").value; var allowed = /^\d+$/; document.getElementById("error").innerHTML = document.getElementById("UAH").value; if (!allowed.test(uah_amount)) { document.getElementById("error").style.backgroundColor = "red"; } } Everything works as I expect until I hit Backspace button to remove some characters. In this case function always behaves as if I entered letters. How to correct this?

    Read the article

  • javascript Programmically exit fullsreen

    - by Mark
    I understand why browsers would disallow websites from programically making the browser fullscreen. However, users typically expect the 'esc' button to exit from full screen, and browsers simply don't do that. Is there any way to get the browser to exit from full screen. Thanks.

    Read the article

  • javascript - Google Chrome cluttering Array generated from .split()

    - by patrick
    Given the following string: var str = "one,two,three"; If I split the string on the commas, I normally get an array, as expected: var arr = str.split(/\s*,\s*/); Trouble is that in Google Chrome (for Mac), it appends extra properties to the array. Output from Chrome's debugger: arr: Array 0: one 1: two 2: three constructor: function Array() index: undefined input: undefined length: 3 So if I iterate over the array with a for/in loop, it iterates over the new properties. Specifically the input and index properties. Using hasOwnProperty doesn't seem to help. A fix would be to do a for loop based on the length of the Array. Still I'm wondering if anyone has insight into why Chrome behaves this way. Firefox and Safari don't have this issue.

    Read the article

  • Constructors and method chaining in JavaScript

    - by Sethen Maleno
    I am trying to make method chaining work in conjunction with my constructors, but I am not exactly sure how to go about it. Here is my code thus far: function Points(one, two, three) { this.one = one; this.two = two; this.three = three; } Points.prototype = { add: function() { return this.result = this.one + this.two + this.three; }, multiply: function() { return this.result * 30; } } var some = new Points(1, 1, 1); console.log(some.add().multiply()); I am trying to call the multiply method on the return value of the add method. I know there is something obvious that I am not doing, but I am just not sure what it is. Any thoughts?

    Read the article

  • Javascript: Retrieve Object Property Names

    - by Jason
    I'm trying to write a function that needs to know the property names of an object being passed in, like so: var data = { "key1":"value1", "key2":"value2", etc} ^ i want the string value "key1" How do I retrieve the string "key1" from data? I know I can set a property dynamically like data[prop]=value but i want to know what prop is from an object passed in. If that doesn't make sense I suppose I could try to explain more. Thanks! I eventually want to do something like: for (var i = 0; i<data.length; i++) { var name = data[i].getPropertyName() <--- not a real function // do stuff }

    Read the article

  • javascript url parsing

    - by Ra
    Hi, I have a url like http://mywebsite.com/folder1/folder2/index how to parse this above url and get all the values separately? I want the output like http, mywebsite.com, folder1, folder2, index Thanks in adavance

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199  | Next Page >