The Strange Zen Of JavaScript
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Best pages on Jszen.blogspot.com
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The Strange Zen Of JavaScript Thursday, February 17, 2011 Why must we still close SCRIPT elements? I was wondering why in the world we still have to terminate SCRIPT elements with </sc...
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The Strange Zen Of JavaScript: How to build a simple calendar with JavaScript
The Strange Zen Of JavaScript Monday, March 19, 2007 How to build a simple calendar with JavaScript While there are lots of JavaScript-based calendar widgets out there, there's not muc...
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The Strange Zen Of JavaScript: What's in a NAME?
The Strange Zen Of JavaScript Wednesday, July 21, 2004 The little-used getElementsByName() method is part of the DOM Level 1 specification and is supported by both Internet Explorer and Mozilla...
Jszen.blogspot.com news digest
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13 years
Why must we still close SCRIPT elements?
I was wondering why in the world we still have to terminate SCRIPT elements with </script> tags in 2011, fer Pete's sake.
i.e. why does this work:
but this: -
14 years
To teach myself a little about HTML 5 and its built-in support for rich media, I built a proof-of-concept HTML5 audio player, written entirely in HTML 5, JQuery and CSS 3. It more or less replaces all the functionality of the Flash audio player on my...
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14 years
Using the "in" operator in conditionals
Most of us are familiar with the for..in loop construct:
Less well-known is the use of "in" as an operator to test if a named property exists on an object:
This works on methods, too: -
14 years
Here's one for the books:
This will be ignored by IE. Why?
Because IE doesn't like the whitespace between the comment delimiters and square brackets. Here's the correct way:
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Web host: | Google LLC |
Registrar: | MarkMonitor Inc. |
Registrant: | Google LLC |
Updated: | June 29, 2023 |
Expires: | July 31, 2024 |
Created: | July 31, 2000 |
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