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I have been trying to find some version of the native code (C/C++) for javascript arrays to see how their methods are implemented, but I have been having trouble sifting through the vast number of files. I have looked through the v8 engine open source (https://github.com/v8/v8/tree/master/src) and the mozilla open source (https://dxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/source/). I'm sure these sources have a strong structure to them, but I can seem to break it and find what I'm looking for.
Does anyone have a link/tutorial/advice on how to find the native code for arrays? And, more generally, a link/tutorial/advice on how to maneuver through one of the javascript native code databases?
Edit: Maybe I'm assuming that the source code is too simplistic, but I think I'm looking for something that looks something like this: http://www.docjar.com/html/api/java/util/Arrays.java.html, but in C/C++ for javascript
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I know that Doxygen doesn't support JavaScript files. I have also looked at js2doxy.pl script and also this:
Documenting JavaScript with Doxygen
The first option(js2doxy.pl) is not producing relevant C++ code, it is also skipping all the prototype methods and leave them blank. The second option is working but not for prototype based programming. I am looking for a filter which can support prototype based(OOP) JavaScript files. I researched a lot about it but I failed to find a better filter.
Thanks in advance!
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Is there a way to get Documentation offline and searchable? For example for Java I have done this to get Java doc offline.
Off-Line Java API Documentation in Eclipse?
But is there a way that I can make this searchable? Because I am just starting so when I am to look for a Java Map for example. I don't know if its under java.lang or java.util...etc So it makes looking for specific doc extremely hard.
Thanks
After some digging
I found this https://zealdocs.org/ and https://kapeli.com/dash
The beauty of this is this is not only for java but for other languages such as javascript, angularjs, swift...etc
=D Happy coding
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I'm just curious, which JS framework Google Keep use? I can't find any mention about that.
I can't say 100% what they use since (to my knowledge) it isn't exactly out there; but you can look into other libraries which achieve very similar layouts like: Masonry, Isotope, Salvattore, etc... There is a good chance Google is either extending functionality from that, or using it themselves.
Also to add to this question, look into the stackoverflow question I found from another user: Is there a Google Keep API?
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Learning to write firefox addons I would like to improve the coding style and avoid bad coding practices.
I'm using the mozilla addon-sdk-1.14 and I am looking for the reference of an open source firefox addon, which code is accessible (for example on github), so that I can get inspiration and an idea of how it "should" look like in the "real world".
Thanks!
All extensions have their code available for you to look at. You just:
download the xpi,
change the xpi extension to zip,
extract and see the code inside.
To download the xpi, see this answer for some instructions.
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I know AOL provides a library for their Web AIM (or whatever its called) but I'm more interested in something I can use with something like v8cgi.
If you are wanting a client-side browser based solution, you'd have to create a proxy similar to how Meebo does this. Otherwise, if you want to use something like node.js you'd be able to implement something using sockets.
In either case, you'd be hard pressed to find something already written to suit your needs.