Cool URIs don’t change. Sucky ones neither—@philarcher1 on burying http;//www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rd… http://t.co/VsjryQhVjB #RDF
@presroi @KulturellesErbe #KE13 visualized by #TomsPhD software. twitpic.com/dmv9ld
@mathias Makes a lot of sense for libs and client-side, I agree. Thanks again for replying and your helpful comments en suite. Cheers!
@mathias My main argument for doing it is in 1:50 of your video. Readability and maintainability. Plus it’s on the server.
@mathias Once at runtime, yes. Should say that it is on a node.js server upon server start, not on the client. Still bad practice?
@mathias I do it once & recycle the RegExp. Of course banged my head b/o http://t.co/gY5p1wpfcO. Now resetting lastIndex each time & works.
@mathias Now building the RegExp dynamically by joining the array from http://t.co/etqoNh7z5D on ‘|’ and escaping ‘.’, ‘$’, ‘/’. Done :-)
@mathias Bedankt, mate, this helped a ton: http://t.co/6KKpDruv1u. If we ever meet, beers on me. Thanks for openly sharing your knowledge!
nelson What?! Of course not, why would I let an ad tracking company know where I am? Fuck you, Google. pic.twitter.com/B6Wbi4vnYN
@mathias Thanks, will need to check tomorrow w/ big screen (on cell now). In principal seems OK to use bi-di. Still unsure about escaping…
In #JavaScript, is it good practice to write bi-di #RegExp, e.g., to match prices /(€|£|₪|د.\ع)/g? Note the escaped ‘.’. TIA@mathiasmathias)