Timeline for Stack Snippets console output
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
12 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Mar 20, 2017 at 9:34 | history | edited | CommunityBot |
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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Feb 19, 2015 at 14:23 | comment | added | user692942 |
@Canon Still technically you are still hacking up the DOM with your approach. What makes document.write() any worse?
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Feb 19, 2015 at 14:16 | comment | added | user692942 | @canon I can see you're point when you phrase it like that. | |
Feb 19, 2015 at 9:46 | comment | added | user692942 |
@canon That is not what I'm saying at all. Stack Snippets should be used for demoing JavaScript but if they use console.log expect the result to be in the developer tools console in the browser. Whereas if you use document.write expect the result to be in the results pane of the snippet. This is how the web works, anything else is misguided hacks.
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Feb 10, 2015 at 22:32 | comment | added | user692942 |
@canon If your going to write javascript only and use console.log don't use a stack snippet it's that simple. What makes me laugh is you talk about "in a standardized way" but by making the result pane something it's not your actually breaking the standardized approach it already has.
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Oct 14, 2014 at 14:16 | history | edited | user692942 | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
Edited to give people a chance to change their vote, this shouldn't have been down-voted like it has.
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Oct 10, 2014 at 14:56 | comment | added | user692942 |
Why so many down-votes? Console is the console a stack snippet is a stack snippet. If your going to write snippets using console.log and your OP is new to web development explain where console.log can be found. The result pane is the document not the console if you want to write out to the document then document.write is perfectly acceptable (regardless of the naysayers). Don't make the result pane something it isn't! +1
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Oct 10, 2014 at 7:35 | comment | added | Artjom B. | @Theolodis I'm saying that it doesn't make sense right now. There is a perfectly versatile solution available. jsFiddle doesn't have it, because they don't need it. But I'm also saying that if we get other language runtimes into the browser, we might need one. But that would depend on the implementation. | |
Oct 10, 2014 at 7:17 | comment | added | Theolodis | @ArtjomB. So basically we shouldn't add a console because others don't have it either? | |
Oct 9, 2014 at 13:22 | comment | added | Artjom B. | To my understanding stack-snippets were introduced to keep users on the site and not let them wander off to jsfiddle and the like. Right now Stack-Snippets is tailored to be similar to jsfiddle which also doesn't have an in-page console. The snippets solve the problem for HTML+CSS+JS. A JS-only mode is a different use case. I think it should have a dedicated console, but only when SE introduces other snippets languages. | |
Oct 9, 2014 at 13:13 | comment | added | gion_13 | If we go by that judgment, why use stack snippets? Aren't there many other good similar tools already out there? What about jsfiddle, codepen, plunkr and many others? The idea behind stack snippets (in my vision at least) is to make it easier for the user to read and write the answer. I'm not saying stack snippets isn't good.. it cool, but there's room for improvement. I would personally want to have a way (without any 3rd party code) to show some simple logs in the result panel, even if my result isn't in the form of html/css. | |
Oct 9, 2014 at 12:50 | history | answered | Artjom B. | CC BY-SA 3.0 |