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Can I convert a string representing a boolean value (e.g., 'true', 'false') into an intrinsic type in JavaScript? I have a hidden form in HTML that is updated based on a user's selection within a list. This form contains some fields which represent boolean values and are dynamically populated with an intrinsic boolean value. However, once this value is placed into the hidden input field it becomes
I've got a simple package.json file and I want to add a comment. Is there a way to do this, or are there any hacks to make this work? { "name": "My Project", "version": "0.0.1", "private": true, "dependencies": { "express": "3.x", "mongoose": "3.x" }, "devDependencies" : { "should": "*" /* "mocha": "*" not needed as should be globally installed */ } } The example comment above doesn't work as npm
Preliminaries JavaScript has only one data type which can contain multiple values: Object. An Array is a special form of object. (Plain) Objects have the form {key: value, key: value, ...} Arrays have the form [value, value, ...] Both arrays and objects expose a key -> value structure. Keys in an array must be numeric, whereas any string can be used as key in objects. The key-value pairs are also
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