I hereby claim:
- I am mikaturunen on github.
- I am mikaturunen (https://keybase.io/mikaturunen) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASC7i2yfk0IGzu9ClXoYa2esH5qsujf2gQnOfR93F88Hygo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
| import * as crypto from 'crypto' | |
| const merchantSecret = 'secret' | |
| const hash = 'sha256' | |
| const encoding = 'base64' | |
| const payload = { | |
| id: 123, | |
| somethingElse: 'not 123' | |
| } |
| // There is no direct way of binding angular to elements onload event as commonly the HTML elements onload="" attribute looks into the | |
| // Javascript global name space (window.*) which is a big no-no. It used to be the norm back in the day of how to do things but with | |
| // modern frameworks like AngularJs and the such the approach has changed a lot. | |
| // This is just one example (and by no means the only way) of how to get Angular behave nicely with HTML elements onload event. As | |
| // <iframe onload="test()"> looks into window.test for a callback we need to bound the onload event to look into provided angular scope | |
| // for the callback. | |
| // NOTE: Written in ES6 |