If you are thinking more about appliances, you need something that makes virtuals. It doesn't matter what it is - virtual firewalls, virtual servers, et cetera. Then you pod them out, so the concerns are local
As far as software, those LXC Linux containers linuxcontainers.org or Docker containers (hub.docker.com) as shown in that Cars.com video can help you deploy without VM's
@Sebastian they want to develop with it, for example develop frontend with React, build tools and similar hooks usually get things wrong and are confusing for that level of development.
People get confused with them, they can figure it out when they need to actually deploy but it deters them from trying.
@Sebastian I'm not sure, I'm just letting you know more than one person was severely deterred by not finding it. Maybe show frontend workflow and backend workflows.
Or link to it in "using babel"
I think even just a link in "using babel" could help
I have these graphic elements which can be manipulated through the UI. used to be just modifying the DOM directly, however when I took over the project I rewrote the whole system to store data in objects. fair enough, works okay. modify something via the UI, send the changes to the object. serialize to JSON for saving / loading. works nice.
each element is composed of a container (to which a few HTML properties, like z-index, are applied) and a body, to which all of the other properties are applied. background color, border, etc. the code that interfaces with the DOM sorts out which properties go where so when a property is changed it knows which element to update, the container or the body, to get the desired effect
the problem is this: I'm moving on to writing behavior for "groups" of elements, like you might have in illustrator. you should be able to group a bunch of these graphic elements together to have them behave as one. each group should be its own graphic element. fine. but this is where the container / body model breaks down, because to preserve z-index, I can't just stick the the DOM container elements inside another container and call it a group.
what framework do you have in mind? i'm using jquery ui already
groups have their own properties, but there are also properties which need to be set on the children. there is an "Element" "class" I'm using to handle all this behind the scenes. I'm thinking that the "Group" class would "inherit" from that. at least, borrow most of the functions and override methods like "get property" and "set property" to handle getting and setting properties on all the children.
and I use "class" and "inherit" very loosely and for expediency's sake
the first and biggest problem is how to set up the DOM to maintain proper z-index between graphical elements.
can't just stick all the Elements' containers directly in another container, because that would remove them from the z-index stack of Elements not in that container, right?
So... from what I gather, you have a bunch of elements that are draggable, but you want to be able to lock them into groups without putting them in a container because that will mess with the z-index?
dragging code is relatively straightforward, I suppose. if one Element in a group moves, just move all the other Elements in the group by the same amount.
@Meredith not really, no. the project is kind of big.
the first problem is the dom. the second problem is memory
I have an "Element" class with get and set functions that write to the DOM and update memory respectively. I need to create a "Group" class that shares a number of methods but behaves rather differently in some instances
for instance, the get method can't be the same because I need a way to differentiate between properties that belong to the group and properties that belong to the elements in that group ("left" belongs to the group element itself, "background color" belongs to all the children) and then a way to get the correct property from the children if that's the case
yes, but. complicating this even further is the fact that all elements can have more than one state, and each state is stored in memory. there's a "render" function which can take all the CSS properties and HTML attributes from a specific state on an element and apply them to the DOM representation of that element
(Unsure if Node.js is on-topic here, but don't want to ask to ask.) Before I go and reinvent the wheel... are there any good Node.js SSO servers out there? I'm looking to have centralised login/logout pages for multiple projects. It would be good if it supported Google, Facebook, etc login/account creation.
I need to have 3 tabs (3 links, A, B, C) but only two panels wher B and C point to same panel. Is something like this good approach? http://jsbin.com/yisuzakime/1/edit?html,output
doesn't that still muck up group containers, though? because if I have two Elements in a group and I want to put just one of them above another element not in that group, then I'd have to move it out of the group container to put it in a higher layer.
just resizing the divs and their positions when the bounding box element is resized, that's not too hard. but that's not changing the scale property, that's just left, top, width, and height of the children
and if you have a slow computer the computations are hardware decelerated
anyway. that was actually really helpful. I guess I didn't realize how simple groups would be. just about every property can be set directly on the elements themselves (except for transforms). huh.
there are a few more complex things but they can all go straight onto the elements themselves (css transition property, some other stuff like JS interaction behavior).
there really aren't any properties the group itself needs to know about, excluding 2d transforms which I probably will disavow for now
I don't know very well Angular, but generally it's said that inlining event listeners is bad, so how is this stackoverflow.com/a/28868353/3183756 suddenly good to do?
@deepak Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.