@SomeKittens what the fuck happened to Andrew Barber :O?
@thePetProjectProgrammer generally, that's a better way (in case other people hold a reference, but you can pass an object and have your modified reference as a property of it to get pass-by-reference
Yeah, I had an hour long chat with a friend yesterday about bargaining for more equity over salary. Also, a big part of equity is that it's usually given with a 4 year vesting period which is incentive to stay at the same company for 4 years.
The concept isn't just getting a more motivated employee - it's getting them cheaper and giving them incentives to stay even if you don't give them raises.
There is a surprising amount of scientific research on how to motivate employees by the way, I can ask my wife about it if you'd like she took a course about it
> The authors estimate that it would take a seven-fold increase in the amount of options held by the typical employee to generate the same job performance effects as a doubling of the employees profits on exercise of stock options.
That'll actually be a good point for my article
Once employees see the relationship between their work and $$$, they work harder (for up to a year)
@minitech cancellation is inherently problematic given promises being eager and immutable and multi consumer - people disagree on how it should be done and they become demotivated.
Why would you ask a question that you a) know the answer to, b) have asked yourself before half a year ago and c) mark it yourself as duplicate to your own question? I mean, seriously, this is complete nonsense. — Tomalak2 mins ago
@Tomalak people ask a lot about the promise constructor antipattern and why it's called an antipattern not realising it's the same thing as the deferred anti-pattern. I figured out the best way to approach this on Stack Overflow is this. The point was to create a searchable target for this pattern that reuses the answers on that other question. We see this question pretty often and the terminology is interchangeable. Asking questions in Q&A style is encouraged here, canonicals are good. If you think I should bring it up on meta I'll gladly do so. — Benjamin Gruenbaum1 min ago
:/
Why the hell does that question have a reopen vote...
I need to know if posible to control a led like this with Javascript, how can I connect a laptop to this led powered by the electrical home network and turned on/off?
Thanks in advance.
In the last year and a half I've answered almost 500 questions in the promise tag. We have a rather small community there and we like to open canonicals such as this one this one or that one. They usually help a lot with duplicates and are generally very useful to us.
One canonical in particular...
@Tomalak it's not rickrolling at all. Rickrolling is when you expect a link to something and end up here (instead of what you wanted). What Benjamin has constructed is the StackOverflow version of Google's "Did you mean" function. — SomeKittens1 min ago
I was in the process of writing an elaborate answer with a number of reasons why all this is not a good thing, but they all start to feel pretty contrived now that I've thought about it some more. Technically there is nothing wrong with this and it has potential benefits. I'll remove my downvote on your question (I think you have to edit it for this to work). — Tomalak1 min ago
hi, I am creating a "class" that takes some parameters in its constructors, and I want to process then inside the ctor itself. How can I do this in a way that every instance of the object gets that processing method? Can this C++ paradigm be applied to JS?
@JanDvorak Can you give more precisions please, here is what I tried so far : var st = "OF n°13243 something n° 1234"; var tab = st.match(/^n°$\s/gi); alert(tab);
basically I want to extract the numbers that have "n°" or "n° " before them
I'm running through the mongoose quickstart and my app keeps dying on fluffy.speak() with the error TypeError: Object { name: 'fluffy', _id: 509f3377cff8cf6027000002 } has no method 'speak'
My (slightly modified) code from the tutorial:
"use strict";
var mongoose = require('mongoose')
, db =...
@Luggage no it doesn't. I want a one step process. with your example p.mod() must be called explicitly. Anyway, like I said, it isn't crucial for now. Thanks for the time.
Can anyone give me an example how not using modules actually pollutes the global scope? I understand that variable names are likely to collide, but I can't picture in what form external non-modular code would be loaded
in node.js, all .js files are modules anyway. You have to explicitly pollute the global scope using the global.someVariable = ...; (which you shouldn't do).
So you'd need to put more work into avoiding modules than just using them.
@Luggage But should I define the functions in the module first and then choose the exports at the end, or should I return multiple functions in an object, or should I use an export argument and add the methods to it?
The simplistic implementation of require given previously has several problems. For one, it will load and run a module every time it is required, so if several modules have the same dependency or a require call is put inside a function that will be called multiple times, time and energy will be wasted.
That's wrong. NodeJS doesn't load the same module twice
Supposedly, it might be loaded more than once if you refer to it differently, like require('../someModule.js') in one file and require('./someModule') in another.
We now have a module system that uses a single global variable (require) to allow modules to find and use each other without going through the global scope.
It's funny, but I never thought that a functional language with C-like syntax would be practicable. And yet it turns out that it's really very straightforward.
I guess everyone else felt the same, given the way that JS has taken the programming community by surprise.