Preference question... if I'm developing an entire UI, complete with context menus, should I pass in context menu options as properties on a component, or should I make ContextMenu components that can target components by ID?
If the child is an editor, it may need to provide context to the menu, like the selected region. Also, maybe the editor has areas that don't have a context menu?
Hey, is it safe to run my Arduino at slightly over 5V? I have a "5V" power supply that I measured at ~5.8V. The ATmega328P can handle up to 6V, but I'm not sure about other components on the board.
@TheGenieOfTruth Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
call a function that makes the decision and returns the proper value, which is a Good Thing because you're isolating the logic and can test it (and since JS aggressively inlines, it doesn't matter)
the parser ambiguity and messy postfixness are probably the biggest problems, but combine those with no usecases and it's not a very compelling feature
this is just a kitchen sink proposal, because JS doesn't have it yet, so it should
user4229770
Hello, i want to ask an opinion, i want to create an app with recipes and one recipe would have an image, is it good to store a string for embedded image in db or should i use file path and save image somewhere... ? :)
@Zirak a) similar features have been implemented in other languages and are ugly and/or ambiguous, b) there are few/no use cases that a simple function can't solve (often better)
What's brought to the table, really, is eliminating some of the statement/expression dichotomy. Statements suck because they have no value, and can't be used as expressions.
For instance, did you know that for loops have a value? That's weird. You just can't use that value because they're statements, and it's not in the language. But anyway.
@ssube You still haven't told me how I'm somehow killing children by introducing ambiguity
having to search the beginning and end of every expression for flow control, which can then have nested statements, which can have nested flow control, etc, does confuse things
you can suddenly create code that is much harder to follow
now, bear in mind, I'd rather type a long name and autocomplete it a few times to keep my code readable (without following methods)
@Zirak just thinking about reading the code, you now have to watch the end of expressions for a do tail and read through it before you understand what is happening
// so the refactor is
`foo ${doesCrap()} bar`
function doesCrap() {
crap
}
And don't pretend like you never had 2 line functions which do exactly nothing and they're absolutely nameless, because naming them is implementing them
call and apply are pretty useful for currying and all kinds of stuff
we wouldn't have been able to do rest parameters well without apply
I've been using the const foo = isBar() pattern for a while now and am pretty happy with it, especially when it comes to testing the logic (and sometimes you can even make your logic method static, which then allows you to take a predicate instead)
there's a weak argument that using a first-class function actually makes your code more flexible, since you can easily replace the function with a variable
@Zirak I like that too. One of the few parts of Python that I like.