« first day (2110 days earlier)      last day (2836 days later) » 

user6524633
1:00 PM
and no more than one dash in a ro
 
user6524633
row
 
user6524633
/^(?=(?:\D*\d))[0-9]+(-[0-9]+)+$/;
 
It just says "push failed - remote not found ..." when I try to push. Auth settings say connected.
 
user6524633
this nails the dashes and number parts
 
are you ready for some fun @Martinloc??? regexr.com
 
user6524633
1:00 PM
how do I give a {6,20} limit
 
Fetch fails, too.
 
Miaou just reached the 3 millions messages
3
 
@Martinloc Sounds like lookahead is your friend here
 
What’s the overall consensus on spacing inside curly braces with ES2015 imports? import { foo, bar } from './something' or import {foo, bar} from './something'?
 
user6524633
@KendallFrey I tried the lookahead before
 
user6524633
1:02 PM
but it always throws an error in the c onsole
 
@DenysSéguret nice, congrats!
 
hmm, dunno @JanDvorak, anything out of the ordinary with the configured remotes? imgur.com/a/pXm7S
grats @DenysSéguret
 
actually I think I can do it without lookahead
 
user6524633
@KendallFrey basically it has to be minimum 6 digits max 20 and dashes allowed but no more than one dash in a row
 
(\d-?){5,19}\d
 
1:04 PM
@poke are you using ESLint?
 
@poke former :)
 
@Martinloc if it matches the pattern, afterwards do str.length >= 6 && str.length <=20
 
@Filip I’m using tslint ;)
 
I assumed it has to start and end with a digit, but maybe that's not the case
 
@poke no such consensus
 
1:05 PM
@KendallFrey hmm, not bad
 
user6524633
@kend
 
@FilipDupanović Mine says https://github.com/[company]/[repository].git
 
user6524633
what does the d at the end
 
user6524633
stands for
 
Use: 1. whatever is already in the project or if new project 2. whatever you want, but stay consistent (in that order)
 
1:05 PM
@Martinloc \d means digit
 
It means that it has to end with a digit
 
@Martinloc (\d-?) "a digit with an optional dash
 
@MadaraUchiha 0: whatever Visual Studio stuffs down your throat
 
{5,19} 5 to 19 times
\d followed by another digit
 
@JanDvorak switch to SSH: git@github.com:userfoo/repobar.git
 
user6524633
1:06 PM
I do think it works
 
user6524633
@KendallFrey 234-5-55555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555555‌​55
 
user6524633
I just tested this number
 
user6524633
and it passes the validation
 
Wait, wouldn't that mean that you could have "0-" 5 to 19 times?
 
@KendallFrey ^
 
1:07 PM
@Martinloc Add ^ and $ before and after the pattern
 
@Neil sure, isn't that valid?
 
that should make Kraken's key work... ET IMMITAM KRAKENUS
 
@FilipDupanović no cigar
 
@KendallFrey no, I don't think his string can go over 20 characters
 
^ matches the start of the string, and $ matches the end of the string.
 
1:08 PM
He never said that
@rlemon interesting
 
Desktop client sees the change, Kraken still can't fetch
 
@KendallFrey no, but I am guessing that that is what he meant
 
I am guessing he meant what he said
 
@rlemon Can I see it filtered down to rocky bodies?
 
user6524633
@MadaraUchiha thansk that worked! Why the domain starts with 5
 
1:09 PM
@poke haven't used TSLint, but it says "extensible" on the homepage; just pick some reputable config that suits you best and don't let anyone introduce overrides :P
 
user6524633
bbut validates at least 6? so if I have 12345 throws an error
 
And in javascript news nobody here will care about: Meteor 1.4 has been released
 
user6524633
even though range domain is {5,19}
 
@Martinloc Yes, it's 5,19 + that last \d at the end.
 
@Martinloc did you mean 6-20 characters?
 
1:10 PM
So essentially, 6-20
 
user6524633
ohh ok
 
Try it
 
user6524633
now makes sense
 
@FilipDupanović I’m mostly asking because the ts plugin for sublime recently started formatting the imports—when it didn’t do that before and I had to take care of consistency myself. So now I’m curious which of those would be the more common format :)
 
user6524633
yes I am testing it lol
 
user6524633
1:11 PM
ok so basically that d at the end
 
@corvid I actively don't care.
 
!!> "12345".match(/^(\d-?){5,19}\d$/)
 
@MadaraUchiha null
 
user6524633
{5,19} + d(1)
 
!!> "123456".match(/^(\d-?){5,19}\d$/)
 
1:11 PM
@MadaraUchiha ["123456","5"]
 
user6524633
right?
 
user6524633
@KendallFrey@MadaraUchiha thanks guys!!
 
@Luggage but now they're only two major releases behind Node instead of five
 
1:12 PM
> We’ve updated Node from version 0.10.46 to 4.4.7.
wat
 
user6524633
can I ask you something else because I am fairly new
 
node is hard to keep up with. seems i just updated to 4.x the other day
 
They've been using that until now? Eghghgh
 
user6524633
why people downvote you when you post a question with a little snippet of code
 
@Martinloc no. One question per day. ;)
 
1:12 PM
node 7 comes out tomorrow and 8 next week
 
user6524633
do they expect to see the whole source code?
 
user6524633
lol
 
Yeah that was a huuuuge problem, because "let's use futures for async instead of promises or callbacks"
@Martinloc Your question probably isn't phrased well enough, or might be too huge in scope
 
@Martinloc No, they downvote you for a totally different reason
 
@littlepootis 0.10 -> 4.x -> 6.x happened REALLY fast.
 
1:13 PM
@FilipDupanović when I go to "clone a repo"/github, it shows all other repos Github does (all public), but not this one.
 
@JanDvorak hmm, maybe something was left stale in .git/...
 
i'm on 4.x, myself..
 
@Martinloc because they want to see you go the effort. Nobody wants to guess at what your problem is and a snippet without context is meaningless
 
@Martinloc You really shouldn't post a question similar to so many ones you can find using Google
 
If Jan is having trouble cloneing, there is no .git/.
 
1:15 PM
@JanDvorak maybe you have a lot of repos and different users sharing with you... does it pop-up from autocomplete?
 
@JanDvorak use commandline. it works. period. :)
git clone git@github.com:jandvorak/project.git
 
@FilipDupanović Nope. Plus there's a blank line even if I don't search anything.
 
and it says in the authentication config that it's connected to your GitHub account, right?
 
is this the github gui client?
 
@FilipDupanović yes
@Luggage no
 
1:18 PM
@poke @Filip So, apparently TypeScript learned to do that in a recent update on its own, and it now prefers the former syntax (with spaces), so guess that answers my question ;D
 
yaaay \o/!!! now, get to work :P!
bikeshedding styles doesn't land features in >:|!
 
sorry (._.)
 
argh.. i need to use transform-es2015-classes in loose mode to fix some ie10 issues, but that causes some ie 11 issues.
 
I handcode everything and now I'm laughing at you
 
who, me?
 
1:24 PM
nah
 
@JanDvorak still scratching my head... should be there if you're an owner/collaborator
repo shows up elsewhere, like travis-ci.org?
 
fuck it, i just won't support ie10
 
Good morning
 
I still have to support IE9 at work…
 
1:27 PM
not according to Filip. :)
 
unless you love putting your system and user at risk
 
@Luggage Well, I still do, regardless of what Filip says :P
 
That's the joke. :)
@FilipDupanović yea, of course. And that's the #1 argument I use when talking to clients.
But sometimes the real world trumps logic and reason.
 
@poke you're a hired professional, don't let peeps with a degree from economics butt in, you're the one that's going to get burninated if things go wrong
 
Actually, I don’t get burniated
 
1:31 PM
I get urinated sometimes
 
on?
 
lemon party
 
management pushes down all sorts of silly choices, if you care about your business and it's customers you have to draw the line
 
we get it, dude.
You are preaching to the choir.
 
The customer I’m currently working for requires IE9 support because its target demographic is actively using IE9.
 
1:33 PM
whoa. solely using ie9? what demographic is that?
 
It’s some part of the chinese market
 
Could have been worse
 
I assume they are stuck in XP, too, then.
 
They are, yes
 
i was going to guess chinese but..
 
1:34 PM
odd, globally IE9 flopped caniuse.com/usage-table, only 0.43%
 
it's popular in china because xp is easy to steal.
 
FCKGW-
 
put your hands together and pray hard they migrate to Opera
 
@Luggage LOL
 
Firefox just needs to give up and do something productive instead
 
1:39 PM
chrome needs someone to chase so they don't get too lax.
I mean firefox chases chrome, not that chrome chases firefox.
I guess edge can do that, now.
 
Neat, just hatched a powerful Lickitung from a 5km egg
 
Firefox hasn't been chasing anything for a long time... Chrome and Edge are the two main contenders these days
Firefox got fat and lazy
@SterlingArcher I hatched a Hitmonlee from a 10km egg, but it was only like a cp 140ish
 
If it can't adblock it's not a legit contender
 
disappointing
 
Mozilla should just run MDN. And make Rust.
 
1:40 PM
pretty much
 
@poke curious, just what's the ratio of IE9 users, how many of them would be affected if you'd stop lying to them with support?
 
"lying to them with support"?
Stop giving him a hard time like he chose ie9. You think developers like it?
 
I have no actual idea. My customer is actively making money with our software, so they probably don’t even care to try. We have the requirement to make it work in IE9, and that’s their reason. Good enough for me…
IE9 actually isn’t that bad apart from some few things where it’s a pain
 
it's better than 8, but no where near as not-bad as 11.
 
At least 9 has canvas... shitty canvas, but still canvas.
 
1:42 PM
Oh, and lying to them won’t work since they test the software with IE9 to make sure it works
 
but yea.. i could live with developing for IE9 if I had to.
ie8 and I'd be shooting up a school.
 
I remember times where I had to account for IE6…
 
ie9 also has SVG, if I recall.
same here. I remember IE 5.5.
 
well, hope it's on some devices you'd need a bazooka to get to
it's not ATMs is it :P?
 
battleships.
 
1:44 PM
probably POS software
or accompanying it
 
that's not nice. :)
 
yeah, IE9 has most of the stuff. You don’t even need a es5 shim.
Originally we were to support IE8, so we had to add lots of stuff, like fallback styles for linear gradients. That was not nice…
 
either way, hope you're charging extra xD
 
yea.. IE8 to IE9 is a big big jump. You'll still like dropping IE9 at some point in the future, though
 
Biggest problem of IE9 is the lack of proper flexbox
 
1:46 PM
put them on the overtime tariff
 
Of course, maintaining IE9 compatibility in a software is extra effort which requires extra time and as such adds costs
 
yea, more and more 3rd party code doesn't support it
 
current biggest problem with IE9 is the missing File API
We have to add a fallback solution just because IE9 does not support it.
 
If what we do for a living were straightforward, we would all be out of a job. Don't forget that. Simplicity is what we bring to the table ideally, it certainly isn't there before we begin to work
 
const { bar = 'bar' } = foo;
TIL
 
1:50 PM
@Neil i agree, but there is neough work for us to be valuable without dealing with out-of-date software that should ahve been updated long ago.
 
YIL Michael Schumacher is basically a vegetable
 
@rlemon get chickens please i.imgur.com/IPrFWOw.jpg
 
I have no idea how I didn't know that
 
@Luggage remember that for every up-to-date programmer using docker and functional programming, there is some poor schmuck still maintaining cobol. ;)
 
1:51 PM
const { foo: { bar: { baz = 'quux', norf } } } = noodles;
 
@rlemon don't get chickens
they're horrible
 
DO YOU NOT WANT FRESH EGGS EVERY MORNING
 
Chicken poop everywhere
 
@SterlingArcher I want fresh eggs every morning less than I want to not smell chicken poop.
 
Yeah, but they lay eggs, and you equip them to hatch pokemon eggs. i'd call that a win
 
1:52 PM
@Neil and yet another company rolling out software that was some pogrammer's first project. software they'll have to rewrite, bit by bit over the next decade at 4x the cost.
conservatively.
 
@SterlingArcher Have you ever had to shovel chicken poop?
 
Do I look like @Jhawins?
 
maybe
 
ba dum tsss
 
@Luggage yep, I said ideally. In practice, we make almost as much complexity as we fix
 
1:53 PM
More. :)
 
All I remember about chickens is they're mean
 
@Neil WRT development environments, it's the fault of the developers
 
@Luggage job security ;)
 
best thing about chickens is eggs. second best thing about chickens is video stabilization
or something
 
third best thing about chickens is their ability to breath fire
 
1:55 PM
I like to think we hide complexity, not so much remove it
 
@ndugger chickens can't breathe fire
 
I see complexity leak all over the user's lap every day.
 
@FilipDupanović WRT?
 
@KendallFrey bullshit
 
can't breathe that either
 
1:55 PM
prove it
 
How else do you fry a chicken? They breathe fire on each other... bam. 16 herbs and spices later KFC has been exposed
 
I don't have enough chickens to experiment with
 
@Neil With regards to
 
@Neil WRT == With Respect/Regards To
 
@SterlingArcher where did the extra 5 come from?
 
1:56 PM
with respect to... there was never anything preventing us from introducing VMs, Vagrant, Docker... but then co-workers just don't want to use it
 
Ah
 
SUCK IT COLONEL SANDERS
 
there's a bernie joke somewhere there
 
@FilipDupanović docker is a great example of hiding complexity
 
Why did Bill Clinton get fired from KFC? He couldn't keep his hands off the breasts and thighs.
 
1:57 PM
 
Sometimes it shouldn't matter what your co-workers think. There will always be someone saying "but VMs are slow, I don't like commandline, Git confuses me, etc"
 
and transparency, if the same containers end up running in production
 
What happens underneath the hood is very complex, but we modularized it well
 
@rlemon That picture looks very "creepy old uncle"
 
well, now we know what your handsy uncle looks like.
 
1:58 PM
@Luggage in the case of git, that's all my coworkers
 
Sanders' chances of winning died around the same time as Harambe
 
yea. it's a lot of people. It was me for a while. I have spoken the words "I don't get git" before.
 
> What's a matter Colonel Sanders? Chicken?!
 
Then came weed and graph theory and git made sense.
 
@Luggage The problem for me is that they think that's a compelling reason to use TFS
 

« first day (2110 days earlier)      last day (2836 days later) »