I think we need to celebrate more often. I've been talking to this Italian girl and she says that in Italy, they party on Wednesdays just as hard as if it was a Friday night.
I am working on a group project where we are sending serial data over Bluetooth from Arduino to Android. We are all fairly new at both Arduino and Android.
Hardware used include Arduino Uno R3 and HC-05 bluetooth module.
I am sending dummy data for a 3 axis accelerometer packet and successful...
I'm attempting to send serial messages over USB to an Arduino Uno, using raw WinAPI commands. When using baud rates less than 115200, it works perfectly fine. However, when I send at 115200 baud, two extra bytes are sent prefixing the data I sent, but ONLY for the first message after connecting t...
@bluetoothfx 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.
Hello everyone. Node.js developper, I've got the habit to use [`async`](http://caolan.github.io/async/) really extensively. With the release of ES6, preparation of ES7, and Promises, should I learn Promises and go all in with it? Or stay with async?
@RoelvanUden Thanks, was wondering if the effort was worth it, I loved async, and have a lot of personal project using it, will be a pain to rewrite them with promises
@DrakaSAN There's nothing wrong with async, but it's nothing more than a bandage library that covers for something that didn't have a good answer for a long time. The good answer has arrived, though: promises. Especially going forward with async/await functions, promises are more relevant than ever.
Or, you know, have a browser that supports promises natively. Not to dismiss Bluebird, which excels in every way in comparison, but sometimes you just don't need a library for promises.
@DrakaSAN It's a ES7 proposal IIRC, Babel supports it and so does TypeScript
@DrakaSAN don't wait for async/await to start using promises. You'll have the use a promise sometimes anyway, even with async/await. It's just some sugar.
Also.. use async/await today, like I and others do.
@MadaraUchiha: I prefer to use native implementation when possible, having 10k dependencies is not my tastes, so unless BlueBird is miles beyond natives promises, I will tend to avoid it
besides being a polyfill that you may need in some environments, bluebird is a fast implementation with thought put into stack traces, debugging, spec compliance and a bunch of just damn useful helpers.
@MadaraUchiha: I will see when I ll deal seriously with promises, only done a handful of tests projects. I was not impressed by Promises, but it may be due to the fact I m so used to async, that I simply don't wnt to change my habits.
We will see about BlueBird, since I almost never do client side, and handle as much as I can server side, it may be something I grow to like as much as async ;)
@Luggage: That was the goal of my question, I m may not like them now, because I prefer something else, but if it has become the standard, I don't have any choice, and once I know Promises better, will probably learn to love them in the meantime
@MadaraUchiha: Already starting to happen, one year ago, everything was callback based, unless you specifically searched the Promise equivalent. Nowaday, half of what I use have a Promise fork set to becomethe main branch in the future
@DrakaSAN you still have a choice, no one is making you use promises - I do warmly recommend them as do most people in this room. Promises are simple, callbacks are easy.