This seems to be happening only about half of the time, which is why I find myself actually taking the time to write out a question.
I have an array of objects, each of which contain a .draw(canvas) method, which "draws" that object to the canvas.
You can see that the method clearly exists --...
Oh... I think I see what's happening... So, I'm using promises... I guess sometimes the components are promises and other times, they're the real objects.
@copy I fixed it... I just had to rename/move things around for my promises... It's all better now. I know I should know better and use the dev tools more, but I usually don't have to do any real debugging at work. I don't get to write fun things at work.
I like Go. It's kind of low levels but with many of the constructs of Python and other modern languages and none of the things I dislike like exceptions, inheritance tree, etc.
Exceptions are great when you don't want to fix a bug and you want to keep it buried in your code so that it presents itself as a wonderful surprise a few months or years later
Even if we ignore sharing code between the client and the server (and there is really no reason to do that), node's ecosystem is much better for web and libraries imo
@copy I wouldn't use Go for web development, I don't understand why people develop web with a language that's that low level
It's strongly typed but it's missing a lot of features that you'd expect a strongly typed language to have, and it's missing a lot of libraries you'd expect it to have, and they still break it every now and then.
I think it might be interesting to consider it in a year or two.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I made a realtime game server (including chat) in go, it wasn't much more code than if I had made it in node (but there wasn't any fallback for websockets and I could only do it because I know the basics of how the web works). More importantly most of it was very clean
@copy you might hate the fact he demonstrates how Windows is oh so very superior to Linux in terms of OS architecture several times in that lecture - so there's that.