It seems the .subscribe() call on the server can really just be a fetch(), since it just needs to fetch the data initially before it can render it out.
Thanks for the info Nate. So in the pad example I mentioned before, the subscribe() called on the model serverside allowed for the "change" event to be emitted from the model on the client?
Got it, so the representation of the model that gets serialized out to the client has some sort of state that tells it that it's subscribed; and then from then on some sort of polling occurs that keeps it synced?
I see; so polling was the wrong term. The server resolves update conflicts from the clients using OT and pushes out the 'correct' representation of the updated data to the clients
Ok, so it's not like hitting a rest endpoint and getting a JSON blob back. You just get back operations that are consumed by the client and the client is responsible for getting their local representation correct?
Hi guys quick question: If i send two messages over the same html5 websocket a few hundred milliseconds apart from each other, is it theoretically possible for them to arrive in a different order than they were sent?