btw @Ekin I have nothing against your code at all, I just keep opening random plugins and optimising the resolve() layers, it just so happens that I have done it to ones you wrote but it's nothing against your or your code
@DaveRandom I kinda feel bad that you were cleaning up any possible the mess I may have created months ago with all the refactoring you are doing on them :P But it's also showing me what to be more careful next time, so that's the important interpretation I have here.
@Ekin a) not particularly b) like you say, it was months ago, a lot can change in a week, let alone months c) I probably helped you with a lot of it so it's at least 50% my fault...
@Ekin well I've only relatively recently landed on my current view on certain things... notably that resolve(function() { ... }) should be avoided where the body of the function is very long, purely for readability reasons
Also some of the stuff I've been cleaning up in Canon is a hangover from a previous iteration of the ChatClient API, some of the code can be optimised now in a way that it couldn't at the time it was first written
@kelunik pull the code into a private method and resolve(this->method()) instead. Obviously it's a case-by-case thing, sometimes one makes more sense than the other
mostly though @Ekin the reason I've refactored those two is because I happened to end up in those two files by way of doing something else, and I get easily distracted :-P
OK so @PeeHaa I'm currently liking the idea of using docker to sandbox plugins if they are running in their own process space. Thoughts? I'm assuming you will hate it, I did when it was first suggested.
It has selling points. Notably that it would be impossible for a plugin to do any damage to the system (we would run the containers so that they don't have direct access to the network) which would allow us to have anyone dynamically load arbitrary plugin code safely
@PaulCrovella It's a toy, but it's also a learning tool for me
hell, jeeves could turn into a chat->rabbitmq (and back) gateway - don't even need to deploy containers, just let people run their plugins wherever they like
@PeeHaa another thing: If plugins run in their own process space with a generic RPC protocol for communicating with the bot, you could potentially write wrappers to enable writing plugins in other languages
is there a way, how I can echo out an onclick event, without having to use both types of speech marks? My code is echo '<td><button type="submit" name="editUser" onClick="Alert.render("Press yes to confirm, no to decline.")">Edit</button></td>';
I am trying to create tables based on a id that changes but i get a syntax error returned:
FAIL2: You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '5 ( myID varchar(255), Data varchar(255), Related varchar(255),...
@UnknownPotato I think the issue here is that you still have no clue what WebSockets are or how they work. So you're starting to ask questions you don't even know how to ask. My suggestion is just go learn about WebSockets first and when you do you'll understand why your current question makes no sense.
Basically what you just asked was something along the lines of "Can I have my kitchen cabinet and my bluetooth too?" Those two things are not mutually exclusive. I have no idea why you'd ask such a question.
i went full retard i pressed on myself and saw some rooms ive been to and then i checked on you what rooms you went on and then i thought there was a room name invite this user to
It means that to yield is to give way to something. It doesn't make sense to say I yield from something. It would make more sense to say I yield to something.