I still haven't figured out half the stuff in TS.. but drool @
EventDispatcher.Singluar<EventDispatcher.SingleEventCallback<any>> = new EventDispatcher.Singluar<EventDispatcher.SingleEventCallback<any>>('on_item');
in PHP it would be the equivilent of:
interface<T> Callback {
public function __invoke(Event $e, T $value);
}
class CallbackCollection<T> {
private array<Callback<T>> $callbacks = [];
}
In this case it's a top level dispatcher whose job is to send events from the communications layer to the individual modules that subscribe to it, they then decode what they want (as they do know the schema) and then fire off their own events
I've started playing with TS for a few years now, but only recently (4-5 months) started working full time with it. What I noticed is that I'm not as disciplined as I'm with PHP.
E.
For example I don't always add explicit return types because the inference engine automatically adds it. The same with properties that have a default value. Oh, and webstorm it's annoying with their language autocompletes.
My existing JS is very class-based but having to support IE11 I was limited in what I could do in terms of the new feature set. I started tying typescript when PHPStorm decided it no longer wanted to properly follow docblocks
So I thought I'd give something a lot more explicit a try, although I'm worried I'll have to go all-in as I've not yet worked out how plain old javascript can reference typescript modules
Have a look at checkJs and project references, maybe it would be helpful. Maybe you could leave the existing code as it is by having less strict typing checks in the old code
I have front end running at localhost:8080 and api resides at some other port. I am using laravel to generate verification email url using the below code. When the user clicks verification link from their inbox it redirects to my laravel url but I want it should use front end url (I mean mail should open localhost:8080 and not laravel url). I am not sure if this is possible or not or I am doing it wrong
> I am passionate about learning new things, not just limited to the area of programming. Wikipedia can be an endless time sink if I'm unprepared to escape its grasp.
My A level practical project was to write a web based interface for managing student records... it was way above what they expected people to do (they only taught I.T whereas I was already churning through a hundred thousand lines of VB6)
Anyway... as part of my research I went trawling over the school network for the existing record of attainment... and found it, turns out it was a MS access file protected by nothing more than a read password... which ASP completely ignores
I take a look inside it, use it to analyse what kind of data I'd need... documented how I did it, showed it to my I.T. teacher (who made it) to ask some Qs, and all hell broke loose.
Only reason I ever got back on was because my business studies teacher was the headmistress and she was getting annoyed I couldn't get online to do my class work
also messed with BASIC a bit, then wrote programs on my TI calculator for math class so I wouldn't have to memorize formulae, only one teacher let me use it though :(
then I made a basic program that couldn't compile because qb4.5 ran out of memory... even though it ran in qb4.5 itself.. then I made my own libraries in assembly...
tried borland pascal, c, delphi, never java.. and i love PHP because it just runs everywhere
Fun recent debugging stories: I spent ages debugging why a ->reduce() on a Laravel collection wasn't working, until I found out I forgot to add the results of the carried variable to it. Then I figured out I was wrong to use ->reduce() anyway and should have used ->sum().
I wish me working more now saved me time later, I'm a one man team in charge of a huge project that could very well have 10 people on it. I don't think i've done less than a 12 hour workday in 2 months
It's a challenging job, and the pay is decent enough, not great for the amount of hours, but decent for where I live... I just don't have enough hours in the day, and certainly don't have enough hours to do what I already need to do, and train someone else
I don't know about yours, but the society that I'm in is discriminating.. I don't think that it can be otherwise. For starters, they discriminate on intelligence.
I have a bachelors of engineering so I call myself a Software Engineer, but it didn't seem worth it to write the project file to become a Charted Engineer
@Tiffany morning! My main target is to finish lisachenko/z-engine library and make it awesome, to provide new features for PHP developers and even allow them to write their own extensions. Beside that it’s new knowledge, experience and fun for me )
@Tiffany Not just disabilities. Gender, religion or life philosophy, desire to have children, race, sexual orientation, gender identity, nationality, political orientation -- all grounds here that can't be discriminated upon. But it still happens.
granted, for me, my learning "disability" is that I learn really well via relation, but I'm almost shit at any other form of learning, especially lectures
I've honestly not got that far yet :S I've not used webpack for it though, all the existing assets are served through a custom packager that does some additional stuff beyond just packing so I suspect i'll have to separate out the JS
I'm working in Typescript (v2.4.2) using Webpack to compile. Everything compiles fine, but when I run my code in IE11, I get the following error: 'Promise' is undefined.
Here's my tsconfig:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"outDir": "./wwwroot/js",
"sourceMap": true,
"allowJs"...
yes, so in a webpack project you define javascript modules, and they can import ts modules. its all compiled down to a single (default) or chunks of js files in es5
our entrypoint script in webpack is javascript, and we have a lot of js code still in tideways, but 30-40% of it are converted to typescript now, it all includes each other
I've only been working in Typescript for about well... literally 1 day. The language seems easily portable from knowledge of other languages, the tooling, not so much
with modern javascript you have to put it all in webpack, it is a beast but once you tame it everything becomes niceish (the most nice level of javsacript relatively ;-))
lets say we dont know the numbers in the brackets, how can I echo them ? I tried this but it echo the value of the first number, instead of number itself (inside the brackets);