@rlemon There are plenty of things you simply can't do with the current event model, also it's very easy to implement publisher/subscriber / events with javascript since it's already event based
The Lemon Party of Canada (') is a frivolous Canadian party which has operated on a federal level, as well as provincially in Quebec. The party was officially registered on January 8, 1987,
by then leader, Denis R. Patenaude and deregistered on November 14, 1998 for failing to have at least ten candidates stand for election.
The party is headed by "Pope Terence the First", whose existence is unconfirmed. Their official agent is Mary-Gabrielle Blay II.
Their 2004 national convention produced a platform of policies which were "placed in small green plastic boxes and sold to ind...
The Lemon Party has pledged to: Restructure Canada's economy to be centred on lemon production Support global warming so lemons can be grown in Canada Abolish Toronto Repeal the law of gravity
1) re-invent wheel 2) learn how wheels work and how they are made 3) look at other wheels you didn't make and compare how they are different (better or worse) 4) probably never use your wheel because now you can identify better wheels and why 5) use better wheels with knowledge and not because they are popular wheels 6) Rollin' all the way to the bank.
@roccosportal.com It offers no advantage to what the language already has. In practice there is very little need for it in JavaScript. Using it means you don't really understand the langauge
@roccosportal.com let us work through a use case, present some classical inheritance use case and I'll walk you though how I would implement it in javascript. This usually works better than a philosophical debate about it
@roccosportal.com I can attach functionality on the fly, I don't have to just do SimpleJSLib.EventHandler.inherit(...) I can do EventEmitter.generate(myObject) which would make my object an event emitter without 'constructor()'
I can build my EventEmitter module to decorate objects to become event emitters
I'm not making them 'EventEmitter' I'm adding that ability to them, that's very different conceptually
You can still inherit stuff, specifically I think event emitters are a bad example since it doesn't determine what an object is (node.js disagree btw, you util.inherit to extend EventEmitter)
@roccosportal.com Extending an object and Inheriting from it are very different :) Before going into private variables let's cover the inheritance case
@BenjaminGruenbaum ok.... now you are just being annoying.... There is no "real" inheritance in js that I know of. only the hacky way that you just showed.
@BasicBridge don't confuse that with (function(){...})() (without the dollar) - that will define a function and execute it (not pass to jQuery). That's perfectly fine.
For example, I had to serialize some data out of a database into 8 text files, so of course every text file was a class, they all inherited from an abstract class that used inversion of control to do exception handling. Then I had a factory to create those classes, I put them in an array and called the 'createFile' method on each of them in a forEach array.
You can structure your code very well in modules in javascript.
Oh wait, I know what'll help you! I know a great book
The thing is, I'm not a strong believer in encapsulating variables, I believe in python's approach. We're all condescending adults.
Why would you even be aware of functionality I don't publish? I can have all the functions and methods I'd like, if I'm not telling you to use them in the agreed API, don't touch em.
@roccosportal.com generally what do programmers share? They share functionality of code
I'm making the API that talks to the database, you're making the API that talks to the business logic, we need to talk
For that I use the revealing module pattern, I return an object which contains all the stuff you need to use that I have
That fits modules much better than it fits classes
Modules describe independent pieces of code (or at least pieces that define their functionality well)
Anyway I've got to go and work on something. There are plenty of good resources and books on how to create scalable and maintainable javascript. I suggest you start with Javascript: The good parts by crockford. Addy Osmani's book I linked you to is also good
@roccosportal.com why would you want to in the first place?
I've set up protected scope in Java hundreds of times
I'm not sure why, it's what I was told :)
The only thing that really matters is whether I'm confined to the package or not, protected isn't really important. The big difference is between public and not public, package protected and private are usually all your code
As I said, I don't want to give external objects the possibility to use variables, but objects that "extends" me somehow
The argument "The programmer is not a 4 year old child, 'giving the option' to him does not mean he'll use it" would mean that everything could be public.
But still you decide to make some variables private
And it the module pattern if you extend the object I don't see any way to get access to this private variables.
But well, you have giving me a lot to think about. Maybe in some time I understand what you mean.
Oh no thanks. I was just so pissed of man. Water went on my table, and the laptop on the chair next the table, was splashed with a little of water, really few, so i dried it. Everything was good I still could use it. then time to go to see my friends, I putted it in sleep mode. It made a weird song. I try to put it back on, no way. I plugged it, no LED. Then an AMBER/white blinking one
I booted it, and it shutted down randomly. I booted it again, and again shutted down at a different time of the boot process
Then no more LED, plugged or not. No way to boot it. I tried every 'power down the motherboard' I could find on the internet
At the end, to please my roommate I tried the 'rice' solution
at the moment I putted the rice on, the LED went completly white...
I did not do anything else than putting rice on my computer, I waited 5 minutes and tried to boot it. no way. the LED was white but no way to boot the laptop