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13:00
sorry ... but couldn't resist
@AbhishekHingnikar I'm sorry, I don't speak Java, I drink it.
hey by the way is there a nice lil http library for C++ ?
@AbhishekHingnikar There's Casablanca
@AbhishekHingnikar I'm sorry; did you mean "SCNR"?
@AbhishekHingnikar There's a nice lil http library for every language
(probably even logo)
13:03
not for Brainfuck, though
I bet there is
@dystroy i meant something like python requests or something to work with rest
and he read my mind and gave me what i exactly wanted !
well thanks :D
curl is pretty good to work with tbh
13:14
@FlorianMargaine indeed.
> The C++ REST SDK (codename "Casablanca") is a Microsoft project for butt-based client-server communication in native code using a modern asynchronous C++ API design.
teehee
butt computing is the best
especially dem butt databases
Put it in the butt ™
13:15
Sir! Right away, sir!
I thought Abhishek was saying that ^
@rlemon you didn't send me the mail?
no sorry, I will send asap
np, it's for you
working on the front end, got distracted
Who wants a sap? Give me syrup!
13:18
Watching Bill Bye vs Ken Ham in a live debate. Fuck I miss Hitchens...
You're 12 hours behind, bud.
@KendallFrey I know, but I experience reality on my own terms!
@rlemon SWEET JESUS
@KendallFrey you are in new zealand right ?
13:19
first time I saw that gif it was a risky watch through
@monners where are you ?!?! [ i mean 12 hours behind nz ]
@AbhishekHingnikar Not even close.
Bill Nye looks kind like an older version of last season's Dr Who
Bill Nye looks like Bill Nye.
@KendallFrey Ah darn canadian
how can somebody be 12 hours behind you !
13:20
@AbhishekHingnikar Melbourne, so about 2 hours behind NZ. Ballpark figure, I don't care enough about that decrepit country to check.
@AbhishekHingnikar Because the debate was 12 hours ago
@KendallFrey I know, but I'm home from work and drunk now, so all requirements are met :P
@monners
> live debate
If you didn't watch it live, you're nobody!™
you sure the debate is live ?
13:21
not anymore
2
Q: What is the root object in Node.js

LegoYou may know the global object in Node.js: {Object} The global namespace object. In browsers, the top-level scope is the global scope. That means that in browsers if you're in the global scope var something will define a global variable. In Node this is different. The top-level sco...

Even if it's at debatelive.org
Oh no. I thought this debate was going to be between two intelligent speakers*.
does bill shut him up?
I would hate to watch/listen to a debate that would make me angry because creationism is out witting Bill
I know nothing about debating, but it looked pretty close to me
13:25
"the word science has been highjacked by secularists in teaching evolution to force the religion of naturalism on generations of kids" - NOTHING ABOUT THAT STATEMENT IS HEALTHY!
brb guys
ttyl
The only reason I still think self-professed faith followers may be worthy of a spot in public debate is because of Arthur C. Clarke and Orson Scott Card. Perhaps it's time I relax my standards...
Orson Scott Card surprised me so much
13:30
@SomeGuy I'm still undecided about the Ender movie
The movie was okay
It doesn't convey as much as the book
@SomeGuy Shocker
@SomeGuy It was pretty true to the books, I just don't think it would have made sense to anyone that hadn't read the booksd
@SomeGuy you mean 4 books
Haha, yeah, same old
@BartekBanachewicz There's only a movie for the first one yet
13:32
I haven't seen it yet TBF
@SomeGuy Ender's Shadow - So fucking good!
@SomeGuy 3the others... I read em, but I'm not a huge fan
Have to read it
Yeah, I didn't even bother reading the other 3
I'm actually reading the Rama series again at the moment. Fuck, Clarke really didn't have much faith in humanity, did he? :P
@SomeGuy Ender's Shadow is totally worth a read.
Right after I'm done with The Republic :P
Maybe simultaneously if I slow down later on
It's the story of Bean, which turns out to be better than the story of Ender
13:35
That's pretty exciting considering how much fun Ender's Game was
yea listening to creationists is not my idea of fun
I dunno if I can watch that fully.
@SomeGuy So read it. But once you're done, do yourself a favor and read starship ntroopers by Robert A. Hinlein.
@rlemon I didn't watch it. But I heard that Bill Nye didn't really do well either
@monners I'll add that to my ever growing reading list
It is number 2 in my list of best books ever read
13:37
What's number 1?
Watching now. We'll see how he does.
I still have to read The Wheel of Time series
@SomeGuy Deep Storm by Lincoln child
how do you honestly debate with them. on one side you have observation and reproducible methods. on the other you have faith and trust in a story
Hollywood is missing out of MILLIONS by not making that book into a movie
13:38
eerrhh
nodes 0.10.x version are the stables right
@rlemon One of Ken Ham's big points was that creationists use the same observation and experimentation as atheists.
@rlemon 'It's not about debate, it's about demonstrating the range of Human ineptitude.
so 0.11.x are the nightly builds ?
@KendallFrey what bothers me most is that this all dwells down to 'we've accepted this religion to be true above all others... and therefore we are now proposing it as scientific fact'
not that i'm religious, but what about other religions with their own origin stories.. i'm sure they are just as pissed off
@rlemon Sounds like you're also a Clarke fan
13:41
I read 2001 a long time ago (probably around 2001 actually) - nothing else of his
Do you know if there's a way to automatically follow 301 in node when doing an http request (could implement it, yes, just want to know if it exists)
@jAndy yes and yes (on nightlies), Node < .10.20 has a vulnerability iirc so make sure your .10.x is above that.
@rlemon I highly recommend it. I'll actually go so far to say I'll read whatever you forward in exchange for a reading of that Clarke series
@monners Kurzweil
13:43
@BenjaminGruenbaum Thanks !
@rlemon I'll do it if you're serious
Raymond "Ray" Kurzweil ( ; born February 12, 1948) is an American author, inventor, futurist, and a director of engineering at Google. Aside from futurology, he is involved in fields such as optical character recognition (OCR), text-to-speech synthesis, speech recognition technology, and electronic keyboard instruments. He has written books on health, artificial intelligence (AI), transhumanism, the technological singularity, and futurism. Kurzweil is a public advocate for the futurist and transhumanist movements, as has been displayed in his vast collection of public talks, wherein he h...
its so tempting to just go for nodejs-latest.tar everytime I update my server
Age of intelligent > Age of spiritual > Singularity is near.
^ in that order. first two are quick(er) reads
13:45
@rlemon Give me a book and I'll trade you for 3001 or rendezvous with rama.
@BenjaminGruenbaum did you use it ? Is it high quality ?
the first two are less relevant today, but they give the author cred and let you get into his mindset before reading the last
@dystroy I used it and it works. I don't really use Node for scraping anymore.
he touches on it in his books, but that article explains his ideas very well
13:47
Actually, for all those strpped for time, all of Clarke's woprks largely end in the same way --> "You are a human and you suck"'
@rlemon ]No articles, give me books and I'll read 'em
0
Q: Difference between Javascript then and now

haopeiAbout 10 years ago, when I first began learning web development, I've read that Javascript was 'bad' and we should avoid it whenever possible. However, today is a different story - Javascript is used everywhere. What changed from the past to now which makes JS so widely acceptable?

ROFL
that one has epic potential
@monners no, read that article
:P
Holy fuck my typing is bad tonight
@rlemon Reading
@haopei Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Javascript is Life. Life is Javascript. Please review the room pseudo-rules: rules.javascriptroom.com. Don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
Thanks for sharing my post, jAndy.
13:49
the epic questioner is here, omg! omg!
@rlemon I've added it to pocket
I'll be back tomorrow having read it
@haopei as someone who started with web a long time ago as well and didn't come back to it until a few years ago, my best advice on the subject is for you to poke around with JS and see what you can do with it today.. you will understand how the natural progression of browsers / the language / supporting APIs has driven it to be a much more robust and powerful language to work with
mostly the browsers have gotten WAY better and we're no longer dealing with NN4 and IE5
life is much better now
the problem just is.. that in this highly flexible environment things change so often and quickly, 10 years is literally like forever
Thanks. As jAndy might have suspected, I am not a seasoned developer. I've developed sites with minimal JS. I'll poke around as you suggested.
13:52
even if the language in its deepest core didn't change much actually (it has with ES5 and certainly ES6) but all the interfaces and things around it.. its all.. completely... new
well yea it is MUCH better now. but the reason ten years ago people may have told him to 'avoid it' likely was because of the shit ass browsers it was running on
Before V8, anything complex or stressing the GC was doomed to failure.
I miss <blink> :?
Now, executing a JS program is often faster than for the Java engine to just verify a class file.
13:54
I mean, imagine a webapp without ajax, without json, certainly without sockets, no hardware acceleration on gfx, no css, etc. etc. etc
it was basically like an upgraded terminal, even with js
Hi all
No CSS? No JS? You've got yourself a template.
no css, everything inline
@monners what about it
do it like we did in the 90's
13:56
I'll have to buy that book. Is that a 'beginner' book? The extent of my JS is the codecademy course
I don't think css was available 10 years ago, but I'm not sure
I don't remember not coding with css, but I could be wrong
@BartekBanachewicz It's kinda hard to comment on an environment so basic.
it has been a very long time
CSS made it cleaner but before CSS you could build your own objects to handle styling.
13:57
I had originally thought that JS today is hugely owed by improved browsers, but I was just making sure there wasn't more to this. Thanks for the help everyone.
@haopei it's not very hard, but it's not particularly good either
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a style sheet language used for describing the look and formatting of a document written in a markup language. While most often used to style web pages and interfaces written in HTML and XHTML, the language can be applied to any kind of XML document, including plain XML, SVG and XUL. CSS is designed primarily to enable the separation of document content from document presentation, including elements such as the layout, colors, and fonts. This separation can improve content accessibility, provide more flexibility and control in the specification of presen...
1996 (initial release) ^
@dystroy Oh I've done my time building EDMs.
okay I started with web in 1997/8
so I had css :P
oh okay.. I might be wrong
13:57
I didn't like the book, but maybe because I didn't like what it was trying to sell me
Of course big JS applications 10 years ago were very different and relied more on the server
css support started with IE3.0
with was released 1996

Javascript Resources.

Sep 4 '12 at 13:36, 2 minutes total – 8 messages, 1 user, 1 star

Bookmarked Sep 4 '12 at 13:40 by rlemon

@jAndy we had sticks and stones before that
@haopei ^*2
13:58
I don't remember using CSS in 1996. I suspect it was slow to gain traction. Or I was slow to adopt it...
that was a browser !
@rlemon thank you
Although I do remember doing things like <p font="..." color="...">...</p>
ha!
13:59
and table layouts
@qwertynl (or better : code to generate that and keep sane!)
CSS is for Chumps. Pros use <meta>
Amateurs use the font attrib.
<font> tag FTW
@dystroy Bahh. I was younger than 10 in the 90s lol
@rlemon unclosed, ideally.
13:59
yup
I started web stuff in middle school. (so abt 13-14 years ago)
just keep nesting them for new fonts

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