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22:00
I'm soliciting criticism.
how much work will it be?
have you ever tried socket.io before? do you know how it works? its API?
I don't know. Since I need socket.io anyway (or something like it) I was hoping it'd be simpler than mixing.
I know the basics of it but never used it in anger.
awww... look at me: rehearsing the talk for "asking a girl out" with a mirror... I'm so sad and lonely right now...
you can get away with a lot of fuckups, towc and still walk away with a date.
or the girl might think I'm the fuckup impersonation
22:06
Tell her you've been thinking of her all night. It's true and she'll fall right on your arms.
> Me: "hey <name>, what about going out to eat something together one of those days?"
*[awkward silence]*
what do I do?
just run for it and hope she forgets, or say something?
Why would you assume the awkard silence?
"hm... not interested? ok :( cya"
@Catgocat I dunno, she might be embarassed or might just not find the right words
@towc Teach her javascript. Much better.
22:08
just say, "Alright, well you can think it over and get back to me"
women are used to turning people down. if she's not interested she'll have excuses all lined up.
@towc If she is not interested why bother with her anyway? If she doesn't want to eat something with you she doesn't want anything with you, really.
@Luggage we're talking about 14yo people though
It's not like a piece of meat that you have to eat.
he doesn't know that, he's jsut assuming the worst
oh.
22:10
Nick suggestion is the best IMHO.
agree
@NickDugger date me
... I'll let you think it over and get back to me.
22:11
overkilled
well, now you're creepy
whatever you do, don't back off. getting rejected feels way better than not asking.
leave me alone, don't want to see you anymore
i mean, don't give up before you ask.
22:12
@towc Maybe she'll say something like that.
@Luggage That's a very convenient half truth
@Catgocat you're around his age, iirc, right?
It's my experience.
The true key is not to try anything. She'll not turn you down if so.
@FlorianMargaine No, I'm more mature can't you see?
It doesn't apply to all scenarios.
Sometimes, it is better no never have loved.
22:13
@Zirak it applies in the current context.
I didn't want to come to this, but let's make a flow chart of the conversation
@FlorianMargaine Change the title of the chatroom to date expert tips
so, let's get back on topic
I have a problem.
and btw, does poetry or flowers really help?
@FlorianMargaine I have many
22:15
I have a chrome extension. A content script uses chrome,runtime.sendMessage to send a message to the background part of the extension.
the background can send back a message to the content script, because chrome.runtime.sendMessage allows this
@FlorianMargaine but a bitch ain't one?
however, the background needs to send a message to the native application, using chrome.runtime.connectNative
the problem is that this API doesn't allow me to have a response right in there, I have to set up a separate handler
so I can't do content script -> background -> native -> background -> content script just like this with simple callbacks
hm...
the best idea I have would be using some kind of id, in the message, as to be able to keep the id of a message.
this way, the handler of the native callback can send a message with the id
hmmm
but how to handle this in the content script...
the part sending a message to the background is an addEventListener('click' handler
I need some kind of access to the element
99 red balloons
The answer is 42
maybe if I keep an object with a list of ids/element?
this way the handler in the content script, listening for background messages, just maps?
hmmm
sounds like a good idea
and more work than I expected :(
22:20
Glad I could help.
Sometimes you just need to send 15 lines to chatstackoverflow to get an idea without ever needing help.
@FlorianMargaine You've reached a good solution
it feels ugly though
@Luggage there's a wikipedia page for this
!!wiki rubber duck debugging
22:21
Rubber duck debugging is an informal term used in software engineering for a method of debugging code. The name is a reference to a story in the book The Pragmatic Programmer in which a programmer would carry around a rubber duck and debug his code by forcing himself to explain it, line-by-line, to the duck. Many other terms exist for this technique, often involving different inanimate objects. Many programmers have had the experience of explaining a programming problem to someone else, possibly even to someone who knows nothing about programming, and then hitting upon the solution in the process...
Content script sends a message, background gives it an id an slaps it in some object, signifying that your're expecting a result for that id. Background sends to native along with the id, native responds with the result and the id, background can mark as complete.
It's sorta like SEQ and ACK
except it's content script that keeps the id
should I just use a simple counter for the id?
yeah, I don't need more
Yeah, that works. You can also use a timestamp
thanks
now
how to call this object handling the id/callbacks...
I already have an object named communicator to handle communication with the background
hm, something like backgroundQueue
and I should let it handle the communication with the background, actually
@FlorianMargaine 11 years
22:26
@BenjaminGruenbaum he beat you :P ^
module.exports = communicator => {
    send(msg) {
    }
};
gotta love es6
emacs needs an update to support this syntax though ^^
@FlorianMargaine I've never written chrome extensions where can I give my first steps?
i, not a
@Catgocat the docs are very good, overall
@FlorianMargaine Yes they provide a very cool guide.
@FlorianMargaine And me thinking apps were written in native code.
there are some tiny tiny things I came across that are missing, but overall these are great docs
like:
> Chrome starts each native messaging host in a separate process and communicates with it using standard input (stdin) and standard output (stdout). The same format is used to send messages in both directions: each message is serialized using JSON, UTF-8 encoded and is preceded with 32-bit message length in native byte order. The maximum size of a single message from the native messaging host is 1 MB, mainly to protect Chrome from misbehaving native applications.
the 1MB max size, does it include the 32-bits message length?
(it doesn't, I went to ask on #chromium@freenode)
@FlorianMargaine Aren't extensions limited to cross-domain ajax requests?
22:33
what do you mean?
Can you make ajax requests to multiple domains? In the browser you're not allowed to make ajax requests outside the domain you're at.
yes, you can
you can even make requests (not http) to native applications, i.e. programs living on the computer
btw @FlorianMargaine you should give fish a try.
I did
I always go back to bash
not even zsh kept me
bash?
Why would you do that?
22:35
@FlorianMargaine Using websockets or directly?
@Catgocat no, chrome provides a specific API to do this directly
Are you referring to a normal web app?
@Zirak dunno. The shiny doesn't get to me and I just default to bash.
@Luggage no, a chrome extension
@BenjaminGruenbaum Same here - just college instead of HS.
These docs are great \o/
@FlorianMargaine Do you need to pay 5$ to publish on the chrome store?
22:40
@Catgocat yes
Credit Card pff too bad I'm not 18
no idea, I don't remember how I did it
you can ask your parents. $5 isn't much.
also, you can have a chrome extension only on github, and show people the way to install it manually.
My mom says the internet is going to still her money if she enters her credit card.
Even tho it's google.
it won't be your classic user though.
@Catgocat weren't you the one who had an app on the appstore?
@FlorianMargaine No, those are the fancy kids who own mac.
22:42
you can buy google play gift cards. I wonder if you can pay for it that way
I guess I'm confusing you.
I hate js. I want to go back to the land of lisp.
soon.
LISP is dead and burried.
is there a lisp to js compiler?
yet
how come I had a commit in it recently?!
@Luggage there are a couple of them, yes
@Luggage Clojure
22:43
there you go.
dunno why I didn't do it.
oh, clojure is lisp (or dialect of)? I didn't realize.
@FlorianMargaine What did you mean by you can have a chrome extension only on github
clojure is a dialect of lisp, yes
Lisp is not clojure though
but there is Lispyscript
because didn't you know.
1 min ago, by Catgocat
LISP is dead and burried.
22:44
@Luggage There are tons
@rlemon true. LISP is dead. Lisp is well alive :P
heh
A friend of mine once said "Java was a failed experiement".
@Luggage He doesn't even know how to write experiment.
Yea. :)
22:47
lisp is dead, long live lisp
alright, that sounds pretty good
module.exports = function(communicator) {
    let callbacks = {};
    let id = 0;

    communicator.on('queue', function(obj) {
	callbacks[obj.id](obj);
	delete callbacks[obj.id];
    });

    return {
	send(msg, cb) {
	    if (cb) {
		msg.id = id++;
		callbacks[id] = cb;
	    }
	    communicator.send(msg);
	}
    };
};
any obvious issue I haven't seen?
The sad thing is that Java was planned. The gross thing about Java is that it's the perfect example of how marketing and business can squash art and reason.
Java is great haven't you listen to their song? So cool. I want to be a Java programmer when I grow up.
haha "spring is dead"
22:54
hmmm
erinome has over 800 lines of code now
I wonder if it's too late to translate to some lisp-to-js converter
Amazing check it out.
@FlorianMargaine send should return a promise :P
Omg that's so cool.
In HTML5.. :ooooooooooooo
it does look neat. i hope i remember to rry it out later and see what it's about
For Node back end stuff, does it make more sense to have a table of tokens and user IDs for email registration confirmation or is there a non-DB way to handle the problem with sessions or something? The table thing rubs my instincts the wrong way for some reason.
23:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm having trouble chaining .map HALP
1 billion lines of codes
check out source code
@ErikReppen are you using express?
Yeha.
Also yeah. But yeha is it fun.
I use Redis for my sessions
there's a lot of good libraries out there for that
@SomeKittens well?
23:02
What would you do with redis typically? Or any back end stack?
a table or something like redis is needed. You typically want to be able to reset your service at any time so you can't depend on it just being in local memory.
Oh damn. Very good point.
@ErikReppen redis? Cache key-storage stuff
@BenjaminGruenbaum not really
Yeah, I'm vaguely familiar with it. Alright. I'll do the DB thing.
@FlorianMargaine Yes, really.
nothing wrong with a DB. If you don't feel ti fits well with your 'normal data' just separate it
@BenjaminGruenbaum how do I call resolve?
@SomeKittens Y U NO JOIN?
oh, you mean, I store the resolve method in the callbacks object?
23:03
We're building an LMS so going with sequelize for the blah sql options centers of learning are more likely to be using.
@ErikReppen Ew, LMS
@FlorianMargaine instead of putting the CB you create a new promise and put its resolve to where the cb is now
@BenjaminGruenbaum what, join recipients on customers?
Ew is why it's an opportunity to kick everybody's ass.
LMS?
@SomeKittens join recipients on customers
Crowded market but a lot of dumbases.
@ErikReppen There's no money in education - "Disruption" isn't a thing.
I looked into sequelize but ended up going with bookshelf.js instead.
@Luggage Learning Management System
@BenjaminGruenbaum Just what I need - even bigger queries.
Corporations, military, and governments train.
@SomeKittens and put your queries in .sql files so you can test them outside your app
bookshelf.js is more work, but less of a black box.
It's almost as log and you're performing a SELECT N+1 which is an antipattern
23:05
@BenjaminGruenbaum I was wondering if there was a better way to do that. Can you provide an example?
@BenjaminGruenbaum The recipients query? I got that from #postgres
Yes, but I'm at a pub, so tomorrow
683
Q: What is the n+1 selects issue?

Lars A. BrekkenThe problem is often mentioned in object-relation mapping discussions, and I understand that it has something do to with having to make a lot of database queries for something that seems simple in the object world. Does anybody have a more detailed--but simple--explanation of the problem?

i'm working on setting up redis tonight. I migrated from mongo to postgres and still have my sessions in mongo (this app is not live, yet).
Smart - unbundling MongoDB into Redis + Postgres gives you the best of both worlds.
yea. I don't hate mongo but it wasn't a good fit for me.
I just wanted to do noSQL and it SEEMED at first like a good fit for a server writren in JS
but.. at the end of the day a relational DB with proper transations was the better choice.
and redis for sessions, and some temp junk, pubsub, etc.
23:12
yeah that problem
@BenjaminGruenbaum TIL - thanks for bringing that to my attention
So, how do servers keep sessions from gobbling up too much memory? Are they just typically so miniscule it doesn't matter?
MLM
MLM
Anybody know of a javascript logic simplifier?
expire them after some time. how many users do you plan on having at a time?
23:13
@Luggage MongoDB is the best choice for a small subset of problems - everyone thinks they have these problems, but they don't.
@ErikReppen Keep whatever you store in the session small?
Indeed.
@SomeKittens Yeah, just a token and a uname at this point I think.
@ErikReppen the application developers have to keep it minuscule
Erik that's a real issue
I have seen projects where the devs had huge sessions, it had performance issues.
like, they dumped php objects in the session
23:14
Usually you put it on Redis so you can put it on another server if it eats too much memory
Well I'
Florian php also has a problem with session locking
one of the benefits of 'stateless' is that you don't need too much data in your sessions.
oops. ... I'm asking because I actually think about memory occasionally.
true stateless you can get away without sessiosn, but.. i go for 'close enough'
23:15
@BenjaminGruenbaum I know, but it wasn't this problem
each user had a 10MB session file
Wowie.
@SomeKittens Now.. someday maybe ravendb.net for another project.
Raven is solid - but it has pricing issues and it's good for very specific stuff
23:18
the async incremental map reduce looks awesome.
Definitely better than MongoDB crap
:D
I still feel like i'm just wanting to use it because it's 'neat', though. I can't really put my finger on any 'must have'
It's really neat, I worked with it before
c# is where a lot fo my experience is so the linq junk is second nature
It's a sane document store - but it's more work to maintain than a relational SQL db
Raven has an amazing LINQ adapter
Also transactions are super simple
23:19
yea. my current project is node, but c# server on raven would have worked, too
I can use it from node, but there isn't as much 'magic' as using it from c#
Node is cheap :D
Although I'd use SQL almost every time. EF is also really nice for simple stuff
money-wise? so is c#. Free, in fact.
Debugging a crying baby is hard -- closed source, no gdb, and people get upset if you monkeypatch their internals to add print statements.
@BenjaminGruenbaum EF?
@SomeKittens s/baby/woman/ and you get the same
ohh. I use nhibernate for my big c# project. for 9 years. Way to big to change, now.
23:22
Naa, C# hosting is usually more expensive and so is expertise when something goes wrong
@SomeKittens entity framework
@SomeKittens Just a .NET thing - entity framework
ohh, hosting. maybe.
@Luggage NHibernate is pretty good - the RavenDB guy worked on it before :D
23:22
silly .NET - the only language/framework I've worked with extensively is obviously the best one.
Aye. I remember him form back then
i had commit access to nhibernate WAY back in the day
@SomeKittens usually it is though :D
@Luggage cool ^^
@BenjaminGruenbaum Node? Or experience?
only trivial stuff that's been replaced.
now that I started to learn C++, I'm starting to notice the things that javascript doesn't have, like right now, I was just thinking, yeah, a reference would be nice right there
23:23
@SomeKittens the .NET solution is almost always the better one, for web stuff.
I was semi-fluent in the '05 vintage of C#. Had no idea what I was looking at when I had to become semi-fluent again a couple years ago. It has all of the features but it could stand to be a bit more conservative with the syntax. I guess if everybody just uses the latest and greatest stuff it's not such a big deal.
That said, it's pretty badass they got all those features in one language.
@ErikReppen C# changed a lot since 05'
@NickDugger objects are references
@BenjaminGruenbaum That was kind of my point.
I was against some of the 'sugar' from later c# but ended up liking it.
23:24
@NickDugger yeah
@Luggage I'd love REAL enums
it has them
Naa, C# enums are awful
Java doesn't (or didn't)
Imagine being able to do:
Java just doesn't. At least not for me.
23:26
enum Either<T, U> {
      case lhs(T), case lhs(U)
}
Where each enum value can be a different type
It's awesome in swift
I don't think that's an enum.
Sure it is, it has a finite (2) number of enumeration cases
It's either lhs or rhs
Also variadic generics would be really nice
looks more like f# complex type
Do people still use async.js or is it all promise-based now? Node's also moving a little fast for my taste. I've wasted a lot of time on docs that were literally being rewritten as I read them.
@ErikReppen People still use nodebacks, yes
Promises are gaining more traction thanks to @BenjaminGruenbaum
23:28
@ErikReppen I can converting form async.js to promises, myself.
@ErikReppen promise based, hopefully moving to coroutines based
People are understanding FRP better :D
FPR?
Functional reactive programming (FRP) is a programming paradigm for reactive programming (asynchronous dataflow programming) using the building blocks of functional programming (e.g. map, reduce, filter). FRP has been used for programming graphical user interfaces (GUIs), robotics, and music, aiming to simplify these problems by explicitly modeling time. == Formulations of FRP == FRP has taken many forms since its introduction in 1997. One axis of diversity is discrete vs. continuous semantics. Another axis is how FRP systems can be changed dynamically. === Discrete === Formulations such as Event...
Functional reactive programming
23:30
ah, right.
I really need to hang out here more. That one was new to me too. Although maybe that's what I've been working on with edioop.
@ErikReppen Yes, you do.
Every time I paste code here, @BenjaminGruenbaum teaches me something.
I got a sort of API scaffolding thingy going where you can define methods in such a way that they're also treated as events which can be listened to at multiple levels. And then the chaining promise-style thing too. So like instance.doSomething(args).doSomethingElse(args) would have doSomethingElse waiting for doSomething's completion event to fire.
Does anyone know any good resources/books/tutorials for HTML5 Canvas API and more specific game development? I am picking some books as I'll spend my holidays learning about HTML gaming (and actually doing some).
O'Reilly had a book on animation that I liked. Probably still useful but a bit dated I imagine.
@SomeKittens Random or you read it?
@Catgocat what platforms are you planning on hitting. Desktop browsers?
It was written by a room semi-regular.
@ErikReppen so you basically reimplemented promises? :-)
@SomeKittens it also has my name on it
:P
@ErikReppen Yes Desktop.. maybe mobile
23:43
@Catgocat Keep your expectations low on Android at least.
@ErikReppen The reason I got into programming was making Games.
I want to finally leave lhe bad designed DOM API.
I lost the game
Perfectly good reason to get into programming. I might strive to be an indy game dev though. The big publishers treat devs like dirt.
It's a lot more possible to do these days, too, the indy thing.
Indy devs make next to nothing on their own terms.
23:46
You don't even need to finish it. just call it alpha. :)
There are examples of the opposite. Like Notch.
that's an extreme example, obviously
@Catgocat DOM's not bad. It's just basic. It was basically designed with the intent to port to multiple languages which isn't considered very realistic now. That's why the method names are so absurdly overwrought. It's built to self-document and work in any paradigm. It's also not the API's fault that Microsoft gave themselves a gold star for semi-supporting it and then ignored it for a decade.
Microsoft isn't the only one. Lots of today's 'standards' started as single-browser features
XmlHttpRequest (Microsoft), Canvas (Apple)
Slowness (Mozilla)
Yeah, but only MS ignored specs and continued to implement their own proprietary versions of stuff for ten years.
Yea.. but they started trying to behave way back in IE 7 and started being a bit successful in IE9+
@Luggage naughty
23:49
And artificially tied their browsers to their OSes making it nigh impossible for them to update incrementally without major version changes.
mozilla (well, its predecessor, netscape) invented javascript though!
and <blink>!
yea. I know. Lots of MS behavior i don't like and the OS-specific is near the top of the list.
CSS was the real crime though. table-display properties were up and running in the last version of navigator. We didn't get it in an IE until IE 8.
alright
I wrote some code
I was jsut joking about the mozilla thing. Also I love MDN
23:51
it's all pretty
but it doesn't work
I'll see tomorrow why. Tomorrow or something.
good night, cya
'nite.
readability over functionality all the way.
I want to be an indy game dev when I grow up (seriously).
Then start now (as you are).
23:52
it's better to get a real job and make games on the side
You're already on the right track. You've made things.
Firefox is tragic.
@Luggage I have school. I strive for good grades. Have to study.
In my school I have 2 tests per week. Its crazzy.
yea, do all that, but learn/program/have fun in your spare time
you'll be a lot closer to being an indy dev than people that learn programming in college
@Luggage Always.
23:56
@Catgocat There's always work for web UI developers. I wouldn't ignore the DOM or CSS. I have no degree and fight recruiters off with a stick when I declare myself available on linkedIn. People who are strong at JS and CSS and have a clue about the DOM can be pretty hard to find.
True story.
Especially with all these new angular-uber-alles who know nothing about what's under the hood entering the market. I can't believe the questions these guys can't answer sometimes.
Though recruiters need to be fought off anyway..
Don't I know it. We've had a front end dev position open at work for like 2-3 months now, and we either get angular devs who know nothing about css, or we get web "designers" who just create wordpress sites and can't use javascript without a million jquery plugins
2
jr-mid level they were great. Complete waste of time after you have a few years experience.
23:58
and web ui development isn't even horrible. it can be funish.
I am jealous.College students learn more in a week than I learn in a year.

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