@SomeKittens to be fair safeApply and variants are very common in Angular - it's just the fact you really shouldn't be doing .apply yourself almost ever.
@SomeKittens because it beats the purpose of two way data binding - there are very few things you should do that won't be picked up by a digest cycle anyway.
@BenjaminGruenbaum You're making a lot of sense - let me try and rephrase. One rarely needs to manually call apply/digest because one should be using Angular services (like $timeout and $http) that automagically call it.
Yes, just like you'd use ng-click instead of adding a DOM click handler using element, take a function parameter and call .apply - it's just something the framework already solves for you.
@SecondRikudo - yes, next accepts an exception as an argument, which will take you to error handling. There's many examples online on how to do error handling that way
There are cases you might want to opt out of digests and handle the DOM or other stuff manually - but in most angular apps you don't really have enough performnace problems to justify that.
@HatterisMad hey I know this is odd but you know of any way I could possibly "guess" at the total volume of a cylinder head? I know I am able to ~calculate it using the compression ratio and total displacement of the engine but I really am trying to calculate that compression ratio right now so I don't have it.... SweptVolume / (compressionRatio - 1) is the calculation I mean that I already know I can do but I need to go backwards :?
@BenjaminGruenbaum sure, but that doesn't seem to really be relevant. I mean.. if it works differently, state has to be involved, and I can't see how there can be state..
function MyError(){}
MyError.prototype = Object.create(Error.prototype);
function foo(){ bar(); }
function bar(){ baz(); }
function baz(){ throw new MyError(); }
foo();
I know there's an error because mapper.fetch contains only Promise.reject(new Error)
In the route list:
this.app = express();
this.app.use('/items', this.getRoute('items'));
this.app.use(function() {
throw new HttpError(404, 'The resource you requested was not found.');
});
this.app.use(require(ROUTE_DIR + 'error'));
Nah, it was just something mentioned in a discussion. About "protocols". But the only protocol related thing es6 introduces is iterator protocol.. Which is basically an interface.
@BenjaminGruenbaum so, the only way I've been able to make it work is if I JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(theObject)). The object properties are enumerable and are on the object itself.. what the heck, right?
people.mozilla.org/~jorendorff/… runs through IsCallable, which as we've seen before checks for [[Call]]. If our object were to implement [[Call]], even typeof would say it's a function