@BenjaminGruenbaum not really the case, im looking for any high level thoughts. Ofcourse a basic orderBy in plunker will work, I am basically doubting ability to reproduce it properly
@monners Taggle Verb - the act of running and tackling someone in a massive, joyous hug. A combination of the words "Tackle" and "Huggle". Best performed from behind on an unsuspecting hug-victim.
@NickDugger I read a really interesting article a while back about how job descriptions influence the quality of the candidates you attract (such as how using the term ninja scares away people who you might actually consider one)
@SecondRikudo not without annotations so not yet. You can assign a generator and loop the prototype properties or use an async function and turn on the "bluebird coroutine" flag in 6to5.
Hi folks.. I'm taking a look at React-Router and this is the exports file. I realy don't understand what it means. Does it have something to do with RequireJs?
cleanAmazonDescriptions.forEach(el => {
//See if any of the amazon descriptions is found in
if (item.originalEbay.description.indexOf(el) !== -1) {
return true;
}
//See if the eBay description is found in the amazon one.
if (item.originalEbay.productDescription && el.contains(item.originalEbay.productDescription
.substr(0, 200)
.replace(/(\s+\w+$|[A-Z0-9]{10})/, '')
)) {
return true;
}
});
return false;
I have X elements. X being <500. I need to generate random, unique strings for each element. I need each element to have the same number of characters, the smallest number of characters possible
What a scam - Hold up, so you’re asking people to complete a task that would likely cost any client tens of thousands of dollars to commission from a legitimate dev shop for the chance to win a $2000 laptop? Good luck with that.
function createIdGenerator(base) { let i = 1; while(arr.length > Math.pow(26, i)) { i++; }; var last = 0; return function () { return (last++).toString(base).pad(somehow); } }?
function createIdGenerator(base, arr) { var i = 1; while(arr.length > Math.pow(base, i)) { i++; }; var last = 0; return function () { var ret = (last++).toString(base); while (ret.length < i) { ret = "a" + ret; } return ret; } }
That's the closest I could get, though. Specify the "zero" character, increment that (and a base N counter) to generate a lookup table of numeric-free digits.
Use that and @SecondRikudo's logic to get the length, use a counter, base N, pad with the zero character, ...
@essefbx Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
We were using the angular-seed @0.11 template in December, and it got unpublished. It's officially only on bower. Somebody ended up publishing angular-seed @0.12 eventually
::UPDATE::
The source listed for the below recommendation has been updated. They are no longer recommending the node_modules folder be committed.
Usually, no. Allow npm to resolve dependencies for your packages.
For packages you deploy, such as websites and apps, you should use npm
s...
@KendallFrey I don't want to use just literals because I'd rather have them named by things which describe what they are, but also don't want to fuck around with resetting /g-ness
Database normalization is the process of organizing the fields and tables of a relational database to minimize redundancy. Normalization usually involves dividing large tables into smaller (and less redundant) tables and defining relationships between them. The objective is to isolate data so that additions, deletions, and modifications of a field can be made in just one table and then propagated through the rest of the database using the defined relationships.
Edgar F. Codd, the inventor of the relational model, introduced the concept of normalization and what we now know as the First Normal Form...
@KendallFrey Well I would prefer to have var DESCRIPTION_OF_REGEX = /myRegex/g; doSomething(DESCRIPTION_OF_REGEX);, But it's global and things are dumb, so I tend to do var DESCRIPTION_OF_REGEX = 'myRegex'; doSomething(new RegExp(DESCRIPTION_OF_REGEX, 'g'));
@KendallFrey Couldn't that be rephrased as "which is easier to read, a complicated regex, or a well named variable that describes what the regex does?"
Sure, if you want to validate the correctness of that code, you need to look at the contents of the regex. But often times, I don't want to validate code, I just want to understand it.
But actually, I'd argue that variable version is more maintainable. Find a bug with email matching? Much easier to just modify var EMAIL_REGEX sitting at the top of the file than it is to dig through the file and find the relevant .match