« first day (1927 days earlier)      last day (3248 days later) » 

16:01
@JoshuaLonganecker There isn't really a need to reference it as a string in that case, foo.bar will equal 3 too.
foo[bar] as well?
I feel like I used a language that allowed as as a casting call.
no, bar isn't defined.
C# maybe?
16:03
@Cereal there are a few, I think. C# sounds right.
@Neal nope must've been someone else lol. and I didn't take a look at the code but the page looks a lot sexier than the old one
Anyone in NYC want to go for lunch today?
@nick Ha for sure :-) You remember what the old one looked like? :-)
Noo
I didn't mean to hit enter
!!undo
@Cereal Yeah C# can do as
btw when you feel the code is relatively stable, I'd recommend running a quick audit in Chrome it'll give you a good place to start optimizing. right now it seems none of the assets are cached
@Neal lol not precisely but I did check it out when a couple months ago when we first discussed a job opportunity
didn't leave quite the same impression as the new version
16:07
@nick :-) Glad that it has improved. Next we are working on the destination and results pages :-) All new design. Fresh CSS file :-D Slowly but surely
sweet
are you concatenating bootstrap with your custom styles though?
@nick in a way. yes
D:
@nick ?
you'd probably be better off loading bootstrap from a CDN
16:10
bootstrap is kinda fat, just leave it on a CDN
Is it possible to bind a this arg without also binding the arguments?
you don't need to combine everything into one single file, just not have 500 requests
dammit sean
@corvid What have you tried, what did you get?
@nick Yea.. but we are replacing colors sizes etc. Using less
@corvid How do you mean?
16:12
alright i see
We dulled down the colors alot.
And now are really responsive (where we were not before)
@Maurice I've upvoted you out of the question block, but you're very very close to being banned again, ask some good questions that will get upvotes to regain the system's trust.
@ssube I can do it with return Promise.denodeify(MyThing.myFunction).apply(MyThing, Array.from(arguments)), but it seems like neither bind or call or apply let you just bind this for later and call with arguments yourself
@corvid that's exactly what bind does, but you probably need to do it before turning it into a promise.
Promise.denodeify(MyThing.myFunction.bind(MyThing)).apply(Promise, Array.from(arguments)) Should work @corvid
16:15
is there any best practice way to have something like "Promise.allEvenIfSomeWereRejected()" ? Probably collect all resolved promises and all .catch() occasions .. create a new array with promises O_o ?
user3119231
@MadaraUchiha Thanks, I'm aware of this. I will think twice if I ask (I don't think I will ask anything soon, no need for it since I'm here)
@Maurice you could try googling
user3119231
I could simply not 'googling', y u no?
what
user3119231
<3
16:17
no
@Neal @corvid if myFunction is expecting/using an instance of MyThing, it's probably MyThing.prototype.myFunction rather than just MyThing.myFunction. A static method shouldn't have this.
@ndugger was it you that helped with my css issue a few weeks ago? I really cannot remember who it was. It was either @nick or you. and I think it was you. Thank you! it looks great on the gozengo homepage :-)
I dunno
Yeah :\ I am probably doing something wrong
@jAndy there's a bluebird function for that
16:24
@ssube no bluebird, vanilla js
there's a jquery plugin for that
@corvid Promise.denodeify(MyThing.prototype.myFunction.bind(MyThing))
@jAndy bluebird is vanilla :D
so is jQuery :D
no, jQuery is just sad
but vanilla
16:26
jquery is in fact built atop vanilla JS
I write code the patriotic way dude.. no external references and dependencies at all. Only Latest browser technology and a little bit of brain power required :p
@ShotgunNinja I thought it was the other way around?
@FlorianMargaine No, because most JS != vanilla JS
@jAndy then, like america, you will fail
jquery is written in jquery on top of jquery
16:28
@ShotgunNinja hm... @BenjaminGruenbaum lied to me then. He told me javascript was a jquery library.
4
@ssube so far I'm doing quite alright..., unfortunately, so does america. I just exploit anything and everything in my code and the technology to make it happen. No matter what it costs!!!
s/library/plugin/
@ShotgunNinja wat
I'm looking to create a nonce system in js and php
@jAndy patriotic code is patriarchal code! triggered
16:30
in ECMAScript, 41 secs ago, by ndugger
Anyone toyed with the Custom Elements api? I'm on the mailing list for it, and they're changing up the API a bit. I can dump the most recent round of emails if you're interested.
I thought I'd create it using the current time stamp and the users access token and then on server side decrypt it and make sure the time is within let's say 5 sec
How would I do this in js and is it safe enough? Looking to put this on an ionic native app
@MagnusBurton JS cannot provide (or really be involved in) your authentication/authorization process.
The most JS can do is warn the user before they try to do something that will fail, to save time.
@SterlingArcher You heard me; most JS being developed right now isn't vanilla JS
You definitely can't generate random/secure numbers or tokens on the client-side. The client may not even have a secure random generator.
in that it uses a set of libraries written by someone else
16:33
@ShotgunNinja Doesn't mean it does not have that pure vanilla taste.
I prefer chocolate
@FlorianMargaine that's the truth
Vanillin is a phenolic aldehyde, which is an organic compound with the molecular formula C8H8O3. Its functional groups include aldehyde, hydroxyl, and ether. It is the primary component of the extract of the vanilla bean. Synthetic vanillin is now used more often than natural vanilla extract as a flavoring agent in foods, beverages, and pharmaceuticals. Vanillin and ethylvanillin are used by the food industry; ethylvanillin is more expensive, but has a stronger note. It differs from vanillin by having an ethoxy group (–O–CH2CH3) instead of a methoxy group (–O–CH3). Natural "vanilla extract" is...
btw, added tests etc to github.com/benjamingr/js-restructure
also posted on HN
@ndugger tomato tomahto
16:34
and I would say that is very unnecessary in the current point of time and technology... [using a bunch of libraries written by someone else]
unless you're doing something very specialized obv
Libraries are a necessary part of being a professional developer; You can't do everything from the ground up on the company time. That's just silly.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Does it make sense for a no match to return with an empty object instead of null? (so that you dont have people try to get a key from null?)
sure, it's not necessary, but if you don't use a library for many of these projects you'll end up building your own library that likely isn't near as well tested as the one you would have pulled down from npm.
well we're talking about fundamental browser stuff and client->server things right
not using libraries is irresponsible
you're introducing potential bugs and security issues by insisting on writing everything yourself, rather than using tested code
plus just wasting time
16:36
that's one way to look at it
I'd say it's very good and the better way if you're an expert, because you know everything that happens and can fix it
that's not to say big libraries don't have security holes (seealso: openssl), but at least somebody else in the world cares and might find/fix them
instead of being dependent on some "guy" or company
your home-ssl-v10relz will never get eyes on it and nobody will ever find your bugs
@jAndy nobody is an expert in every part of their application
you'd have to know every RFC by heart from IP and TCP up to however V8 works
@jAndy Hey!
Also, the game
well again, I'm talking about fundamental browser [client->server], DOM etc. things
16:38
@SomeGuy I didn't expect this ending
@SomeGuy thanks, much appreciated :P
Always
@Neal I'd rather fail early than fail late - but I did that to keep consistent with re.exec
@BenjaminGruenbaum is it at all possible to break down an existing regex (from a syntax that supports named groups) into one of your matchers?
@BenjaminGruenbaum hmmm makes sense. Maybe consider throwing an error instead? So it can be caught? dunno. just an idea.
16:40
what part of the the DOM, ajax, websockets, promises, ECMAscript as language etc. do we really need to fix or extend with libraries at this point?
I'd say.. none.
@jAndy the entire DOM API. It's a piece of shit.
3
XHR is far from intuitive and doesn't use promises or async at all.
that's not very objective.
Sockets and Promises are good, but can use improvements.
XHR not making sense with current practices is very objective. It should return promises, it doesn't.
@ssube what do you mean? Can you ask in the repo?
I think at this point, the DOM API is awesome (it has anything we need), probably it's verbose but that's no argument for an entire library
XHR2 is also awesome
16:42
oh yeah, XHR2 was designed by the gods
DOM includes jQuery bells and whistles like "HTMLNode.closest()` als all kinds of those things
it took me far too long to notice you were trolling :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum Matcher.fromRegexp(foo) or Matcher.fromString('^abc(123)$'). Constructing from an existing expression.
I'll open an issue later.
@ssube not trolling at all. I think in comparison to XHR it as fairly easy and simple to use, simple callbacks for any event, xhr upload progress etc.
@ssube great, open a PR that's better :D
user1596138
@jAndy What??
16:44
@jAndy You'd actually argue that the DOM API is good? Do you have any idea just how absurdly slow it is?
lol oy.
There's a reason angular and react implement their own DOM. The current one is just shy of useless.
@ssube what can an external libraries change about that?
I don't get that.. "implement their own DOM", what is that supposed to mean
The existing DOM events API is fairly mediocre and not at all standardized (events, what causes them, and what they contain differ between browsers).
user1596138
HTMLNode isn't a thing, there is no .closest on Node.
16:45
@jAndy React has its own internal DOM that it uses until it has to flush to the page.
still don't get it
you can do that for your own?
user1596138
@jAndy What did you mean
why would you write a deduplicating algo when react already has one?
:-(
user1596138
16:47
Oh it's on Element
@jAndy IE doesnt support that at all
This is an experimental technology
Because this technology's specification has not stabilized, check the compatibility table for the proper prefixes to use in various browsers. Also note that the syntax and behavior of an experimental technology is subject to change in future versions of browsers as the spec changes.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe, after I figure out how it would work.
user1596138
I didn;t know that was there, thanks!
@ssube great, thanks :)
@ssube well personally, I can't really argue about it because I don't like angular nor react. I don't like the way of architecture and implementing templates etc.
user1596138
16:47
@Neal Yeah no shit, IE doesn't support anything I wrote the last year.
I'm just wondering what "implementing their own DOM" means
@jAndy React works like a pure function
@jAndy They implement their own DOM. They don't use the page's DOM API until the very end.
user1596138
"Doesn't support IE" is no longer valid for the masses as support comes to an end.
@jhawins Where do you work that you dont have to support some modicum of IE?
16:48
It accepts "state" and outputs "dom"
user1596138
@Neal Well Babel or another library makes it compatible. Depends what it is if it's CSS or what lol
But re-rendering the entire DOM for every small change is insanely inefficient
They keep a virtual DOM until they flush to the page.
So React implements what's called a virtual DOM
Because the existing API is too slow to be usable for any med/large app.
16:49
well.. at some point.. you have to use the DOM right, no matter what you do under the hood
As in, it cannot handle any complicated application, even with the browser's optimizations.
They internally diff between the current state of their virtual DOM, and the new state of the virtual DOM (as a result of .render()), and only persist the delta to the actual DOM.
@jAndy ^
if you want to update some counter or display, you have to eventually update the real DOM
@jAndy once, at the very end
@jAndy And that eventually has to call assembly code
That will eventually have to update pixels on the screen
Every 16 milliseconds.
16:50
@jhawins Not for IE11 etc
Doesn't mean you need to be aware of all of it to write good programs :P
If you make direct DOM API calls, you'll never get them all done in under 16ms.
@ssube Not true.
I find that hard to believe.
@MadaraUchiha Well, for large apps.
16:50
@Neal IE11 is a dream compared to every other vs.
If you're smart about it, and don't query in between needlessly, you can achieve 16ms easy.
user1596138
@Neal We are JavaScript developers. We don't give a shit if something is supported yet :P
@jhawins True. Are there that many peple using that now? (i really am not up on times it seems)
That's why jQuery's animations are so slow compared to other libs.
no it's not
16:51
precisely @MadaraUchiha, that's my point the whole way.
@ssube No, not really.
@Neal Yeah. Babel has a huge list of users, and a few large sites.
@jhawins Ha you should if you have a customer facing website that many people have to use (and alot of those people can be little old ladies on non-updated computers)
user1596138
@Neal Yeah at this point either you Babel or you're a bad dev seems to be the consensus lmfao but it's just one of those things.
@jAndy But that's plumbing, I don't like plumbing.
I like to describe how my data is transformed into a view of some sort.
16:52
We support IE9 and up still and write ES6/2015 all day .
No excuse anymore not to really.
If you write your own architecture respectively use a well thought architecture, being aware of all browser and DOM quirks. you easily outclass any library in terms of performance, hence.. being "an expert".
@Loktar I guess I gotta install babel on our environment it seems?
@ssube Okay great, thank you. Then what would be the best decision if I don't want people inspecting/intercepting my API? (see: producthunt.com/tech/peach-for-mac)
@jAndy Sure
@Neal it's pretty nice
16:52
If you have the time and money to invest in that.
@MadaraUchiha What? They are. jQ animations are super slow, especially if you have a few running, because it hits the DOM directly. The other animation libs do DOM caching.
And maintain it.
@Loktar I have not wrote any ES6 anythings yet
@ssube jQ's animations are slow because they're naive as hell
@Neal Now's the time to start
16:53
@MagnusBurton That's not possible...
Not because they're DOM based.
They're also queued, which makes for some super buggy behaviour
@MadaraUchiha Ok, that's a superset of what I'm saying, but more accurate.
@ndugger I guess. I just gotta get it approved. And it is an extra deploy step, no?
16:53
any smart animation (lib) is bound to transitions and css animations
How do I add that to the gulp build?
@Neal no
@jAndy Not necessarily.
@ssube It has to be a native native app right? not angular etc
16:54
@ssube How so?
@jAndy The job of a library is to abstract a pain from you.
React has a relatively specific usecase, and people abuse it to fit theirs.
@ssube How do I use it with require?
React is very good when you don't want to do the plumbing, you don't want to know how this component is tied to that component, you just change your state and hit "RENDER"
user1596138
@MadaraUchiha What is an example of this abuse? Curious what the cool kids are doing.
@Neal If you can use webpack (or browserify) instead of require, things will work much better, but Babel will spit out one normal JS file for each ES6 file you feed it.
user1596138
16:55
@MadaraUchiha So it's magic and does everything for you.
@ssube babeljs.io/docs/setup/#gulp hmmm can add it to the gulp build i guess?
@jhawins I've seen completely or nearly completely static websites with React.
@MagnusBurton if it's client-side, anyone can dig into it. If it needs to be secure, do it server-side.
@jhawins ask @Mosho
cc @BenjaminGruenbaum :D
user1596138
I asked @MadaraUchiha because he's the one who said it :P
16:56
@KevinB I just want my Ionic app "safe" from CORS
user1596138
> you just change your state and hit "RENDER"
@MagnusBurton Your client will never be secure.
I know it's not 100% safe since it basically is JS
@ton.yeung Don't have any sadly fortunately.
@MagnusBurton What do you mean?
16:56
@Neal IF you run babel in gulp, you don't need to change how require works at all.
@MadaraUchiha I have this Ionic app and I want to make it CORS proof as much as possible
@MagnusBurton The client is always 0% safe, regardless of language or platform.
requireJS is icky wtf
@MadaraUchiha I totally dislike to be fundamentally dependent on 3rd party code. So i general, I like to have as many code unter my "control" (written by myself). I have the experience that especially if you run into very specialized edge-cases, you're almost fucked if you use a bunch of libraries
@jAndy That has advantages and disadvantages
16:57
of course.. that's more time, but once you have a basic architecture you're pretty ok
But you're generally right
@ssube Yea, but then ill have to tell people that they have to run gulp on their local env before testing anything which could be annoying for them.
@MagnusBurton remember this cracked MS office you got?
@rlemon Did you get your sub floor installed?
@jAndy don't forget disadvantaging anyone you work with :p
16:58
I like those small, simple libraries that with 2 hours of work you'd be able to implement them 80%, minus the edge cases.
this is what we mean by "0% safe"
> So what do you guys use here?
Like Redux
@FlorianMargaine Sadly I don't use MS office but I get your point
> Oh.. your own framework... awesome
user1596138
16:58
@MadaraUchiha Did I just miss your answer?
@Loktar your*
I have never worked anywhere where a homegrown framework was very nice or up to date
@jhawins Hmm?
@Loktar that's why I'd say we should use pure vanilla code and technologies as often as possible
So how does for example Instagram, Tinder, Snapchat etc limit CORS on their API?
16:58
@Neal no, you distribute a built version of it
@FlorianMargaine lol fixed
because no library is there forever
@jAndy or something widely supported
user1596138
4 mins ago, by Madara Uchiha
React has a relatively specific usecase, and people abuse it to fit theirs.
user1596138
16:59
3 mins ago, by Madara Uchiha
React is very good when you don't want to do the plumbing, you don't want to know how this component is tied to that component, you just change your state and hit "RENDER"
@jAndy big, corporate-sponsored libraries will be around longer than your code
user1596138
I don't understand this. It;s not magic, you do have to know exactly how one component is connected to another.
So can anyone actually say what the advantage of a transpiler like Babel is, other than being able to write "cooler" ES6 code? Does it run faster, or better, or something else ?
corporate-sponsored libraries will outlast me ?
@jhawins No, you don't.
user1596138
16:59
You just don't have to bind listeners for props
that's scary..
Or rather, your components don't know how they're connected to one another.
@adeneo cooler code
@adeneo ES6 tends to be more concise.
Or don't have to know
16:59
@adeneo also, cleaner code.

« first day (1927 days earlier)      last day (3248 days later) »