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16:18
@Jhawins Could you elaborate? how would i get router without the context? sorry if that's an XY question
@rlemon you use rogers?
here's a new one for you... when I'm on the phone, the internet works... when I hang up, it stops working about 30 seconds later
no shit
repeated it about 6 times
Sep 19 at 20:35, by Sterling Archer
late
16:35
what is the best way to install nodejs in ubuntu
is node-legacy in apt-get repository up to date
is this a real question or are you just joking?
real question
I downloaded the stuff from the site but there is no make file
@Luggage thank you
@monkeyinsight so i downloaded the linux binaries but how do i install then
@William for up-to-date node use these: nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager
uninstall the node that came with ubuntu, it's old. use nodesource repos
nodesource is much newer and only occasionally broken
it's also pretty straightforward to install from source
does "install from source" mean building libuv and v8?
I think not, just node.
i will install from source then
does it take 48 hours?
ugh. sometimes the main site flags are bullshit. I flagged this as spam stackoverflow.com/questions/40047245/… and it was declined
> spam: verb;
send the same message indiscriminately to (large numbers of recipients) on the Internet.
16:39
no, a few minutes.
how is that not in a definition of spam?
cc @MadaraUchiha
@rlemon hey, me too.
@William i'd sitck with the nodesource repos, that's what i am moving to
It sits in a weird place between spam and just being misposted, so I think that's a fair decline.
I wouldn't care but too many declined flags and you cannot flag
16:40
isn't that ratio-related?
a mod deleted the post even, but punishes me for flagging it appropriately.
:/ stupid af if you ask me
@ssube if it sits on the fence it should be accepted for either
confirming spam means banning the user, and that post wasn't promoting anything, just somebody asking for the wrong kind of help
or there is no valid reason
@rlemon not when one button has consequences and it comes down to opinion, IMO
then the system is fatally flawed
16:42
I knew the spam flag was a stretch when I sent it, but it seemed borderline and I'd rather raise the issue than not.
^ and there was no better reason
the post does fit a definition of spam.
don't they all?
@rlemon it does, but it's pretty harmless and misguided spam, rather than anything malicious or profit-seeking. It's more of a software recommendation (since OP is asking for examples), IMO.
discourages me from participating on main tbh.
so I'm not salty about my flag getting declined
16:44
> hey, please help us clean up site quality
"fuck you for choosing a reason which doesn't 100% line up with my views on why this question should be removed"
spam flags carry a very big penalty to the target user, which is why they only get approved for posts that are obviously spam
the mod deleted the post but chose not to ban the user, so
ban me
again, wouldn't mind if declined flags didn't have a punishment on them
@rlemon they don't, really, though. Not for somebody with plenty of approved flags.
16:44
but they do, just because I out weigh that possibility doesn't mean it isn't wrong.
what was the punishment?
it was between dropping our flag ratio slightly and banning that person for spam, and this doesn't seem malicious enough to cross the line
so the mod just deleted the post and didn't punish anybody
flag bans don't happen after just 1 decline?
if you get too many declined flags you lose the ability to flag. tmk
i have a quick question for the javascript gurus here lol. I have an image slider on my page and it works awesome on firefox, but when i load the page in safari or internet explorer 9 it wont load the slider until i hit refresh, the first load always fails. Firebug is showing me this error:

typeError: a is undefined
....load=function(a,b,c){var d,e,f,g=this,h=a.indexOf(" ");return h>-1&&(d=mb(a.sli...
16:45
@KevinB not the point I'm hitting on here
@KevinB hell no. It's a much bigger number.
I've got 10 declines out of 160 or so flags and never had any problems.
@ssube declined flags are in a way punishment, because they do carry negative connotations
even if I may never see them
i can link you to the page and you can tell me whats wrong with it if anyone knows the answer?
@Kaboom no. include non-minified version of the script that is failing and it's dependencies and debug further.
16:49
not sure what you mean.
what's wrong with this code? Linter says it's unacceptable.
This is valid right, var rt, ot, dt = 0 ?
  initialize = container => {
    const { scrollHeight } = container;
    container.scrollTop = scrollHeight;
  }
i`m having a problem with tab navigator, can someone tell me how can i unselect all tabs ina tab navigator?
@kadzu Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
16:49
@Waxi yes, but it's bad
because object properties are not assigned that way @corvid
come on man
wait, nvm.
@ssube Why is that?
How should they be assigned? What is the proper way to handle this?
I'm a moron
@corvid it's not good
at least parenthesize things
16:50
is the linter bitching about lack of ;?
@Waxi the comma operator rarely makes things more clear, so it's usually best to avoid
  ✖  19:5  Assignment to property of function parameter container.  no-param-reassign
it probably wants arguments in braces
which is stupid to force on a single argument
@ssube Fair enough, ty.
ah, it's complaining... because you're assigning to a property of a function parameter, and have no-param-reassign enabled?
16:52
Apparently. I took this from a boilerplate and the linter is waaay too strict for a boilerplate that is meant to just get you up and running
adjust the linter.
@corvid didn't we go over this earlier?
stop doing ugly stuff and the linter will be less angry :P
the warning even gave you the name of the option you can disable to remove the warning.
I suppose, but I want to test it. What's wrong with emitting a warning rather than blocking the entire ui? It seems silly to say the code is broken for that reason, it's more just that it's not entirely correct
16:56
and a link to an explanation.
the 'blocking' is your workflow
es-lint doesn't block anything
also, you can set them as warnings, if you like
@Luggage comes from this boilerplate. If you encounter an error, it will block the UI with an overlay
the docs say you can even turn off the error/warning for JUST the properties of the argument, like you are using
linking some boilerplate isn't proof you are stuck with that, just proof you didn't investigate changing the config / workflow
yeah but I've downgraded like 10 different kinds of errors at this point
Your choice.
turn them all off if you want. then es-lint will only complain about code that isn't valid JS at all.
I'm working on a Typescript version of a javascript game I made to learn concepts with, and am having a problem with the primary class in the Module instantiating the other classes in the Module so it can use them (I'm assuming its all of them, since its failing at the first one it tries).

I have a references.ts file that I have all of my .ts files referenced in, and all of my dependent .ts files refer to references.ts, and Visual Studio thinks my TS code is fine (highlights the classes as classes as intended).
17:06
@ChrisThompson Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
so feel silly doing it but I installed nodejs by source
he found my link to the nodesource repos too convenient
for (var i = 7; i <= 13; i++) how come this stops at 13 and not 8-12. It says less than or equal to, but it only stops when equal to.
I've never understood this behavior. Maybe I'm reading it wrong.
read it.
17:12
if i is less than OR equal too 13 then stuff
Less than doesn't make sense then since it already starts off less than?
actually it stops when greater than. it continues as long as it's less than or equal to.
but in a loop that middle condition is more of a while.
So Im working with FullCalendar, Ive tried alot but could not achieve the functionality. What I am trying to do is - Trigger a modal opening function when user selects an area on the calendar and drags and chooses the area he wants to create the appointment and when done selecting and dragging, he should be able to click a button on the website (+ button) and create appointment. Any ideas?
while( i <= 13 )
will continue until i is not meeting that condition
i.e. i > 13
17:13
Ohhhhhh.
Shit, been reading these wrong the whole time.
How have you gotten this far without being able to write a loop?
@Waxi Do you perhaps wear mirrored glasses?
@Luggage Stackoverflow
can't wait to go home and see which games I'm missing
I have like 6-7 origin games
Damn I'm a dumbass. I guess I've been lucky with my loops then. I always thought it meant run until the middle condition is true, not run while the middle condition is true.
And I just thought it was ignoring my less than the entire time.
So stupid.
17:18
Guys, I don't get why this isn't working :| I just want to make a div that is always scrolled to the bottom unless someone explicitly scrolls to the top
(when appending shit to the dom) scrollDown();
otherwise
do nothing
I just have the container scroll to the bottom whenever its props change (ie, it receives a new item). Never seems to work right.
Hi all.
Can I make this any smaller?
0
A: Sum of neighbours

NealJavascript, 48 bytes a.reduce((t,c,i)=>t+(a[i-1]||0)+c+(a[i+1]||0),0) console.log([1,2,3,4,5].reduce((t,c,i)=>t+(a[i-1]||0)+c+(a[i+1]||0),0));

NaN is not a falsy in javascript. — Neal 10 mins ago
the fuck you on about neal
!!> if(NaN) console.log('here')
@rlemon "undefined"
17:23
!!> NaN == false
@Neal false
ding!
!!> !!NaN
@ssube false
it is falsy
17:24
^
when coerced to a boolean, it becomes false
The following values are always falsy:
false.
0 (zero)
"" (empty string)
null.
undefined.
NaN (a special Number value meaning Not-a-Number!)
!!> "" == false
@Neal true
!!> null == false
17:24
@Neal false
!!> undefined == false
@Neal false
fun
ill delete that comment
and confusing
That's a cool stack site, that puzzle/golf one you linked to. Gonna have to poke around that.
Can i go any shorter in my reduce solution?
17:27
@Neal you could make the snippet work
@ssube lol one sec
fixed it
I cannot fig out how to make it smaller @ssube
replace t+(a[i-1]||0)+c+(a[i+1]||0) with t+c+((a[i-1]+a[i+1])||0)
no, that will break the ends together
Yup... I thought of that
a.reduce((t,c,i)=>t+(a[i-1]|0)+c+(a[i+1]|0),0)
ohh negatives.
I didn't look at test cases
eh, actually, should work fine
two bytes shorter
one bar?
hmmm
17:35
yes
I feel like there should be some tiny opt related to the fact you won't ever use i-1||0 and i+1||0 at the same time
seems to be working.
it will work for anything under the 32-bit boundary
|0 coerces to an int32
hmmm but I guess then all the test cases will still work.
updated @rlemon
l=>eval(l.join`+`)*3-l[0]-l.pop() is a clever answer, using a template callback
17:38
is there a way to find the rendered height of a DOM element, without the scrolling area? That is, the visible space the box takes up
@ssube I guess l represents the array in that case?
@Neal yeah, then l.join`+` passes the join method as the callback for the string, which only has one part, so that's passed as the first param and they can elide parens.
@corvid the element offset - the scroll height of the page + the scroll position of the element
it then produces an empty string or a 1+2+3 style string, which you eval and fiddle with
or something like that. it involves math
17:41
@ssube what the what. you dont need the parens?
!!> [1,2,3].join+
@rlemon "1+2+3"
you can pass params without ()
Well this is news to me
17:42
it works because of the way template strings are handled tmk
> doing security is achieveing a goal in the presence of an adversary - MIT lecturer
that's deep
yeah, it's because you're not calling anything, the system is
ohh, the ` are hidden?
@Luggage sorry yea
[1,2,3].join`hello`
"1hello2hello3"
yea, that makes sense, then
^ had me going "wtf?"
lol
same here
I can feel my blood begin to boil because I'm turning a simple math problem into rocket science. Breathe Waxi, calm down.
rocket science is fun
17:45
I have a knack for making things overly complicated...it's terrible.
who is at the front?
in space, successful mission
judging by the facial expression, Jeb.
Jeb can just float out there till we get a rescue mission going
17:46
badass=1
That pretty much happened to me the other day
@ssube that's crazy
I can't stand it anymore
TIL
except it wasn't the rocket, i blew off the ladder on reentry
17:46
I'm gonna remove my mods tonight
is that Kerbal X?
yesterday, by Kendall Frey
protip: the atmosphere is never thin enough for an EVA
or an antenna
yesterday, by rlemon
> I wonder if I'm going slow enough to activate this antenna.... nnooope
gets me every time
yea, that.
17:47
Hi everyone.. anyone know generator for angular2 or better structure to maintain code easily for a large project with number of controllers
The secret to organizing large projects is...
Stand by, writing a series of books..
angular-cli has the generator
@Luggage directories
use directories
I got an array of numbers that will end up in 3 buckets. Each bucket has a maximum before it spills over into the next. Should I be calculating on each number, or total the array up then spread it out?
they fix pretty much everything
17:50
I cover that in chapter 5 of the second book.
@Waxi binning algorithms are pretty well-solved.
go look one up
Hey thanks, now I know what they're called, was sitting here making the most complicated piece of code lol.
do it
bin packing is also a nice into to NP problems too
const a = 5;
const { a: b } = { a: 3 };
console.log(a,b); // 5 3
hrm, that is actually pretty damn neat
17:53
@rlemon makes sense but damn it's hard to read
as long as it's not common a practice and only when you need to rename something while destructuring, it's fine
How does that work..?
the duplicate names make it confusing, but I use reassignment to rename stuff all the time
That's definitely destructuring but the dupe key names?
@SterlingArcher you can rename whilst destructing
17:54
wow
that seems... dangerous
so rename a into b
taking a from this object
yeah
@SterlingArcher { a: b } = { a: 3 } is equivalent to b = it.a
aliasing is actually helpful when the current scope has a conflicting var
@abhisekp like if you're plucking privates from other in a copy ctor
what do you think of this one?
const { target: { files: [ { path } ] } } = event
lol
17:55
Easy solution: don't make conflicting names
@SterlingArcher copy constructors
but we don't know what might end up in the object
Oh goody, the rabbit hole is deep and wide for bin packing. Time to educate!
@Waxi i volunteer at a digital archive and bin packing is used a lot and yeah, there's a lot of opinions too
const foo = {
  topLevel: {
    intermediate,    // declaration of intermediate
    intermediate: {
      nested         // declaration of nested
    }
  }
} = {
  topLevel: {
    intermediate: {
      nested: 56
    }
  }
};

console.log( foo.topLevel.intermediate.nested ); // 56
jesus man, es6 is cray
17:58
lol
user1596138
@NathanJones Props. Also check out the React page on Context.
const foo = {
  topLevel: {
    intermediate,    // declaration of intermediate
    intermediate: {
      nested = 56         // declaration of nested
    }
  }
} = {};

console.log( foo.topLevel.intermediate.nested ); // 56
@abhisekp that's.. not going to work?
the point was you can desctructure deeply nested objects.
nested destructuring is the work of satan
17:59
@rlemon did you see this?

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