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20:04
newegg sold to a chinese company
should an 'empty object' in json be denoted with {} or null?
if you use null, it isn't an empty object.
@KevinB ok, sorry about the wording there
but why care? let your json serializer do it
use new Object
def use new Object
20:09
@KevinB ha! i'm working with a 3rd party system that only allows for direct SQL results -> JSON serialization, so i kind of am writing a json serializer...?
if you want, i can elaborate, but it's not pretty
sounds terrible
and wrong
yarp
{
  "prop": "value",
  "optionalObj": {}
}
// vs
{
  "prop": "value",
  "optionalObj": null
}
APPARENTLY IN MY AREA THERES A BILLBOARD THAT SAYS "DONALD TRUMP MAINS HANZO AND COMPLAINS ABOUT TEAM COMP IN ALL C… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/786753908332982272
People still playing Overwatch? I assumed the shine would have worn off by now.
I can't wait for B1 to drop in like a week.
i think null is better because {} is not falsey
20:18
@NathanJones you should never use null
omg i hate rollup at this point
Why do you even have to declare the empty object now?
@ssube i'm strictly talking json, not object literals
@NathanJones ok
null is a mistake
the concept of null existing, period, is a mistake
hangs head
20:19
Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare FRS FREng (born 11 January 1934), commonly known as Tony Hoare or C. A. R. Hoare, is a British computer scientist. He developed the sorting algorithm quicksort in 1959/1960. He also developed Hoare logic for verifying program correctness, and the formal language communicating sequential processes (CSP) to specify the interactions of concurrent processes (including the dining philosophers problem) and the inspiration for the occam programming language. == Biography == Born in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to British parents, Tony Hoare's father was a colonial civil...
Null and empty object represent two unique things. They should be used interchangeably
Null is a value that has no value, correct?
tl;dr: null means you have an option and aren't treating it as such
nullable and optional are not equivalent, but are treated as such
@rlemon ...what? if they're unique, why are they interchangeable?
Shouldn't*.
20:20
that's why a lot of functional languages have an Optional<T> type that will throw if you dereference it without checking first
I hate mobile keyboards
@Waxi no, that's undefined.
@ssube so it's better to just omit the null key->value altogether?
@NathanJones I prefer the empty object. You have a value, it's just defined as containing nothing.
Having a well-defined, set value that is empty is much more reliable than an undefined value.
typeof null        // object (bug in ECMAScript, should be null)
typeof undefined   // undefined
null === undefined // false
null  == undefined // true
20:23
@NathanJones does the data structure care that the property exists?
the bug can't be in ECMAScript
maybe in v8
the language has no bugs
it's not a bug
bug != design flaw
it's actually a bug
there is a null type in the new standard
20:24
that has become a part of the language
it should be 'null'
because they couldn't fix it without breaking the internet
but it still isnt' a bug with ecmascript
it is a bug in the implementation
in implementations today it's like that on purpose
but in initial versions of the language it was an actual bug
yes, but not following the standard is a 'bug' regardless of reasoning
a will-not-fix is still a bug
20:25
it was a bug in some very old implementation and now it's just part of the spec
if it was a bug and became the spec
is it not a bug anymore?
goes to show why "this will only be in prod for a day or two" is never true
@Mosho it is not, because the spec requires it, so that's the expected behavior.
the bug is that 'Null Type' didn't make it into Reference imo
Bug means it's doing the wrong thing, not doing the right thing and just still sucking.
@ssube fixing a 'bug' by hiding it could still be considered a bug
20:27
is it not still the wrong thing though
> it's not a bug, we documented it
@rlemon but they decided that the "bug" was the expected behavior, so...
saying it's right doesn't make it so
maybe
@ssube they added a Null Type, but didn't add it to the references table.
@Mosho but... I want to agree with you, but I'm pretty sure it does make it so.
20:29
Where does this become a problem, when the type of null is object instead of null?
i think i'll do this: if it's a blank object or array, make it an empty object or array. if it's a blank scalar, make it null.
Is it a semantics thing or does it actually break shit?
it's inconsistent
@Waxi i'm probably doing something terrible by re-evaluating this behavior half-way through the project, so for the stuff that's already implemented, it uses null and it works.
20:31
always a good idea in a programming language
@Waxi were you talking to me, or about the standard/bug?
My question could be applied to both. :)
@Waxi Whenever you do typeof something, you don't know if it's null
So the point of the operator is severely lessened
// if this.props.optionalObj === {},
// does this still work?
{this.props.optionalObj &&
  <div>
  	{this.props.optionalObj}
  </div>
}
Test that out
20:36
@Zirak the past, the present, and the future walk into a bar.
it was tense
fix the syntax error first
@Mosho i don't see it
first line
commented
oh I see
nvm
I mean, it's still a syntax error :P
user1596138
@NathanJones Super super super simple to test......
user1596138
!!> ({}) && 5
20:45
@Jhawins 5
user1596138
Yes, {} is truthy.
@Jhawins i want the blank value to be falsey
imgur.com/r/funny/dCm5B list of weird music videos
user1596138
@NathanJones Look for the property inside of it you need then.
user1596138
It must have a keyed value you want inside of it right?
user1596138
!!> ({}).someProperty && 5
@Jhawins "undefined"
user1596138
@NathanJones ^
!!> (Object.keys({}).length == 0 && {}.constructor === Object) && 5
@NathanJones 5
@NathanJones false
@NathanJones 5
20:48
woah, cap re-runs the edited code
TIL
@rlemon hah
I know Ronnie, he's brilliant
@NathanJones dude, use duck typing. JS doesn't work right if you do it the old "is X a Foo? Hey compiler, you know?" style.
king of snooker, basically
@ssube if it's your code and you know how your 'classes' are defined, it does, right?
were you referring to instanceof ?
@Luggage I'm not sure, tbh. I do use instanceof fairly often, but I don't like it.
user1596138
20:50
@NathanJones You're solving the wrong problem
@Luggage no, his Object.keys(...).length nonsense.
user1596138
Don;t find a way to recognize an empty object lol
user1596138
You don't need that.
Checking if the object is empty is bad, just check for the property you care about and provide a sensible default.
^ or throw an error if it should never happen
20:51
i.imgur.com/TH8ZDtq.mp4 the flips legit impressed me
user1596138
Or initialize the object with a loaded property and update it once you retrieve your data. If you must
user1596138
But don't look for an empty obj, you're the one that made it empty... Make work easier for yourself
I have occasionally used non-exported symbols to test if an object is the right type, too. Kinda like react does.
the point of an empty object is so foo[bar] won't throw
so you can always do mightReturnFoo().bar and it will never throw, but it might be undefined
user1596138
^ lol it's like this so that you can check for the property you want inside of it
20:52
so then mightReturnFoo().bar || defaultBar becomes your normal value
they all build together so you never need to check the type or if the key exists, you just... let it default
ok, i'll try that instead
think about it like a config file, where the key might not be set, so it uses the default
it's probably going to be a large or statement because there a lot of optional keys, and no required keys
is it like a config object?
@Luggage it's an object that may contain student absence counts for a specific section (class)
{
  unexcused: 1,
  excused: 4,
  tardy: 3
}
some, all, or none of those might be present
20:56
and they are all optional? That's kinda messy, in a way.
user1596138
@NathanJones You're doing it wrong
that might be the 'Y' of the question
ohh well, let fooWithDetauls = Object.assign({}, { unexcused: 0, excused: 0, tardy: 0 }, foo);
user1596138
You're just passing that whole obj down to the component below with optional properties
user1596138
Messy messy...
20:57
!!afk weekend
@Jhawins may no more about your situation. I came in in the middle and am too lazy to scroll up
@rlemon I did that once
@rlemon that yours?
user1596138
Idk he's just doing things weird
ohh, license plate.
20:58
^
user1596138
@rlemon Check his snapchat for dat drift tho!
@Jhawins could you point me in the right direction?
->
2
ahahahahahaha
!!afk
user1596138
@NathanJones I wouldn't ever pass an object like that as a prop.... It seems to me that the React way to do this would be to pass each of the optional properties individually, then handle the conditional stuff inside of the child component.
user1596138
We don't pass objects like that for props. We might pass an array of objects to iterate over, but never just blanket props like that.
user1596138
21:00
When I say "we" I mean me and my colleagues, not the React community.
yes and no. If the object is 'data', like a "user" or other object typically passed around whole..
user1596138
We wouldn't pass a user prop that had username, age, address, etc underneath it. We would pass each prop explicitly
user1596138
If it was an array of users sure.
Your choice, but I think passing a user is valid sometimes.
user1596138
And you can cheat and just do {...user} to pass each as it's own prop
21:01
I was about to say that.
<Component {...someProperties} />
user1596138
Meh. It's passing an object with who knows what inside of it that we don't like.
@Jhawins most of my components are created using spread as well
user1596138
@Luggage Yeah I'd do it that way and then access them via this.props.username instead of this.props.user.username
@Jhawins can't you just look at the propTypes?
user1596138
@NathanJones No not if it's just a blanket object like that..?
21:02
I don't disagree with that, but maybe I would if there were other properties that weren't on the user object
like.. selected={true}
but meh.
user1596138
@NathanJones If they were individual you could say, age is a Number, username is a String. Notes is an array etc. But instead you are only going to be able to say user is an object, who knows what's inside of it.
@Jhawins i'm not saying this with authority or confidence, but you can use shape({}) to define the types of age and username
i wish i could just preface everything i say with "i could be wrong, but..."
user1596138
@NathanJones were you the one trying to set a top level component's proptypes to the proptypes of it's child programmatically yesterday?
user1596138
Using shape ^
<ul>
    <UserListItem user={user} selected={foo} />
<ul>
21:03
@Jhawins yes
but i eventually settled with
user1596138
Different strokes. It may work for you. I prefer the declarative/explicit approach of not passing props that you will have to drill down into.
Parent.propTypes = {
  children: React.PropTypes.arrayOf(React.PropTypes.object)
};
user1596138
@NathanJones You wanted node
user1596138
Same thing lol
@Jhawins i tried node, but it kept giving me warnings
something like 'expected node, got object'
idk
user1596138
21:04
An array of components is a node, what are you passing that's objects??
user1596138
So you seriously have like
I've seen some react components take non-nodes as children.
user1596138
let arr = [{data: ...}, {data: ...}, {data: ...}];
<Component>
  {arr}
</Component>
user1596138
you're doing this then basically? Weird...
// this isn't a prop, right?
const parent = this.props.contacts.map((child, index) => {
  return (
    <Child {...child} index={index} key={child.id} />
  );
});
21:06
I've seen that. I don't know how 'correct' it is, though
user1596138
It all works I mean it's up to you to use these tools however you see best. So your approach is valid. It just feels very foreign to me
@Jhawins oh...if that's what is implied by my propTypes, I'm doing it wrong
I just don't bother declaring children in proptypes most of the time.
user1596138
Yea your proptypes imply to me that children is an array of objects.. Not adjacent JSX nodes or something
"react/prop-types": [1, { ignore: ['children'] }]
user1596138
21:07
@Luggage @Loktar lol we should've just ignored them ^
user1596138
@Luggage +1 I would rather it be that way.
user1596138
children is implied lol. And unless you're @NathanJones you're always passing a node :P
I can maybe see value for when you only want ONE child.
or when you do somethign non-standard like take objects
that second one should be rare
@Jhawins wait, i think i am passing nodes, i just miswrote my propTypes...?
user1596138
@NathanJones Probably :P but if it's giving you errors Idk
21:11
here's the code, it probably speaks more clearly than i do: ContactList and Contact
how does one get out of religious arguments if the other conversant is avoiding calls to end the argument with stuff like "I respect your religion, but I have my own opinions"?
walk away
this is m59 on fb btw. I really respect him, but he's cornering me into saying that I believe he's wrong
I had no idea he was so religious
well, his nick is literally a bible passage...
@towc is he a presupper?
no idea what that refers to (other than the last supper, but why pre?)
21:19
Presuppositionalism is a school of Christian apologetics that believes the Christian faith is the only basis for rational thought. It presupposes that the Bible is divine revelation and attempts to expose flaws in other worldviews. It claims that apart from presuppositions, one could not make sense of any human experience, and there can be no set of neutral assumptions from which to reason with a non-Christian. Presuppositionalists claim that a Christian cannot consistently declare their belief in the necessary existence of the God of the Bible and simultaneously argue on the basis of a different...
I value things that religion just doesn't give, like knowledge and understanding of how things really work.
@KendallFrey but a religious person could rightly argue that religion is what actually brings you closer to that truth
Religion is fine until it becomes a replacement for just looking at what's actually going on around you.
under the assumption that god didn't exist, which is how I go through life, you would be correct
but most people make different assumptions
that you can't go against directly
@towc they can construct a state of affairs that makes it true that it allows you to get closer to the truth, but they can't (or haven't) shown why that state of affairs is true
@towc put the burden of proof back on him
21:21
building on top of their assumptions, the evidence for that being true is right there
ask him to justify his claims
@towc Religion states the truth about things like souls and the afterlife and some philosophical things. Not about what's happening right here and now.
and if I had the same assumptions as them, I would agree with them
Are you familiar with Bayesian inference?
@KendallFrey tell that to Galileo. Most of the world still believed the church on that, and not because they were irrational, but because of their assumptions
21:22
I find it useful here
@KendallFrey no
I think I ended up confusing m59 enough by talking about too many things at once to make him stop wanting to continue the conversation
m59
m59
I'm always glad to talk =D
and yes, I hold to Clarkian presupp.
Truth is axiomatic.
The Bible is my axiom.
ohi
therefore that's your assumption
m59
m59
But I wasn't claiming things. Just asking questions.
I get that
@KendallFrey you can take it from here :P
m59
m59
21:26
What I most hope from a conversation is that someone questions their presuppositions.
another consideration is that I have other immediate things that I should be questioning
like achieveing good grades so I can get into a good uni
once my life will start slowing down I'll have more time for this
did I mention I went through elementary and middleschool in 2 schools that are considered to be the most christian in italy, and that italy is easily the most religious country?
until I just couldn't be bothered?
21:39
Its been a couple of years since I posted anything to facebook.
i never have
Never felt better.
The only thing I've done to my account on facebook is create it, verify it, and disable it.
i put an img of my truck on it, bout it
I use to post "deep quotes", I was that guy. Those were the blunder years.
21:43
I don't remember what I did on my fb account outside of making a group called "Robert Lemons" (there was like 100+ of us) and I got rid of it when farmville got too much
@KevinB You must be like people where I live
There's a FB group called 519 Trucks where people post truck porn and trade trucks
(519 is our telephone area code)
eh, dunno
216 sucks
I definitely prefer trucks over cars, just seem more useful
519 for life
21:45
I bought an e-bike
@rlemon I don't even know where 216 is
it's pretty amazing
@KendallFrey same area
we're now both
gay though
> Cleveland, OH
I think you mean 226
21:46
er, yea, that
stupid area code
why would I remember it
area codes are an artifact of a forgotten era
not when I am forced to enter them now
they are a pain in the ass from a forgotten era
remember when you didn't need to dial an area code to call locally?
imagine that
yea, those were awesome times
Now, you don't need to dial at all
21:47
ohh you're talking about the days when we needed to actually remember phone numbers other than our own
yea, those were messed up times. I still remember every phone number I've ever had, and my best friends numbers from when I was 10
I have a bit of a photographic memory when it comes to phone numbers
but only the last 4 digits
most people had the same first 6
I used to be really good at remembering numbers. now I'm not so much, but my mental math has gotten much better vs when I was a kid
so, tradeoffs?
I should try to memorize more of pi
I only know 13 digits
with a guess at the next 4
I was really good at bop-it :D
21:51
and I used to be good at mortal kombat
I can solve any odd-numbered rubik's cube
@NewWorld 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.
got it on steam, the new HD version... man my hands don't move like they used too
but I can still type real fast, so I suppose it is just practice
1 message moved to Trash can
@NewWorld Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
1 message moved to Trash can
@NewWorld Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
Can someone please help with below code?
`     fetchssd(){
            var matchcount=0;
            var count = 0;
            var j = 0
            count = this.ContentTable.Rows.count();
        for (j = 0; j < count; j++) {
            matchcount = matchcount + 1;
        }
        return matchcount;
        }`
21:55
what's wrong with it?
other than doing a bunch of pointless operations ;) :P
> ;) :P
did you just have a stroke?
I'm curious, would the compiler be smart enough to collapse down all that needless code?
Not working.. It is not taking count value. If i return count, it is giving me right value
function fetchssd() {
  return this.ContentTable.Rows.count();
}
why not just this?
i think he left out the match condition
21:58
1 message moved to Trash can
@NewWorld Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
no condition I can see
:/
Here is more compact version
`  fetchssd(){
            var matchcount=0;
           var count = this.ContentTable.Rows.count();
        for (var j = 0; j < count; j++) {
            matchcount = matchcount + 1;}
        return matchcount;
        }`
are you leaving out some code from that for block?

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