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17:00
but.. if that is unavailble, then extracting the coords on the server but sending in a smaller and more efficient method than your earlier trials might still work.
perhaps, look for an existing format that IS understood by JS.
misha, i don't think you understand the concept of this blob string is a compressed form of the lat/long coordinates
and no two coordinates are the same
@misha130 wut? it's just a file compression extension
luggage, that brings us full circle again
how does it compress? @KarelG
all i'm trying to find out is if fthere is a js extension or something that can read my blob string
17:01
ok. as stated, I know of none.
it takes everything that is the same and passes references to it instead of actual content
@misha130 by a deflate algorithm
but haven't look too hard for JS version of code that reads MSSQL geometries.
in var css = require("!raw-loader!sass-loader!./file.scss"); what do the exclamation marks indicate?
gzip may still help as many number sequences can be similar, but.. that's another layer.
17:02
to save that discussion... the gzip portion is working as expected
i'm only talking raw lengths, not compressed over the wire lengths
Are those delimiters? And if so, why didn't they stay with the common ampersand &
?
not really important. having your web server compress may be beneficial
if the data doesn't have lots of repetitive pattern, then the shrink level is bad
@AnthonyHart right, got it.
17:03
@KarelG of course thats true
whats the difference between the binary string and the actual object that you'd send @Anthony
the binary string would use some sort of zip algorithm
to take the same object you originally sent
POLYGON ((-81.747254 39.095379, -81.746354 39.096578, -81.746254 39.096878, -81.746054 39.096978, -81.745854 39.097278, -81.745754 39.097478, -81.745554 39.097978, yaddayaddayadda
for purposes of understanding how efficient the current binary format is.. that 43k, how many coords?
and minimize its size
that's raw form
so how can it physically be that there should be such a huge difference in size
@misha130 the problem is actually not the data size, but how to use it. If you decompress it, you get back a blob. He seeks a solution to work with that blob to create shapes
if i send the final column to the client, it takes FOREVER... if i send the GEOM column, it's a fraction of a second
yea.. datasize on the sql column and the count of coordinates is what I am looking for
really?
i don't understand why you're talking so much about compression lol
17:07
Anthony, workers and progressively rendering things
if i have a string that's 43kish characters, it's much smaller than the other string that contains that many coordinates which each coordinate is like 8-15 charactrers
yea but you cant really do anything with your string
he can use tranform streams
at the very least
17:08
so you refuse to tell me how many coordinates?
the coordinate count differs for each shape
Alabama has less coordinates than california
so choose one.
ummm, ive never actually done a coordinate count
I want to know if we can just make a list of coords that is as compact as the SQL format.
My money is on 7
17:10
7 penny ?
your money is lost
@KarelG pence*
Holy fuck
that's a test query... I'm not sure if that's actually the difference or not
17:11
760,000 coords.. damn. you must allow google-maps levels of zoom.
766k objects ?
Why are you sending all this data directly?
SELECT TOP 1000 [Id]
,[NAME]
,LEN([GEOM].STAsBinary()) AS BinaryLength
,LEN([GEOM].STAsText()) AS CoordLength
FROM [MAF_Tiger].[dbo].[STATEs]
@Abhishrek he must spend 100% accurate maps down to the meter, for some reason.
instantly
pretty sure that's string length which makes me rethink this
@AnthonyHart why can't you stream whats needed?
17:12
you know where I can find accurate maps from a government agency?
it takes way too long to get to the client
once it's on the client, it's instantaneous
streaming will only stream the data required
to render the current view
say you are looking at alabama
I'm only sending the required data anyways
personally, i'd figure the size of the rendered output on the client and then adjsut the detail level to suit.
so thats not 766k objects
@Luggage same
But anthony gets angry at that
17:13
i don't think so, no . . which means that it's not as drastic a difference
but the binary string sends MUCH faster than the coords
That is going to be a huge difference
you are talking about over 10M points vs 2000 if their are 2000 in view
luggage, i'm already doing that with bounding boxes
yea.. no reson you need to send string coords. you can still send binary.
You can still create a binary string for 2000 points on the fly
infact you'll probably not even need binary string
because you'll have a better selection of points
I'm i reading that wrong? is that number of objects or length or the string/number of bytes?
17:14
@alebianco 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.
also if your data is in postgres
it's a polygon
or any sane db
it's not, it's in SQL Server
you can use geocoding to further
17:14
you're telling me to send only a small portion of the polygon which means it'd just be a line
which is pretty sane
reduce the data you are going to stream
by querying just a geographic area with the level of detail
No, just a level of detail suitable for the size of the render.
if each pixel is going to be a mile wide, you don't need to know the curves down to the foot
i don't understand how i would adjust the level of detail
or what luggage said
17:15
Alabama is alabama
can't you just make it appear as they wait with streams as someone suggested?
how do i make this dataset less granular and still be accurate?
Alabama is your entire screen at zoom level 10
and a tiny slice at zoom level 1
zoom level 1 would be tab blocks
you have a finite limit on details, becuase the user can only see one rendered frame
17:16
that's a different table altogether
There are probably lots of pre-made algorithms for shrinking the coord set and keeping the shape. it's a very common need
you just turn up/down the detail iuntil it's as fast as can be while still looking as detailed as you can see for that size
@AnthonyHart what I meant is, you'll either need to pre-process the data
to generate and cache your rendered image
or send just enough data
sql server may even have that..
@Luggage there is an entire Google API just for rendering maps
google has api limits
17:17
make another column for the pre-processed data for the client. keep the original for when you need to re-scale
you can pass it crazy loads of data it renders and scales really well
i wrote a proof of concept using google api and i hit the api limit within 1000 calls
not the maps API there is one where you can push data into a google table and then use that table to be rendered via google maps IIRC
damn they removed fusion table :o
nvm
look at that fusion table example ;)
17:19
I found the coordinate count
Alabama has 13,582 coordinates
Still too high
and here is why.
yea, way better than the earlier numbers, but still a bit high.
you can "realistically" do this on a canvas
in worker thread
I'm already using webgl
17:20
he's using webgl, currently
is this animated?
the problem isn't the rendering, the problem is decoding the binary string that transfers MUCH faster than the raw coordinate string
oh perfect
or zoomable?
then you can just dump that via a shrader
animated, no.. zoomable not yet
17:21
@AnthonyHart decode it in flight
then you just need to send detail for your highest zoom level (or re-send on demand)
the binary string sends in a fraction of a second vs a few minutes for the coordinate string
i have the transfer working
i just need to decode the binary string in JS
decode it as the data arrives
that's what he wants, but he's trying to send the binary from SQL server and we don't know the format
the unscaled binary.
I am assuming he does
17:22
abhishrek, so your answer is write another binary stream reader in JS that I already wrote in C#...
Yes, that is the only thing you can do.
that' what you asked for
so, something that has existed since 2008 has no javascript implementation already?
Most of time you are going to spend is still going to be in network flight
I'm seriously the first person to do this?
17:23
@AnthonyHart becuase nobody would do this and it might exist in nodejs libs ... not garunteed though
well, most of us don't use MSSQL, so just becasue we don't know of it doesn't mean it doesn't exist
unless it's a standard format, in which case..
I use MSSQL and there is no way it would exist
@Luggage it might exist for nodejs
probably might even work with browserify :D
if its gzip then, the browser should decode it automatically, if you set the right header.
right
gzip compression is implemented and working just fine
17:25
this is hilarious
everything that goes over the wire is getting compressed with whatever that does
it's like groundhog day
> if its gzip, the browser should decode it automatically, if you set the right header.
he said it's already gzipped.
@Luggage if it is gzipped then the browser should decode it for him out of the box
17:26
wow
but the gzipped hex is still smaller than the gzipped text.
so he still wants the hex (or binary)
Have you tried gzip?
hehe
I've been hearing that browsers can decode it out of the box
17:26
I now want to see his POC :D
It'll become a browser benchmark :D
Something something groundhog day
Wtf is groundhog day?
a bad movie
woah
17:27
bee movie
the day when you hog the ground ?
It is not a bad movie
why would say that
an ancient pagan tradition
bill murray was great in that movie
17:27
the ending was meh though
Maybe i'm not explaining this right...
The BinaryString column sends quick enough
the TextString column takes FOREVER
all i want to know is what i need to decode the BinaryString column in JS
that's it...
What is the format of the binary ? Is it gzipped(TextString) ?
it's just a blob
the gzip happens via IIS
i don't compress it any further
We understand. If you refuse to send a scaled version, or make your own binary format, than go search for a pre-made library to parse/read the MSSQL data from JS.
17:29
How did you get a blob out of TextString
that's how sql server stores it
STAsBinary() vs STAsText()
We obviously don't know of one or we'd tell you and you hate all our other more sophisticated plans.
SELECT TOP 1000 [Id]
,[NAME]
,LEN([GEOM].STAsBinary()) AS BinaryLength
,LEN([GEOM].STAsText()) AS CoordLength
,[GEOM].MakeValid().STNumPoints() AS CoordinateCount
,[GEOM].STAsBinary() AS BinaryString
,[GEOM].STAsText() AS TextString
FROM [MAF_Tiger].[dbo].[STATEs]
ORDER BY NAME
Okay good! Now we are making progress!
all caps sql keywords is st00pid... the only reason people used to do it is because they didn't have syntax highlighting back in the day.
17:30
MAF_Tiger?
look how simple it is in C#
it's the MAF\Tiger dataset
why can't you just do this and thats it
17:31
yup ?
Sigh Misha, i already know that
thats your polygon dataformat decoder it is the decoder you are using!
My personal plan:
* Read from SQL Server, get coords
* Scale the detail to what the client needs
* Write in another binary format
* Cache on server to prevent need to re-scale every request
* Send to client
* read binary into coords on clients
@AnthonyHart I can't help, but it sounds like you want to die, so have a virtual hug
17:31
does it parse SqlByte String to Object?
Your STasBinary is a well known format described at msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb933912.aspx
there you go.
Which you can decode using npmjs.com/package/wkx
abhishrek, that would require me to send it as STAsText() which takes forever to send
read the link, it takes binary, or at least hex
17:32
No
//Parsing a node Buffer containing a WKB object
var geometry = wkx.Geometry.parse(wkbBuffer);
hmmmm
that last part on the link might work
yeah, i just saw that
that might work
always so quick to dismiss.
@Luggage sounds like my girlfriend when I am trying to suggest her career plans
I don't get why you all need to be so insulting =-/
it's the internet though
you probably wouldn't do that to someone in front of you like a coworker
Because you keep telling us we don't know what we're talking about based on half-read interpretations of what we said.
17:36
Did i say that once?
nope, more than once.
where did i say that you guys don't know what you're talking about?
show me
can't we just leave it at the fact that it was a fraustrating issue?
and we were all very fraustrated by it
17:38
I dont know what you're talking about, I found it very entertaining
me too
Still not seeing where I enabled people to be so rude though =-/
If I talked to co-workers like that, i'd have been fired immediately lol
calling people rude is rude
@Luggage do I need node-sass as well, or would sass-loader do everything I need?
17:43
I talk to them like that all the time.
Dude, I linked you the package thrice.
and you disapproved it even without reading the docs
thats not Luggage being rude
thats Luggage being honest
like a wise old man should be!
You struck down my suggestion to send coords based on final image size as "i'm not sending images"
^ Which TBH is the best option in a longer run
also are you planning for this to work on mobile devices?
including non desktop pcs, without a gpu? If so, good luck!
you never said "you don't know what you're talking about" you just made it clear that you thought we were wrong before reading the entire sentences.
webgl uses the cpu
2
17:45
anywho. If you have a formal complaint about us spending nearly an hour trying to work with you, here: github.com/JavaScriptRoom/culture/issues
I died
if i can get the data to the client in an acceptable manner, webgl will work just fine
> The process of drawing in WebGL involves using JavaScript to generate the information that specifies where and how these triangles will be created, and how they will look (colour, shades, textures, etc). This information is then fed to the GPU, which processes it, and returns a view of the scene. Next we will look in more detail at how this last bit happens.
This information is then fed to the GPU, which processes it, and returns a view of the scene.
and if you use the shader, like @Abhishrek mentioned, you can use almost entirely gpu
And if you use canvas, you will be far beyond acceptable lag case, the best would be to use webworkers with canvas otherwise your page will lag / freeze and might take forever to render on a mobile device.
17:49
the problem isn't webgl though... as I stated previously... when i get the data to the client, webgl is instantaneous. It's 2d without shaders
mobile will be able to handle it just fine
Have you tested it? On an average Android Phone?
the problem was simply decoding the binary string which i'll be testing the wkt
yes
HTC HD7S ran it just fine
that's an old windows phone
he didn't say webgl was a problem.
ive also tested on the IPhone 5 and IPhone 6S
just mentioning an optimization
17:50
@Luggage am just curious
I wrote a 1.0 M simulation of simple motion in WebGL
and my macbook heated up like cooktop
if you flip them over, you can use them to make eggs.
smooth bottom.
Yep!
@AnthonyHart I'm interested in reading your shrader code or any code :D
if you can share <: with WebGL :D
there is no shader code and the webgl code is simply drawing points
aside from that it's stock webgl handling everything
2-10 colors at any given time without animation on a 2d image...
nothing elaborate
aha :P oook
something smells
17:54
@Luggage Cya in DC this time when I visit for sure :P because i'll be visiting Baltimore
ohh, sweet.
when?
Feb/Mar
Feb? I hope you like snow.
@Luggage I love snow!
I know how to fix that
Come clean off my car
17:59
is node-sass required to have sass compilation when using node and webpack?

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