@DavidKamer After discussing with Aaron, I see that the answer needs many corrections. Not sure, how users vote and mislead other users? This statement is wrong.. This is essentially how TypeScript interfaces work.
@Luggage for that question, the core principle is, TS follows compile time structural typing.BTW.. these points are important to debug TypeScript code working with JS code, say migration project.
guys :| I really need to figure out how to do one thing. How do you store a reference to something in the redux store in a component without triggering a reconciliation whenever that thing changes? I only need to know the value of it onDrop
Ideally, I would be able to select it from the store at that moment if possible
@BenMcKenneby 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.
hi, all. I'm trying to design a take turns (as opposed to shared) memory model to make serious image processing possible in the browser. @BenjaminGruenbaum has created a chat for it here: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/170102/… if any of you would like to join us.
I've seen in the internet that you can test if you are pregnant with things like sugar or toothpaste. I tried to find studies of how accurate are this methods but I couldn't found any. Does anyone know any study that tested the accuracy of any of this types of methods?
P.S: If you are going to a...
I've straight up used the homicide analogy to customers telling me about bugs and shit. "I need to replicate the bug, pretend its a murder, give me as much evidence as you can by showing me how it was committed"
Personally, I wouldn't use node for anything, but I'm building a JS library for image processing in the browser, but want it to be node friendly as well. It seems that it already is, because you can just use node futures and promises normally.
I have a few applications in computer vision and image analysis that really need to run in the browser. Also, looking for good image processing performance to underpin a sprite library.
So right now, it's more about making this possible.
Large images and involved processes aren't hard to implement in javascript, but they tend to trigger its timeout limits and hang the page.
So I'm doing all of this painful stuff to coordinate with web workers.
It's nice of you to ask, but tell me. Do you think other people would want something like this?
it's hard to know what people want, it sounds a little niche, but if anyone ever needs it they will be glad you put the time in to make it work
If you're worried about making the browser hang and want a faster method than webworkers, people often take computationally heavy tasks like this and timeslice them
here's an example. I was trying to calculate a dither effect, but it takes a second or two to process, so i split it up using setTimeout: jsfiddle.net/ctrlfrk/q6c7qgqj/7
which means that while it's processing i can still interact with the browser
i'm doing 1000 steps at a time in that link. if you find the bit that says iterations < 1000 and change it to say 100 then it will be slower, but the page will be more responsive
change it to 10000 and it will be faster, but the page will be less responsive
Those were insightful suggestions, david. I think web workers is still better for my design goals, though. This is actually a scala.js library that cross compiles for JVM and JS. If I do timeout or requestIdleCallback it makes no sense from the scala or java perspectives.
Also, if I was just doing one image processing function, like your dither, it would make sense, but since I have to write hundreds of image processing functions, it'd be harder to design them all this way compared to just writing a generic way to delegate the computation to the worker. A way that'll work for all of the methods.
It's actually pretty insane. I serialize objects that wrap method invocations with their parameters, send them to the web worker along with image pixel data, deserialize them no the worker side, then return the results in another serialized object wrapper.
when you create a promise you give it a function that gets called with 2 arguments, resolve and reject
you use those to either resolve or reject the promise
I mean you could just write it like const nextIdle = () => new Promise(requestIdleCallback); but that scares people
it means that the requestIdleCallback is getting the 'reject' function as its second argument, which is normally an options object, but because none of the fields match up it still works
I have searched all over the Stack Overflow Website and can't find a Perfect Solution. So someone who is good at HighCharts can help me out.
Any answers will be Appreciated.....Please answer in Javascript and not Jquery....
Generally I am creating empty variables in Series according to my usa...