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19:03
@ndugger a reverse search gives me cats with makeup
I originally thought it was the paws of an upside down dog drowned in chocolate
what is it?
I see a face in it
look, the pecan-looking-thing is the mouth
Hey guys, does anybody know why this code doesn't decrement the variable i before the first loop? It should, right?
for (let i = arr.length; i >= 0; --i)
> final-expression
An expression to be evaluated at the end of each loop iteration. This occurs before the next evaluation of condition. Generally used to update or increment the counter variable.
no, it shouldn't
@rlemon Thank you!
you probably want a while loop
let i = arr.length;
while( --i ) {
}
while runs the condition before the body
19:11
or arr.reverse().forEach(...) depending on if you need i to decrement or not
why?
that's a lot more work for no benefit
@towc I do. Writing a function to reverse a string.
str.split().reverse().join()
string.split().reverse().join('')
Thx guys!
user1596138
19:15
@towc Post a cat with makeup from that lol
user1596138
How do you put makeup on a cat haha. I couldn't find any
Array.from
uhm...
that first one
user1596138
user1596138
19:16
Weird that we got such varied results
user1596138
user1596138
This should be @ndugger's avatar
19:41
hii, can anybody help me with regex?
I think I am almost there, just need a little help
!!welcome Vikas
@Vikas Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
Cool
This is a regex for alphanumeric word with length 9 and can have letters as given:

var frenchPassportRegex = /^([CFGHJKLMNPRTVWXYZ0-9CFGHJKLMNPRTVWXYZ]{9})$/;

frenchPassportRegex.test("CC1234567")
// The above regex should work but I don't know why it's not working in reactjs
so show us where it isn't working
not where it is
you want code snippet?
19:45
why are all the letters duplicated?
I had doubt in this implementation, the word can have anything from the given letters and digits
Was that intended to answer my question?
Because it didn't
just bcoz i Thought it will be able to work on words such as CC12345CC
thats why
I don't understand at all
he thought you needed to padd either side for the match
19:47
I don't think you know what [] is
a1b would need a-z 0-9 a-z
ofc that isn't correct, just how it looks like to me (from his code)
exactly what @rlemon said
user1596138
lol
user1596138
19:49
If it doesn't work in a specific place, show us the specific place
user1596138
The example posted works
user1596138
It's definitely not a React issue
yeah. I too feel that as the snippet I provided works in my browser
1 message moved to Trash can
@VikasYadav Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
well, you're testing it against 'france'
19:50
if(this.state.country == 'France'){
            console.log(frenchPassportRegex.test('France'), "franceCOndition");
        }
that's not the code you posted here
Cool?
let me explain dude
yes, but that's not the example code you posted
!!> /^([CFGHJKLMNPRTVWXYZ0-9CFGHJKLMNPRTVWXYZ]{9})$/.test('France')
We've been waiting for you to explain
@rlemon false
19:51
is expected to fail.
@rlemon yeah. that is what I dont understand
user1596138
So. Let's make it simple
user1596138
"A" is not in your regex
user1596138
"a" is in France
user1596138
Why do you expect it to pass.
19:52
You expect nine chars mixed letters and numbers then test it against the string France.
shit man
user1596138
I have like 7 more questions but this one is dead obvious..
got it
wait
also it only accepts uppercase anyway
user1596138
Also France is not 9 in length
19:53
/a/.test('a') vs /a/.test('pizza')
Is basically the two snippets you've given us
m so sorry, i got the point where I made the mistake
user1596138
We didn't but maybe you did
"the" :P
Cool
thanks guys
except @KendallFrey
user1596138
19:54
I'm fuckin dead
what is going on
Ironically I think both of my examples pass. I forgot pizza has an a in it
user1596138
@rlemon I thought you were just piling onto the absurdity
19:55
No, vaping. Being lazy
user1596138
Least you are here <3ro
user2620028
@jhawins got both springs in, and knocked out the races and installed new ones last night
user2620028
@jhawins how far down should i set the front ride height?
user1596138
Put it on the ground
user2620028
20:10
@jhawins we have speed dips here that i would at minimum need to clear lol
user2620028
the speed dips are supposed to just be an obstacle that does no damage to your vehicle if you are going the speed limit.... but a lot of them are like rock climbing obstacles that require you to almost come to a stop or you will take the entire undercarriage of the car completely off
20:28
If I'm loading a picture preview using FileRead API, and said picture is really large. Is it better/faster if I first resize it using canvas before appending the img tag to the HTML? Or is that counter-productive?
once you've loaded the image, it's loaded
pulling it in with file reader should be enough to cache it
so the image pulls it from cache, only concern is render time which should be moot
Makes sense... Thanks!
What about auto-generating thumbnails for that image in the client instead of wasting server resources for that? Is that a bad practice?
Well, ofc it is.. But I wonder if I should worry about that
generating thumbs is fine, if you're serving them all
having the thumbs load with the html and the full sized pulled in with js is pretty common
Yes, I mean to generate and upload them as is... So that thumbnail is later pulled from an url
meh, I'd just generate them on the server then
20:34
Isn't that something quite expensive for a node.js app? I forgot to mention that
That's why I'm considering cutting and resizing the image before sending it
but then you have to upload more
bandwidth is worth a lot more than server cycles
Oh... That's something I didn't think about
size the image to your max dimensions before upload, then make the thumbs on the server
remember, storage is the cheapest thing of all
20:36
Of course... Thank you!!
Well except for those great deals on big packages of cheerios
@KamilSolecki you clearly haven't met me
Those are some really cheap deals
I can try teaching javascript to beginners, for money
in person
I might actually be good at that
I need test subjects
just don't teach them to bloat code because "who knows, I might change it later"
20:45
"who knows, I might change it later" is one of the fundamental rules of programming
@towc try with some facebook groups first
no
it really isn't
guaranteed test subjects
it's a joke lemon. I don't blame anyone for not knowing if what I'm saying is a joke or not anymore
Future programming is the leading cause of future confusion/poor planning
20:46
if( a === 1 ) {
  return foo();
} else {
 // keeping in case I change it
}
return bar();
@rlemon seriously though, sure, it's often stupid, but also often not
I use multiple const statements instead of comma-first because of that, alone. You can't really blame me for that
you could easily argue that if (x) { y } is preferred to if (x) y for the same reason, although there are others
also trailing commas in arrays and objects
yea not really.
@towc Ever heard of YAGNI?
making things easy to tweak is not really the same as overly complicating things now in fear of the future
@KendallFrey nope
20:49
why am i not surprised
my mocking code sample isn't the greatest at showing what not to do, but I think the point is still made.
@rlemon worded differently, a clean modular architecture is better than a locked-in architecture more often than not
ofc depends on your actual context
and ofc you can still bloat it over the top
that else branch in your example is stupid, I agree
but keeping something because you might change things later isn't automatically stupid too
it's not one of the fundamental rules of programming at all though, I still stand by the fact I meant that as a joke
you know full well what code snippet you posted in the past to spark this
I can imagine I did something dumb
I don't actually remember what it is
Mar 29 at 14:31, by towc
const fs = require('fs');
const { promisify } = require('util');
const hash = require('./hash');

const { dbs: dbsPath } = require('./paths');

const readFilePromise = promisify(fs.readFile);
const getDBFileContentsFromName = async name => readFilePromise(`${dbsPath}/${name}`, 'utf-8');

const getNodeContentsFromName = async name => getDBFileContentsFromName(`${name}.json`);

const getOriginHashFromFile = async () => getDBFileContentsFromName('origin-hash.txt');
const getLastHashFromFile = async () => getDBFileContentsFromName('last-hash.txt');
you defended redundancy and convolution with "but I might change things"
so now I'm going to tease you about it
20:56
it was an experiment
sure, as long as it keeps at teasing
what else am I going to do? fly to slovakia and beat you up?
ofc it is just teasing
well, you could
I would hug you though, so I'm not sure if you'd want to do that
well, you could say that I'm an awful developer and no company should ever hire me
and that would hurt
I mean, it probably won't now that I've said it, but there are other things that would genuinely hurt
you could pin a message out of context that makes me look like a full-blown trump supporter, instead of just starring it, and that would hurt too
...let's not get too stupid here.
hello javascript
it's too late
21:13
never too late
21:32
hello javascript chatoverflow
@AkinHwan Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
what
Can you force a react component that doesn't have a natural disabled prop to be disabled?
like... make it not do anything when interacted with?
For example, i'm working with a custom MultiSelect component, and if disabled etc. However, the source doesn't have that option.
Yeah, like throwing disabled on a regular element
21:40
you could always style it using the attribute, and "disabling" it would require making it uninteractable
for example, positioning something over it, or disabling events, etc
positioning something over it would likely require the least integration with whatever 3rd party component you're using
yeah that's not an option unfortunately
It's technically read only, they can just play with the select and remove chips, but can't save it
@SterlingArcher you can select the component wrapper in css and make it non-interactable
not sure if there's also a way around tab-indices
oh wait, just now reading the rest
still seems possible this way
anyone know why JSON.stringify({ScoreExample: 0.9, AnotherExample: 0.5}, (key, val) => key.startsWith("Score") ? val : undefined); returns undefined instead of '{"ScoreExample": 0.9}'?
21:48
Did you do any logging?
wait I just realized JSON.stringify({ScoreExample: 0.9}, (key, val) => true ? val : undefined); returns '{"ScoreExample": 0.9}'. hmmm
Don't put all that on one line, it doesn't read well
ternaries are fun
if you log key and val, you'll see that key is never "ScoreExample"
well, this is interesting
for some reason key seems to be passed the entire object
21:53
1 message moved to Trash can
@rosslh Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
filter(key, val) {
        console.log(key);
        console.log(val);
    }
    display() {
        JSON.stringify({example: "value"}, this.filter);
    }
my bad, tried to format it
this is weird
did they break it?
21:58
!!> JSON.stringify({example: "value"}, (k,v) => (console.log(k,v), v));
@rlemon "{\"example\":\"value\"}" Logged: "",{"example":"value"},"example","value"
on the first pass, you get the entire object and a null value
the mdn example works:
function replacer(key, value) {
  // Filtering out properties
  if (typeof value === 'string') {
    return undefined;
  }
  return value;
}

var foo = {foundation: 'Mozilla', model: 'box', week: 45, transport: 'car', month: 7};
JSON.stringify(foo, replacer);
worth opening a SO question?
22:01
and this also works:
JSON.stringify({a: 'a', b: 1}, (key, value) => typeof value === 'string' ? undefined : value );
still weird behaviour
why doesnt this work tio.run/…
lemmy look
because you're returning undefined on the first pass.
> Initially it gets called with an empty key representing the object being stringified, and it then gets called for each property on the object or array being stringified.
from the docs.
also, holy hell that page has a bunch of examples
22:19
what does it mean by an empty key exactly?
user1596138
@HatterisMad Yeah Idk if I have ever seen a speed bump that you can hit at the speed limit. It's always like 5mph or lose your whole front clip
user2620028
@Jhawins dip not bump
user1596138
I ate a bug out of spite. It was quick. I was in the moment. Now I'm laughing myself to death
@rosslh on the first iteration of the function being called, the first argument is empty, and the second is the entire object being parsed. then you get into the key/value iterations. but you need to handle that first pass
user1596138
Dude kept crawling on me and finally hopped in my drink. So I said fuck u and thats that
user2620028
22:27
alrighty then lol
user1596138
Now who's the predator
user1596138
!!afk smoke
man I have no idea how tio.run works. but just add if(!key) return val; before you do the other check.
@Jhawins Hi, I'm Chris Hansen with Dateline NBC...
Predator
By eating a bug?
That's just nutrition
22:34
f u too linkedin
23:24
am i allowed to ask some questions here or will i get shamed
You get shamed for asking that question
!!welcome JMR
@JMR Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
thanks
ive been a developer for like 7 years now but never really touched js
im trying to build a super simple form in html just to test something and im hitting a wall
using fetch im linking out to a firebase function i built, the function works when i hit it in postman just fine, but via fetch it loses all the request data, headers, etc
i was just wondering if theres some obvious thing im missing
ill keep digging around, just figured id throw it in here if it was one of those 2 second duh fixes that i just dont know cause im new to the platform. thanks!
also to be clear this is all on my local machine hence the localhost
23:43
@rlemon thanks for your help!
guys I want delete a user from a db can I do it with my same request that I'm making by just api.post to api.delete
23:58
i'm trying to create an authentication in nodejs, is passportjs the most common for that?

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