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3:00 PM
I am welcomed by your presence.
 
@Neil change of thought?
 
@MadaraUchiha Does anyone actually say that seriously?
 
yes
 
@Allenph Oh yes.
 
req.onload = ()=>{

          var res = JSON.parse(req.responseText);


      } //end of req.onload
 
3:08 PM
What are there names so I may make alternate accounts and troll them.
 
i'm getting an error
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected end of JSON input
at JSON.parse (<anonymous>)
at XMLHttpRequest.req.onload
 
did you google it?
> Unexpected end of JSON input
is pretty much self explanatory
have you tried it?
 
@rlemon honstly not yet because it doesn't seem to be that hard , my code is 1 line .. and i dont see anything wrong with it
let me try googleing it
 
@za001a so google it. that error message is telling you the exact problem
in actual terms. not some cryptic error. it's telling you that the string you're feeding JSON.parse isn't valid
 
@Room Is VueJS a thing or not relevant?
 
3:11 PM
nvm i am stupid html has onmouseover lol silly me thanks :D
 
@jAndy I don't know how many Vue users there are here, but definitely on-topic.
 
I just had an discussion wether or not we take VueJS in consideration for a new project and I surfed through the SO job section. It seems like... almost non existent
which wondered myself a little bit. It doesn't look like too shaby tbh
 
how many jobs are available isn't really indicative of how good the tech is.
 
@jAndy The way it seems to me is that it has quite a bit of hype and buzz, but very little actual use
 
look how many wordpress jobs are out there.
 
3:13 PM
Lots of stars on github, lots of medium articles and tweets
 
Are you saying that Wordpress is not the pinnacle of human engineering?
 
@rlemon you're right. But in contrary, react is like on 95%. And it is not that great imho
 
yes, further proving that popular !== the best
also see VHS / Betamax
 
But I haven't met that many companies that use it in practice, and the npm weekly downloads indicate an order-of-magnitude difference between it and React.
 
but popular does mean you have a huge resource to pull from when you need help
see: jQuery
 
3:15 PM
Now, neither of those are clear indicators one way or another, but the feel I'm getting is that it's generally a mostly hipster thing at this stage.
 
@rlemon do u think if used req.onload = ()=>{ var test = JSON; }

just to read the respond i'm getting from the backend would work ?
 
I had to research a little because of decision making, and Vue 2.0 together with the Nuxt Framework (serverside rendering and other tasks) AND Vuex (basically redux) really seems like a true alternative, maybe even better than React
 
Also I admit that the ability to treat "HTML" parts as objects that I can manipulate, filter, map and return, is something that appeals to me greatly that Vue doesn't give
 
@za001a the response coming back is a string. log that string and see where it is fucked.
 
@rlemon how to grab it though ?
 
3:16 PM
....
the same way you did before
just don't parse it
or use the network tab and bypass code.
 
so like i said req.onload = ()=>{ var test = JSON; }
let me try it
 
@MadaraUchiha mine does... The front-end team here uses vue.js
 
hi
 
@Kognise 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! Are you a bot :D
 
3:20 PM
!!tell Kognise yes
 
@KarelG Command yes does not exist. Did you mean: ye (note that /tell works on commands, it's not an echo.)
 
pfft
 
!!tel Karel wrong command
 
@Karel wrong command
 
stop pretending, Caprica.. you always act like this when new people come in
 
3:21 PM
@rlemon that is just .... to troll me
 
lol
 
the second l is not important
 
I guess the thing which annoys me the host on react/vue/angular still is that it is so far away from native coding. Those fw's introduced pretty much new programming languages. Even tho many things might be better, easier and helpful, it brought more confusion in an already confused industry.
 
tell works on commands. Tel is echo
!!tell Karel doge commands fun lovely
 
@jAndy How would you say the industry is confused?
 
3:22 PM
@rlemon Command doge cannot be used in /tell.
 
Bah.. shot myself in the foot
 
whoever programmed that bot is low iq
 
But normally
 
haha
*ow jee*
 
3:23 PM
@rlemon JSON {parse: ƒ, stringify: ƒ, Symbol(Symbol.toStringTag): "JSON"}
parse: ƒ parse()
arguments: (...)
caller: (...)
length: 2
name: "parse"
__proto__: ƒ ()
[[Scopes]]: Scopes[0]
No properties
stringify: ƒ stringify()
arguments: (...)
caller: (...)
length: 3
name: "stringify"
__proto__: ƒ ()
[[Scopes]]: Scopes[0]
No properties
Symbol(Symbol.toStringTag): "JSON"
__proto__: Object
 
Hmm, one of the server was failing. So I just rebooted it and said "no problems now". Lazy mode is on atm.
 
that is what i got.
 
@Kognise What I mean by that, I'm a member of SO for 8 years or so, and questions in the kind of ("please create my application") increased a lot, then we had a period where it looked decent. People began to actual start solving problems and asking sane questions. With the introduction of react/angular, those questions raised again, by a lot.
 
Lol I just got a comment: "it's hard to come up with an answer" at se question I asked. - Kind of the reason I asked in the first place.
 
@za001a ..........................
 
3:24 PM
@za001a you just console.log JSON ....
 
You console.log(JSON); didn't you?
 
@jAndy I want to see the data
 
lol they named their variable JSON, of course they did.
 
It doesn't really has to do with the frameworks themselves, its more about the old problem in this industry. Too many new technologies too quickly.
 
noo @madara
req.onload = ()=>{
          var test = JSON;
          console.log(test);
          var res = JSON.parse(req.responseText);


      } //end of req.onload
 
3:25 PM
@jAndy well? that should not be a problem. The problem is that people wants to move to a new tech. Because it is hyped. Or just "new"...
 
Why do you think new technologies lead to more create my application questions?
 
i console.log ( test)
 
and test is JSON
 
@za001a where do you think the data from the server is coming from?
 
@Kognise Nobody learns it really. Especially official students and colleges cannot catch up and teach it proberly
 
3:26 PM
wtf is req
 
if you JSON.parse req.responseText and I told you that JSON.parse is trying to parse bad data.. what should you log to see if the data is bad?
 
@rlemon what do u mean ? just a list i've created as an example
 
@jAndy eh. Most of the regulars here are out of school benches and are able to adopt on new technologies.
 
@rlemon I would log the raw req.responseText?
 
@rlemon var test = JSON;
console.log(test);
 
3:27 PM
self-education is a thing. Like I am doing research for Spring myself last weeks because we made a choice to use Spring for our CRM
 
@za001a what is JSON? where did you define that?
@Kognise if that was your problem. yes
 
@KarelG As I said, I mostly see this through my SO glasses. Maybe it has other reasons, but when I compare the questions about Javascript from 5 years ago to now, it's different universe
 
I'm not old enough to go to college and my school doesn't offer any programming classes so I taught myself everything
 
@rlemon whenever i get a json response from the server under the ONLOAD function JSON automatically grabs the JSON object under the name JSON
 
college is a scam
 
3:28 PM
@za001a and who told you that?
 
...
 
Probably lol @ndugger
 
@ndugger :P But that scam is still industry-worthy
 
the professor from harvard
 
College is too expensive (on this side of the pond) and making it a requirement is bullshit.
but education in general is good
 
3:29 PM
The whole idea of education started off as a simple apprenticeship
 
honestly quite a lot of tech companies have stopped requiring a degree or even really prioritizing it
 
You worked for a blacksmith which paid you next to nothing, but you learned the trade
 
@za001a I don't believe you. because that is absolutely made up information.
 
I'd put that in more strictness: Technical education is good and important.
 
the matter that college is expensive is actually a responsibility of the government
 
3:30 PM
and as the trades became more sophisticated, you needed more time and effort to teach
I think we should go back to the apprenticeship system
 
*this is getting deep*
go on tho
 
@Neil nah
there is a risk of tutoring old technology because the tutor did not learn new technology himself
 
@rlemon 95% of the job application require "at least MSc in mathematics or related technical field" in the Netherlands, germany or belgium.
 
@rlemon let's not get into that , what do u suggest ? how to console.log the respond that i've retrieved from the server
 
that is why academia is important. They come up (mostly) with new courses to follow up technological changes
 
3:31 PM
I think we need to start preparing for the future where there really aren't enough jobs to go around and we don't need everyone to have one
 
Ok that number is made up, but the far majority
 
Well, in our "industry" that is general practice (teaching old technologies). It's going too fast.
 
My university started to give data science courses 4 years ago because of importance of data mining. And see, it is important now.
 
At least for official institutes like colleges/states
 
@KarelG I think we can find some sort of compromise between the two, can't we?
 
3:32 PM
@za001a no, lets get into that. because where you are getting this made up information from is concerning. Besides that I've all but told you exactly what to do. I'm avoiding writing out the exact code
 
They never require a CS education though, just "msc in technical fields", or even nowadays "msc in any field".
 
@KarelG it was already old news 4 years ago
 
Hey Guys ! I need some help and opinion with this => stackoverflow.com/q/55291049/2954267
 
My friend just built a new tower, and he got an i9, and an RTX 2070. Not sure why, but he'll have no problem running anything lol
 
no. It was barely "implemented" in industry.
 
3:32 PM
experience is lightyears ahead of education in this field.. one year as a programmer is worth 4 in formal education imho
 
There was a newspaper article last week about how Archeologists are being hired to maintain server infrastructure and older libraries
 
@ndugger I am jealous about that RTX 2070. The nvidia tech below the hood :3
 
formal education fills gaps on theory that self-taught often lacks.
 
however, are there games that uses most of these new nvidia stuff (such as hairworks?)
rlemon, that is well said.
 
not impossible to learn on your own. but having done it on my own, I feel like these uni kids have a far better grasp
 
3:33 PM
@rlemon well we just need better online courses to learn the theory
 
I think there should be an education there, but there comes a point when education isn't enough
 
@forresthopkinsa They'll still be "courses" not a "study".
 
@forresthopkinsa and the good ones will be paid.. so in essence you're still getting a paid formal education
 
It's like learning the vocabulary of a spoken language.. sure, you need to know the vocabulary, but eventually you need to begin trying to form sentences
 
@rlemon I don't think that has to be the case
 
3:34 PM
Like how most self taught people neglect (refuse?) the formal mathematics behind things
 
if Uni/College were reasonably affordable, I'd recommend that for everyone. because education with an actual instructor and peers is beneficial for most
 
Besides, even if it was, I'd rather take a paid online course than two years of prereqs
 
@forresthopkinsa sure, but that's splitting hairs
 
there are ( I assume ) good and bad unis
 
3:35 PM
actually, that even leads me back to the "problem" of framesworks like react and angular. Because even if you know like Javascript in-depth, pretty much on interpreter level, it doesn't really help you at all, using such high abstractions on the language. At least not for the most parts.
 
> and some of them, I assume, are good schools
 
eh. Remember when Shrek came here about complaints of his university?
 
and like.. I wouldn't need to go to uni for front end design. that's too fast moving and subjective to matter.
but like.. OS design and development.
 
Two years of prereqs IS important, university is "universal" - it's in its name. You get taught not just for one job, you get a universal understanding of how to think and tackle problems.
 
He posted some exam questions and I was like "wut"
 
3:36 PM
I'd probably need someone to hold my hand a bit more
 
@rlemon So you get a book and hang out in the C room
 
Is it called a function component or a functional component (in react)?
 
@forresthopkinsa like I said it isn't impossible to learn on your own.
but a formal, structured environment with peers and a prof to ask questions and get a educated answer
that's all valuable.
if it didn't put you in debt for 30 years..... I don't see a downside
 
@jAndy How do you recommend learning Javascript "pretty much on interpreter level"?
 
I do think it's valuable but I think it isn't necessary for most
I think the tradeoff is the time it takes
(if we're excluding financial costs)
 
3:37 PM
@Kognise What do you mean?
 
@forresthopkinsa and then when are you going to learn the topics you haven't thought of yet?
 
@paul23 You read books and you talk to people who know more than you do
 
Not completely sure lol. Like, how do you get much lower down knowledge of javascript/node.
 
@forresthopkinsa sure. it's all a tradeoff. but you can always do part time school.
 
"learning C" isn't what university is/was about.
 
3:38 PM
It isn't really that novel
@rlemon Yeah for like six years lol
 
@Kognise web assembly ?
 
Ah yes, been meaning to learn that for a while
 
@forresthopkinsa so? I've been programming for much longer than 6 years and never stopped learning yet
 
that tech ... is "so so"
sure, it brings a better performance but is so fake.
 
@forresthopkinsa and how would you find the correct people? And how would you "see" that you got all side information like ethics etc?
 
3:39 PM
that is fake assembly
 
the monetary aspect makes it something that you feel obligated to do tho. like if it were cheaper (much much) then you wouldn't feel so bad taking time off, or dropping X for Y when you realise you like Y better
 
@Kognise well, if you know for instance how the scope chain works under the hood or activation objects / lexical environment records and stuff, it will make you top-nodge on javascript level. Even if its only for tiny bits and pieces here and there, it makes you a better javascript programer
 
I think that is a huge impact on how much people enjoy themselves
 
you can write assembly codes in C files.
 
@jAndy I have no idea what 50% of that message means. Time to learn :D
 
3:40 PM
but on the other hand, it doesn't even make sense to learn such things, if you're forced to work with high abstractions of course.
 
@paul23 What makes you think that uni makes you a perfectly well-rounded learner?
 
Like I said: actual dictionary-information isn't valuable at all. It's all about learning how to tackle a problem, and (nowadays) how to work as a team.
 
Both of which are things you learn so much more in the workplace
 
@forresthopkinsa Because people who are actually paid to find the best well rounded solution, and make their job of doing that find it for you. (companies pay huge amounts of money to actually let unis do this)
 
I can feel any student, that web development is pretty much overwhelming at this point in time. You have to learn so many things to work "state of the art", its kind of ridiculous
 
3:42 PM
@rlemon Yeah but someone who took 6 years of part-time uni probably knows half as much as you do
 
@forresthopkinsa I'm fully self taught, and I do see where formal education could have helped me. I know a lot of "what not to do" because I've fucked it up enough. I see a lot of problems because I've faced them.
 
@jAndy web dev is not university level at all... Sorry but university was never about learning a single "trick".
 
i've send " supposedly " Json object from the Backend .
how to console Log the response ?
here is my javascript code.

const req = new XMLHttpRequest();
req.open('POST' , "http://127.0.0.1:5000/test");

req.onload = ()=>{

  var res = JSON.parse(req.responseText);
  console.log('the response from the server = > ',res)
}
const data = new FormData();
data.append('x', y);
req.send(data);
 
but then there are huge gaps that I can't just learn by doing
I need formal education
and I can teach myself
but I'm just saying formal education benefits in areas
 
you have something what those students does not have yet: experience
 
3:43 PM
if it wasn't so fucked about making people poor...
@KarelG yea, I'm advocating both really.
 
@za001a You are sending a string me thinks.
 
Why not both? First teach yourself as much as you can and then move to formal education
 
Starting with things like webpack (that alone is a monster in documentation and options), over Javascript5/6/7 and then of course the need for Babel in order to use it. Then you should know about webservers, maybe nginx, another beast. Not to mention API's and Frameworks, which pretty much change every 2 years
 
not a json object
 
@KarelG Companies (Again in the netherlands/germany) consider a BSc even "more" than 10 year of experience typically.
 
3:44 PM
@paul23 They have an opinion about what you need to know. You brought up ethics -- who's to say that you need that to know CS? Who's to say that the ethics they're teaching are the full story? I have family members who create the curricula at universities and it's all a lot more arbitrary than you might think.
 
and I even forgot about 5 other things :p
 
@za001a for all intents and purposes, for now, assume you only ever send strings.
until you learn more aobut the other techs
 
Because a formal degree is backed up by formal institution, who doesn't want to lose credibility so it's highly valuable.
 
@jAndy you just keep a side project going at all times and you won't have a hard time keeping with it
 
@paul23 I am from Europe. That is the culture here yes. But like in scandinavia, there is more focus on skills. That is what the industry here is moving to lately
 
3:45 PM
@KarelG how to check ? how to log the response ? ... i'm getting error "Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected end of JSON input
at JSON.parse (<anonymous>)
at XMLHttpRequest.req.onload "
 
@za001a this is getting tiresome
I've already told you. multiple times.
JSON.parse is getting a bad string.
log the freaking string you pass it
jesus
 
@rlemon I know
 
EXACTLY
 
@forresthopkinsa My profs never ever said "this is the full story". about 75% of my education was focussed on researching papers myself and thus finding out what is 'current" view right now. Only the very basic education (not university) is about teaching "this is how you do it, now repeat after me".
 
STAHP
 
3:46 PM
HAMMAHTIME!
 
CAN'T TOUCH THIS
 
@rlemon i've responded to that already and tried this " var test = JSON;
console.log(test); " and i gave u the response on the console log
am i doing it right ?
 
and that is not at all what I told you to do
and I gave you a follow up
 
just do console.log(req.responseText) ........
and show what it displays
 
@paul23 The idea that it's all invaluable to one's growth as a learner and as a human is ridiculous
 
3:47 PM
I was purposely avoiding handing him that
 
It's a cash cow, it's a card trick, it's a red herring
 
he has a huge block of missing information
 
@forresthopkinsa .....
 
@KarelG thank you
 
I'm out
 
3:48 PM
I mean I all but said it.. but now there will be more copy-paste code he doesn't understand.
 
There are a lot of very useful elements to uni but they're absolutely buried in ceremony and arbitrary requirements
 
ceremony? :P
 
Yeah, ceremony
 
@rlemon dude , sometimes we forget , iam an Architect / learning dev front and backend .. and that is not all what i do believe me.
 
beer drinking and meeting women (or males, dependent of your sexual flavor) is a part of the ceremony!
 
3:49 PM
@za001a I'm not meaning it to come off as a dick. but I told you to look at the arguments you passed JSON.parse(req.responseText) and you said JSON
so there is a lot of knowledge about programming/JS you haven't got yet
handing you code isn't going to give you that
 
Learning about statistics before you can learn Java is ceremony
 
esp on code you already are struggling to understand.
 
Writing a million essays just so you know how to write essays is ceremony
Writing research papers on psychology isn't something you do in practice as a developer
 
@forresthopkinsa fun anecdote: I can write an essay drunk. highest marks in my graduating class.
 
@rlemon i know , i appreciate it sometimes i follow throgh the whole things and sometimes i just have to get it done ASAP
 
3:51 PM
I CANNOT do math drunk
 
Thank you though
 
RIP my average.
 
@rlemon Now that I can appreciate
 
@forresthopkinsa You did not just say that did you?
 
@forresthopkinsa yea I got such good praise on my eng essay I decided to try it for math.
 
3:51 PM
@paul23 I totally did. Fight me
 
20% on my final
😬
 
@rlemon LOL
 
creativity doesn't help maths so much, as it turns out
 
so here it's
"req =
content.js:587 Cross-Origin Read Blocking (CORB) blocked cross-origin response http://127.0.0.1:5000/findq with MIME type application/json. See https://www.chromestatus.com/feature/5629709824032768 for more details"
CORB blocked it.
 
Learning a language is like learning to hit a single type of nail. Learning mathematics is like learning what tools are in a toolbox and how to read the manual for each tool. - So you don't have to hammer each nail and screw you see.
 
3:52 PM
that is why it was empty
 
@za001a that should have been in the developer console from the getgo
now go look up "CORS"
(not CORB, although it will probably give you results)
 
@rlemon prepare for pain.
 
it's lunch time.
I'm shaking the proverbial baby and passing him off
😉
 
@paul23 Learning statistics is like learning what's in the plumber's toolbox when you're a woodworker
Like yeah I'll probably end up using some of those tools at some point but I think I'll be better off crossing that bridge when I come to it
Rather than becoming a certified plumber preemptively
 
Cors was one of the things i had lots of trouble "understanding". Mainly due to (what I believe) is due to the same term for multiple things. Since to solve/prevent the problems from occurring you do complete different things based on whether the server blocks the incoming request, or the client is refusing to even send the request.
 
3:56 PM
@rlemon i've been doing that all day ... it says i can avoid CORB by adding X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff to the JSON reply but i'm trying how to just add the right handler instead
 
The problem with uni is not learning things that aren't immediately practically useful. I learn those kinds of things all the time. I love learning all sorts of things. The problem with uni, as I see it, is the way it presents the learning
It presents it as a means to an end, as something you have to slave through to get somewhere, and that's really not a great atmosphere to expand your understanding in
At least, it's not a great atmosphere for me
 
Ever heard of research
 
Oh lol you're talking to him aren't you
 
@paul23 what is the hard part in understanding CORS/SOP ?
 
o/
 
3:59 PM
I mean, in a nutshell, you can only access data from the same source/server/protocol unless the server gives permission within header information.
 
The hardest part about understanding CORS/SOP is getting past all the bullshit/garbage "answers" on how to fix it.
 
Done.
 
@jAndy Basically the amount of information that's often "non applicable", since it's about a complete different part of cors. Or that a lot of things tell you "for testing purposes disable it by doing X", and then X is no longer working due to browser updates. Or the fact that "set headers xyz to ..." can mean both return or sending headers.
It's easy to understand how cors works/why it is what it is. However the actual implementation is hard to me due to so many conflicting statements.
 
it's a very easy problem to solve, if you understand HTTP and how to control what headers are being sent by your server.
but people often skip that step
 
And then you think you solved it, but chrome still blocks the request.. And you just solved the problem of express refusing incoming requests.
 
4:02 PM
they don't want to understand how it works
they just want it fixed
 
maybe I'm having a hard time in getting the problem, because most of the time I'm used to work backend and frontend (including webserver configs). But in generell, it should be a peace of cake
 
I still cannot really run multiple hosts at my laptop and connect from a website directly during testing/development. I "solved" it by using the nginx middleman as I would do in production.
 
@KevinB *nods*
 
Or well I can in firefox, but suddenly in chrome the settings "ignorecors" are simply ignored by chrome since chrome 70 or something.
 
but that is applicable to most problems you see on SO nowadays tho 😉
understanding why a problem has occurred is not important. Nor is how the fix solves the problem. They just copy paste and try it out to see if it is "fixed"
the CORS thing comes back very often.
it is an essential counter-measurement for security, yet a lot people does not know what it actually does
 
4:10 PM
@paul23 sounds like you need to set up the proxy config in package.json
“proxy”: “local host:9292”, for example if your API is running on 9292
 
@Cereal that is if you run through npm. We used until oktober last year Sencha, which didn't have this feature.
 
Is sencha not a JavaScript library
 
It's a complete environment: with it's own library database, build tools and development server.
 
 
4:39 PM
Hi guys, i'm new in this chat, regards, i have a problem with my code :(
 
@amadojesusmartin 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.
 
@amadojesusmartin line 9
 
could you help me?
jejee
 
dunno. haven't seen the problem yet
 
first, sorry for my english
is about promise.all and api soap, in a for loop only get result of my first request, the rest is array empty
 
4:44 PM
share the code.
 
0
Q: Problem with promise.all in method soap, only return the first query api

amado jesus martinI'm consuming api soap, but when run the function only get the first result from a for, Why do not all queries complete or complete correctly? I’ve tried with a function promise, and call that function in a function async/await, but it does not work const moment = require("moment"); const s...

 
getDataPromise doesn't return the promise
      getDataPromise(params){
        new Promise(function(resolve, reject){
 
and in your first code block, you have no path to rejection.
 
i'll check
 
4:50 PM
if (result.Result && result.Result.AvailableCarList) {
	... stuff
	resolve();
}
what happens when your results are bad?
you'll have unhandled promises
 
that moments ago i remove, i was testing, because i was blocked! :3
 
1 message moved to Trash can
!!tell amadojesusmartin format
 
@rlemon Don't be annoying, drop the @, nobody likes a double-ping.
@amadojesusmartin Format your code - hit Ctrl+K before sending and see the faq
 
then stop being slow Cap
 
as you know, "npx" installs packages temporary (for testing something), now I want to know, when that package will be deleted? when I restart the computer?
 
4:55 PM
this is your fault.
 
ok, sorry
 
@@CapricaSix stop being a little bot
@rlemon @MadaraUchiha merge my PRs from January you fools
 
no
 
!!>new Array(10).fill('').map(()=>'@').join('')+'DavidKamer'
 
@DavidKamer "@@@@@@@@@@DavidKamer"
 
5:01 PM
huh, thought that would ping me more lmao
 
no to do that you have to edit
 
@DavidKamer "@@@@@@@@@@DavidKamer"
 
oh, so it's just when you edit a post that pings someone? I never had her warn me on that before
 
@DavidKamer yes @DavidKamer this is only one @DavidKamer ping. but when I edit it you'll get another ping. see
 
@rlemon Thank you!
i was missing the return!
 
5:05 PM
@rlemon, thank you @rlemon, I get the idea @rlemon, and I appreciate that it is supposed to warn you @rlemon, because I did a bunch w/o knowing I was doing it @rlemon
Can you set interval's with Caprica?
 
no
 
Is there a good ali baba opening the door with open sesame gif
 
@amadojesusmartin I've added as much to an answer
 
I can't find on google :(
 
That's a super specific request
 
5:14 PM
@rlemon ok, thanks! you are good! :3
 
5:42 PM
You guys...they're going to blow up the water tower
 
wat?
 
Guys, I'm spawning a child process with node in this way:
const command = spawn(cmd, args);
and I can see the results with:
 
@DavidKamer The BFS prototype.
 
command.stderr.pipe(process.stderr);
command.stdout.pipe(process.stdout);
but if I use:
const command = spawn(cmd, args), {stdio: "inherit"};
I can't use "command.stderr.pipe" or "command.stdout.pipe"
the child process is "npm install ..." and I use "stdio: inherit" because I want to see the progress bar installation of the package
Does anyone has tried this before?
 
5:57 PM
why can't you pipe it?
and have you tried the callback approach?
 

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