@AKS Most numbers in computer has a representation range, and you are going beyond that range. BigInt is special in that its representation range is as much memory as your browser/computer have - as long as the number is an integer. So it will work as far as your example is concerned if you get it right.
But before asking us to hand the solution to you on a silver platter, may we ask why would you want to shift 000719751186416140289 by 32 bits?
In that case it may be better to concat the session id as a string, and get a substring in js. In js, "00071" (string) is NOT the same as 00071 (number).
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@Sheepy @ShrekOverflow i already know java, if there is no difference between the OOPS concepts of java and javascript means i can omit it and i move ahead to learn React
@TharunEniyan I think you mean OOP instead of OOPS. And I am doubtful that you know OOP or Java well enough to appreciate the difference. So be my guest, just go ahead to learn React.
@ShrekOverflow @Sheepy ok after i learnt the basics in javascript like functions, objects, arrays, controlflow.. I'm jumping to learn React... btw i'm a naive
@forresthopkinsa The STEM toy ads that I read a lot recently say otherwise. They are saying that their fancy robots and drag and drop coding mobile apps are the best. ;)
I've often imagined that I'd get a pi and a 3d printer and start becoming a real life (as in physical world) hacker. Reality is I spend my free time on gaming and coding js tools for games and my boss just asked me whether I can do an AR app.
I can imagine that. I got a pair of vr glasses earlier this month, and I can't help but feel that I am drifting further and further from the physical world lol
not going into much unneeded detail but TL;DR we started building two slightly similar apps within the same codebase.
butt not we're splitting them up and trying to sort things out.
in an ideal future we should have kinda like a mono-repo (perhaps) but with a core package with things that are shared between both apps, and then isolated packages for each of them.
but for now, because we just did the split - I'm trying to remove duplicate code.
Is there some kind of webpack plugin that can identify dead code?
Why don't most developers give a shit about code quality? The amount of effort I have to put in to babysit in order to ensure quality is too damn high.
Manually making sure your braces, parens, spacing, etc is consistent takes little to no effort at all. It's either that they don't care, or they're blind
The tools exist; the problem is that they don't use those either. Again, the IDE/Editor can help be a solution here, but the problem is that they don't give a shit in the first place
The problem is that I'm not the only person doing code reviews, and I have my hands full doing most of the front-end. I was much more engaged on the back-end when I was doing a lot of work in there, but the lead guy for the back-end also has issues with code quality, and he doesn't care
Just pay attention to what you're doing. Sloppily throwing around code without a care in the world is the problem. You can do anything after the fact to clean it up, but just fucking pay attention
One of these people that has issues with quality has also accidentally wiped a production database. It wasn't a big deal, but the person is a senior level engineer. That kind of stuff isn't specific to my current employer. I keep ending up working with people like this, no matter where I go
@rlemon You should probably be making sure that the animation frame function doesn't run 100% of the time, usually you buffer by a millisecond differential for that, somewhere between 16 and 75. The clouds look cool though, I will give that a shot later.
How do I make a relatively positioned tooltip of a button not be part of the actual button (when I click on the tooltip it activates the button, which I don't want to happen)?
> The number of callbacks is usually 60 times per second, but will generally match the display refresh rate in most web browsers as per W3C recommendation.
raf used to be limited, or that was the implementation
now I guess it will take your native refresh rates
Apparently, for certain attributes, React is intelligent enough to omit the attribute if the value you pass to it is not truthy. For example:
var InputComponent = React.createClass({
render: function() {
var required = true;
var disabled = false;
return (
<...
Warning: Received `false` for a non-boolean attribute `active`.
If you want to write it to the DOM, pass a string instead: active="false" or active={value.toString()}.
If you used to conditionally omit it with active={condition && value}, pass active={condition ? value : undefined} instead.