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9:21 PM
@faceless talking about people being an idiot. I just spent 15min figuring out why my bot was sending messages twice. Forgot that I have two instances running lol.
 
omg haha. you must've felt like you were going crazy
how long have you been working on this bot?
 
Thinking time: About a year. Writing code and actually doing stuff: A bit less than a month.
 
ah interesting. Why did it take a year for you to think about it?
 
Anyone worked with creating data visualizations here?
 
9:27 PM
I don't think he is a regular here though
I almost thought you were trolling me with the yt link for a second
(thanks for not sending me somewhere weird)
 
@faceless cause I didn't know node, npm, git, how SO worked, web sockets, puppeteer, functional javascript (I know this half ass) and a bunch of other shit
My thinking time was learning everything I needed on many other projects
 
ahhh gotcha. Looks like all of this is backend shizzle. Do you know your front end stuff? Also, have you ever used source tree? It is so muc better than gits interface
 
Well, in case anyone drops in to check. I am using a data visualization of a population's age in days, by day. It is a date range stacked column graph. So, day 10 may have a set of 5 aged 3 days, and a set of 6 aged 4 days. The problem is that, on day 11, there will now be a set of 5 aged 4 days, and a set of 6 aged 5 days. Since the age in days is different, they are grouped different (color coded).
This works well for one day, but over multiple days, it can give the appearance that the population is larger than it really is. For example, using the previous numbers, it would seem that there was a population of size 5 and size 6 on both days, implying a population of 22. However, it is really just a population of 11.
What would be the best way to allow this visualization to differentiate the difference between the real population and the perceived population?
 
@faceless I know front end decently → joshbrown.info (You can see my design abilities there). But I am not creative and I don't know colors (which is why its black).
And I use the git in my ide not the CLI
 
@JBis - Color palettes can be a hassle. There is an automated way for creating nicely balanced color schemes though, if you are interested.
 
9:39 PM
@TravisJ sure. could be helpful
 
@JBis - Simply choose a base color that you want, can be anything. Go to paletton.com. Use the selection "tetrad (4-colors)", and then drop your color into the base RGB field. The result will be a set of 16 colors (as seen in the grid on the right in the tool) as well as several examples in the tab marked "examples" in the bottom right, that can show how to use the stronger colors in combination with lighter colors.
 
@TravisJ Oh yeah. But I find those colors are sometimes really ugly, even if they work together.
but I can try again
 
It really depends on what color you start with
pale green/brown might make for a questionable page where food was involved for example
 
 
2 hours later…
11:25 PM
It's too quiet in here
 
jrh
11:44 PM
Question for you guys, if I download a repo from the internet, if there wasn't a readme, how would I know whether to use yarn or npm? Is there a way I can tell by some package file or something which package manager to use?
 

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