« first day (3716 days earlier)      last day (1457 days later) » 
02:00 - 18:0020:00 - 00:00

02:33
Microsoft architecture docs are really terrific.
 
4 hours later…
06:06
gud morning all
 
2 hours later…
08:13
anybody there who's knowledgeable in React? I have a question!
@Deegee 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.
 
1 hour later…
09:40
@Deegee don't ask to ask, just ask
 
1 hour later…
11:04
how do you guys convert a specific json node to an array in React? For example I have [{name: Sean, age: 31}] json object, how can I convert it into an array?
11:21
@Deegee an array of what Elements? do you have an example on how it should look after conversion?
11:53
@makadev sorry my question really is for ex I have a json data from an api call like ['M', 'T', W'] it should just look like this: const days = ['M', 'T', 'W']; when converted to an array.
So, you want to convert a JSON string to an array?
@Cerbrus yes! is there a simple way to do that?
12:22
hellow
const screenHeight = window?.innerHeight
const scrollHeight = document.body.clientHeight
const teste = (screenHeight < scrollHeight)
console.log(teste, screenHeight, '<', scrollHeight)
this works but only wen i refresh..any other idea to help? thanks in advance
the objectiv is detect is i gave a Y-scrollbar visible or not
 
2 hours later…
14:07
!!> Object.entries(null)
@paul23 "TypeError: Cannot convert undefined or null to object" Logged: `` Took: 79ms
!!> typeof null
@paul23 "object" Logged: `` Took: 0ms
that is..... werid.
The fact that the type of null is object yet it doesn't behave like one is irritating
@paul23 null is a primitive, idk why typeof reports object
14:13
"Bug in ecmascript specifications - that would break the internet if fixed" is the most reasonable explanation.
we really need a "js++" that is native executed in browsers and a new iteration of js/es but without having to commit to backwards compatibility.
But that's a chicken and egg problem in the presence of a bird that already lays golden eggs.
@paul23 wdym "native executed"?
As in: not "compiled to javascript and then distributed to clients to be executed" like coffeescript/typescript.
so wasm?
or you want typescript natively supported?
Well is typescript that good? Or can there be made something better if it doesn't have to compile to javascript? But yeah think like that.
Meh. I don't think we should be locked into typescript or anything like that
But I agree we need to drop this notion that everything on the web needs to be backwards compatible
14:22
But you do think we should be "locked into javascript"?
It's quite arbitrary anyways.
@paul23 wasm moves us way from being locked into js
but we need a versioning system
at the start of a js file there should be a comment with the version of js
Uh not really: since to interact with wasm you need a js layer between the dom and wasm.
From what I've seen you can't directly interact with the dom (or other tools like http requests) through webassembly?
@paul23 i think that'll be fixed soon enough
Not sure if that has any priority
@JBis The problem of this is then that you get into a complex matrix of which browser supports which version of javascript and how do you find the correct polyfill for each jsversion x browserversion
although dom access and web stuff won't be sped up by using wasm so its not a huge deal, the only issue is transfer of data from js to wasm and vice versa. Data transfer is really slow right now.
@paul23 we already have that problem
I understand why, but it's frustrating that we can't just screw over users.
The expectation is that our websites will work on 8 year old browsers
users have gotten the mindset that if your website doesn't work with my browser, it's the website's fault
14:30
C'est la vie
But adding versioning would add another problem: say you have a new feature X that breaks with older version Y.
Now a browser always has to support version Y to allow viewing of older websites.
backwards compatibility is always an issue in software
However all new development would be done in feature X. But say a security bug was found in feature Y. This has to be fixed, thus development has to continue on old features/versions that are no longer considered "standard" and might not be well defined.
if i am using 8 year old software (what is that? windows 7/8?), and I try to download a program, I may get a message that my os is too old to run it.
Yes, but normally data (say document format of .doc and .docx) is normally separated from the programs. Which gives a clear update: I can update to a new pc but the data is still accessible.
In the internet world javascript execution has very much become a part of the data itself, you cannot really see a site without (correctly) interpreting the javascript.
@paul23 not sure what you mean
14:35
Well I expect my newest fancy word-processor in 2025 to still be able to read word documents I wrote back in 1995.
yes and no, documents maybe, but not a program
Similarly I expect a browser of 2025 to allow me to view sites of 2010s full of that "era" javascript.
you can't run a 1995 word on 2025 hardware
No but I can read the files
websites are applications not documents
at least in 2020
14:36
Are they, then where is the data/document for the end user? The end user should always be able to get a document, that's basic user experience.
Then each website should have a "print-to-portable" feature as a standard action.
it depends what the application is. Microsoft has a web version of Word. You can create, read, and edit docs there. I'm sure there is compatibility with 1995 documents.
Yes but what about hybrid sites like wikipedia? Or gmail?
both you can save as pdf/print
Sure but it shows that you cannot really consider a website to be an application - and the content to be separate. We have to take very very specific actions to separate those again.
they are separate it's just not stored on your computer
14:39
Thus an end user cannot be expected to always do this, and hence from UX perspective an enduser can be expect to have a website "always work".
if you want a website to always work, keep your browser up to date
@JBis That would make it even more tricky: if it's user data you store as website you're now also responsible to make sure that it's always visible with any tools from that day forward. Also keep visiblity for the "old tools" from the moment they entered it.
Updating isn't something you should enforce on old users who just want to see the old data they stored, it's theirs anyways.
So you're saying that since the user can't "archive" a web app in it's current state, they wouldn't be able to use it as the years go on without updating to even view their own files.
If you consider the "website + javascript" a document you aliviante the problem as you say "hey here with js that's the complete document up to you to decipher it". - But then we're back at end users rightly expecting browsers to always be able to decipher all old versions of js.
i'm not sure but would it really be difficult to say Chrome 90 supports JS versions 1.0-2.0. Chrome 91 supports JS versions 2.0-3.0, etc?
14:45
@JBis yes, actually for "sinterklaas" (5 december) holiday we make for each family member a small poet/rhyme. To do that this year I went through all my old rhymes for inspiration - which dated back to the early 00s. Those were stored on an old hdd I hadn't used in years.
It would've been "weird" if that suddenly stopped working as I used it as backup drive
but i still don't see a website as your document
At the internet we also have those things (google drive?) - and since JS must be general purpose it also must handle those, so it must be backward compatible. Either that, or browsers must. Or each website must very carefully define backwards compatibility itself (which would be awkward for already existing sites).
a "web app" is analogous to a native application, not to a document
Sure but would you describe any website that uses javascript to be a "web app"?
maybe semantically no, but for purposes of this conversation in 2020 yes
websites before 2000 (?) were more like documents, then applications started to exist
14:53
@JBis counterexample: wikipedia.
wikipedia is a web app
You can login/logout, create articles, edit articles, search for articles
if you want to call each article a "document" i guess you can
Ok, but then (say) 20 years in the future we wish to view the data from wikipedia but it hasn't updated itself for 15 years. Should we just consider it "lost" because there are no browsers for "those old versions of javascript"? And "no os can run those ancient browsers anymore"?
"dead", but yes
That's not really a good position to make actual data available, it's actually opposite of the statement of wikipedia to provide accessible information.
same as netscape from 20 years ago. You can't run that on modern hardware, not without a lot of trouble.
14:57
Your idea would make the internet no longer a feasible system to store information for long term sharing of information (like books are).
yes it is
you just can't use the "application" part (login/logout, create articles, edit articles)
Well the problem is: a lot of "spa" applications would be empty without correct interpreting of javascript.
true
Sites like facebook/gmail only load information after an initial render (even without logging). So you're now putting extra tension on developers: "hmm do I want this visible for later public... How would I go about it...."
Something we can kindly ignore for now since backward compatibility helps us.
i see your point, and it is a good one. But it doesn't seem to be an issue with native applications. Since the web is replacing native apps we can (and should) treat it similar.
Ok. Fine, then maybe we keep backwards compatibility as optional.
15:00
It's because there's a very clear distinction between "application" and "data" there, while in modern websites it's hard to separate those two and "just get all data".
Chrome 90 has JS 2.0 and 3.0 installed, if you want to use 1.0 you'll need to download the JS 1.0 engine in chrome 90.
How about that?
I'm not saying it is a bad idea: it just means "someone" has to take responsibility: either devs (in websites) or browser makers (by guaranteeing all versions)
@paul23 seems like we both take responsibility now
es6 imports has pretty decent support. I don't know a single website using it in production.
@JBis Problem is then that creators of chrome have to keep a track of all potential "js 1.0 bugs" and fix those separate from 2.0 etc.
@JBis we will be! - And actually react sites quite often use it.
@paul23 no they don't. When 1.0 falls out of support, it's used "as is".
15:03
It's part of the "first tutorial" series of react :P
@JBis consumers won't accept that if there's a big security hole.
yes they will
they do now
Windows Vista isn't being updated for security issues
Hmmm yet with windows xp there's quite a big outcry!
But you're correct there.
Let's say google decides JS will have a 5 year support life time in browsers. Years 1-3 will get regular bug fixes, 4-5 will be security fixes only. Past that, it as is.
I guess "current js" would be like xp and need to be supported for a long long time and future versions could be more dynamic and faster drop support.
@paul23 exactly
you can't do this retroactively
we could call current js, "legacy js" and then start proper versioning
15:06
Though, it's still a chicken-egg situation. There're a lot, lot of people who simply use js to quickly add a small thingy to their website. And they copy ancient code...
most of js would be backwards compatible
So also on the developer side you'd have difficulty gaining traction for versioning.
const x = 5;
console.log(x);
I don't see that changing for a very, very long time
var x = 5;
It "changed" not too long ago ;)
@paul23 that's still suported in "legacy js"
not the best example, but the basic structure of js would be backwards compatible
15:09
sure, but can you imagine the amount of people "sighing" and saying "why would anyone need this version of js, I read this and that site and it showed perfect examples how things work".\
from java version to java version how many breaking changes are there?
I know quite a few people even in this room happen to do just that with some new tools
@paul23 people will always complain about change
i highly doubt anyone who isn't a lazy would argue js 10 years ago is better than it is now, and the past 10 years of js development have been useless
I would like to volunteer for the second statement :D
although... I am lazy, so I dont really qualify
@Wietlol you'd probably know the answer, "from java version to java version how many breaking changes are there?"
@Wietlol XD
15:11
I think about 10
but only in recent versions
I'm not actually afraid of hte people who don't want change. I'm more afraid of those who learn the "dirty" js way (not be overly generistic but those who came from css and started adding js tricks - and just read old tutorials). Those second people just want to do "the fastest thing that works, first thing I found". And they'll keep repeating then "ancient" version between them.
I've seen that happen with python 2
you guys know a way to see if scrollbar is enable or not using js? i have googled but seams noting is going well for me....
although, there is a difference between Java backwards compatibility and Javascript backwards compatibility
@paul23 so screw them
if you want to be a dev be a dev, don't half ass it
Where -highly intelligent- people just don't wish to go for python 3. Because python 2 works, and they keep teaching those tricks to new people etc.
15:13
in Java world, there are 2 major parties that are involved
1, the front end language (Java)
2, the back end language (JVM Bytecode)
in Javascript world, both of those are Javascript
You can't always say "screw them" when they're your prof, or it's the interface code for a SIMONA simulator XD.
JVM Bytecode is 100% backwards compatible (apart from maybe security reasons)
Java itself is not
if someone is teaching me Java from 2000 why would i take their class?
will some stuff be the same? probably but most will be useless
@Wietlol exactly
Btw if someone tells you you need to call him/her "they", is it then: "they is" (since it's still singular) or "they are"?
for example, I had to make some changes to allow a piece of Wietbot to run in Java 8 instead of Java 11
because in Java 11, the nashorn engine was removed
15:16
@NoobDEV-GBL uh you just modify the css style: overflow-x and overflow-y
which is what powers evaljavascript
@paul23 "they are", same thing with "you is" vs "you are" "you" is singular
But then how do you make a difference between "they are" when talking about a single person or when you talk about a group?
oh wait english doesn't do that with you either.
yeah, context i guess
english is dumb
but not even english is backwards compatible
look at english from a couple 100 years ago, impossible to understand ;)
@paul23 i just whant to check is i have or not the croll bar to change the width of the menu
15:21
I mostly respect pronouns, but if someone were to tell me their gender is non-binary, my programming background shows up "EVERYTHING IS BINARY!"
It's weird, because in most other languages they have 3 forms for singular 3rd person (for example german: "er" "sie" "es"), or the pronoun is "added" back in from the plural form. But those would always follow the same plurality as the other singular 3rd person pronouns.
I've never heard in dutch someone wished to be called "het" (third/undefined gender type) though.
we need a finnish person in here to brag about 46 forms of words
i have try somting like this:
  const screenHeight = window?.innerHeight
  const scrollHeight = document.body.clientHeight
  const teste = (screenHeight < scrollHeight)
  console.log(teste)
but it looks wrong
@Wietlol nothing is binary
I would asume that it would be the other way around
clientHeight (iirc) is the size of the application window reserved for the website
15:25
@NoobDEV-GBL you can't really do that - only "guess" it by checking the width/height. But browsers may choose not to show the bar at will. Also be careful that changing the menu size might change the width and hence not show the scrollbar, creating an annoying blink effect.
(basically, your browser without the url bar, bookmarks, etc)
@phenomnomnominal no u
@paul23 all of that because the client dont whant the menu to pushe leftthe crollbar 5px
@NoobDEV-GBL did you look at this? stackoverflow.com/a/10948074/2764866
if you want to fiddle with the position and reserved space for the scrollbar, perhaps re-arranging the html or applying some trickery css might do a better job
15:27
🤷‍♂️saying non-binary genders don't exist because current computers use a 2-state model to represent some things is a bit of a garbage take (joking or not)
@Wietlol ya but to aply css i ned to know if i have the bar or not right?
@paul23 ugh, calculating that stuff is sooo annoying
you can style the bar itself
@Wietlol i did´t...tanks for let me know
that way, you can make it... thingy... so that it doesnt consume the space
floating?
im not sure :D im not a web dev
15:30
the client says that is confusing for people see that the menu change 5px to the left..all webpages do that
but the question is, does the menu have to scroll?
@NoobDEV-GBL not sure exactly what are you trying to do but you can have the scrollbar always show up and then just offset the element so it isn't visible
or just the content in the main panel?
also that ^
just the content
can you get the width of the scrollbar though?
IE: on mobilephones the width would be 0 as it is floating of the text
15:32
you might want to pull the menu component out of the main panel then
@paul23 i didnt get there yet....
I'd just ignore the scrollbar and design the site to look good independent of scrollbar visiblity
 cosnt scrollBarWidth = element.offsetWidth - element.clientWidth;
uhh you'd also need to subtract the borderwidth (which can't be queried I'm afraid)
|| mdn getComputedStyle
@phenomnomnominal were you able to figure out your ts issue?
@JBis that get always 0px
for me, the statement of genders is a joke regardless...
where I come from, genders dont even exist, only sexes do
based on the description of genders, they appear to be a categorization label with various properties... such a construct can never be described by a complimentary antonym, nor a graded antonym.
instead, it should have a matrix based on the number of properties and whatever value they might hold (each could be complimentary, graded, etc)
but I suppose people dont care enough to get things right, they just want to complain about things
are you doing the right element?
:51186581 <div className='App'>
  <Box className={classes.Body}>
    <Router>
      <Header {...menuProps} id='BodyBox' />
      <Analytics id={process.env.REACT_APP_GA}>
        <Switch>
          <Route path='' component={} />
        </Switch>
      </Analytics>
      <Footer {...menuProps} />
    </Router>
  </Box>
</div>
thats tha hader..where i have the menu...
15:44
@Wietlol where are you from?
logic.exe
His name implies where :P
it does not!
Does so!
Mar 2 at 14:28, by Wietlol
its an abbreviation of Karakirewiet
15:45
@Wietlol meh, i think its naive to say "genders don't exist"
I know, had this discussion earlier with you :P
they do exist, but it is just a categorization group
yes, it is
some don't feel they fit into either category
and in that context, male and female are not exhaustive
they could never be
@Wietlol nobody said it is
15:46
but neither can it be just a line between male and female
same with political parties
you may identify as a "democrat" but not agree with everything the democratic party agrees with
but other identify as an "independent"
but the thing I dont understand is why pronouns are bound to genders
for me, they are bound to sexes
because you don't check the sex of someone before you use a pronoun, you base it off of gender streotypes
we base it on visual appearance
if we cant decide, we just say "old woman"
and I would apologize for the "woman" if it were to be wrong
i mean i don't see an issue with that
i disagree with people who think we shouldn't assume
assume all you want, but if you get it wrong then correct yourself
15:54
@JBis with some fucking dark magic yeah
haha nice
export type PromisifiedValue<Value> = Value extends Func
  ? Value extends PromisifiedFunc<Value>
    ? Value
    : never
  : Value extends Obj
  ? Value extends PromisifiedObject<Value>
    ? Value
    : never
  : Value extends Array<unknown>
  ? Value extends PromisifiedArray<Value>
    ? Value
    : unknown
  : Value extends Set<unknown>
  ? Value extends PromisifiedSet<Value>
    ? Value
    : never
  : Value extends Map<unknown, unknown>
  ? Value extends PromisifiedMap<Value>
    ? Value
    : never
This is fine :D
i feel bad for whoever has to look at that after
Just me
I'm a strong believer in hiding complexity in libraries :D
Nice DX is more important than simple code any day
@phenomnomnominal true
15:57
What I'm making means you can go from:
import { thing } from './my-module';
thing(); // runs on main thread

// to

import * as myModule from './myModule';
const thing = workerRequire<AyncModule<typeof myModule>>('./myModule');
await thing(); // runs in worker thread
// or if you're just using JS
const thing = workerRequire('./myModule');
await thing(); // runs in worker thread
pretty cool
@JBis ok now that i fixed it give me offsetHeight:747 clientWidth:1423 ut on same cases the offsetHeight is 0 or other values and the clientWidth is always not the same
i'm tink in put the overflow-y: scroll !important; and it will aways display the bar
but that is really ugly look
I wonder if I can use this via require.extensions 🤔
@JBis did you see this that I wrote? gist.github.com/phenomnomnominal/…
Probably the most insane TS thing I've done so far
16:14
How do I target a span inside a h4? Ive tried nextElementSibling and nextSibling but not returning what I need. Not fluent enuff to know choices. Any Help is appreciated
h4 span for any descendent, or h4 > span for direct children
@phenomnomnominal Ooops sorry, not fluent in workings of chat
Could you kindly elaborate?
I am referring to JS not CSS
@JBis I've seen it, that'd beautiful
@Stuart a child of an h4 isn't a sibling of the h4...
16:19
and a newb
@Stuart sorry, in JS you can always use CSS selectors with HTMLElement.prototype.querySelector
idunno, you've been here for many years
So how do I access it in JS?
So if you have an element (such as your h4) in a variable like foo
Yes
16:20
you can do foo.querySelector('span')
Mmmm
or if you just have your whole document, you can do document.querySelector('h4 span')
I dont think I like querySelector tho... How about vanilla JS?
You can also use querySelectorAll if you need all elements that match the selector
16:21
querySelector is vanilla JS, it's in the DOM spec and has been for years
🤦‍♂️
Ohhhh
Thank You kind Sir
@phenomnomnominal I think you are in love with typescript. I'm a simple ts guy. A couple generics is as advanced as i go.
yeah... i tend to have a little typescript with my javascript, not the other way around
Is this the best and only way? Would not a specific selector be better? (ie: nextXXXElement..)?
Nvrmnd me
16:23
alternatively you could do something like Array.from(target.children).find(a => a.tagName.toLowerCase() === 'span')
TY for the querySelector tip. I guess its time I become unafraid of new things
@KevinB and this is usually possible because libraries give you good types 🤷‍♂️
Oh Man...
No Thanks
Thanks again @phenomnomnominal Im off to experiement with it
You're a genius. Quick n Simple after 2 days of throwing darts in the dark
Thank You Sir
16:32
Sometimes instead of looking at docs I just look at the intelisense suggestions and see if any method name looks right
@Stuart Not a genius - I've just thrown way too many darts over the years.
Jeez: chat user since 2012-06-11
When did I get so fucking old :D
bunch of boomers in here ;)
I remember we were all still excited about ES5
wait...json parse didn't exist until es5?
16:40
I mean
a lot of things existed during the wild west period that weren't standardized officially
We used to use the original Crockford parser
we used $.parseJSON
ah, jquery
the library so bad that it got all browsers to come together and standardize
16:59
@phenomnomnominal If you wouldn't mind taking a look at a motorcycle oriented site Ive got one more for you
Have to show and explain
basically want to click another link to make prev discussed foo do what it does when clicked on
like a shortcut
if not possible in under 20 chars prolly gonna bail for now
just putting it out there
will provide link upon request
17:13
@Stuart i'd suggest creating a MCVE if you want help. If you can't reproduce, post link.
Reproducing would be harder than the challenge Im afraid
This is a long race schedule which is not yet updated for 2021 of which Im dabbling on is all
Link coming
I have the accordion feature working (mostly) but I'd like to now make it so that if you click one of the top links (ie: Northeast Qualifiers & Regionals) are "opened" when you get there
Link
Im thinking something along the line of <label> ??
This is where Im back to throwing darts in the dark
why can't you just add a listener and go from there?
Mmmm
IDK
?
Good clue tho
was trying to 1 line append to existing accordion script
AFAIK another listener would greatly extend script. I might just leave it as is (Except for fixing toggling of show hide races text
Im already pretty proud of my heavily modified W3Schools script
might just be good enuff until I have a better & broader understanding of JS
Thanks Y'all
@Stuart if you'd like to get a better understanding of modern/good js, i'd not suggest starting with w3schools
lol if I had $1 for everytime Ive heard that, yet Ive learned alot there
17:28
The problem is that what you learn there often isn't what you should be learning.
Im up to $2 Yayy
I agree, Ive combated some questionable code from there...
I'm wondering: is there a canonical site that is good for 'learning js'?
i don't think the mdn tutorials are bad
This cant be made up...
or W3Schools
lol
I've come to js after having 10+ years experience in c++/java/c# and (mainly) python. So for me MDN was useful as reference manual. But MDN doesn't teach any of the fundamentals regarding "programming".
17:38
MDN is supperior... Just a lil hard on the eyes / brain
@paul23 their tutorials does. It's different then their reference pages.
singular?
I remember learning c++/java in highschool, and had some hefty books about those languages written for newcomers.
Nice @JBis
17:40
the content on mdn is pretty good its just overwhelming and confusing to navigate for new users
accelerated C++. I haven't found a similar book for javascript, but a book really helps grasping fundamental ideas of programming
I only claim hard on the eyes / brain because W3Schools dummifies it for pple like me
@paul23 wish i learned c++
As it moves through the abastractions and how you abstract "thoughts" into "code".
php manual is even worse
17:41
i've been trying but got distracted
php is trash
"Just get a good book"
lol
although php 8 added some really cool features
Really c++ has amazing books written by some of the best in the field, just grab one and read it over the holidays/while you have an hour or two spare time.
i was following this learncpp.com
17:43
4238
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

I've read c++ primer, accelerated C++, effective c++ and effective stl before I found myself versed enough to even look on stackoverflow XD
the issue with books is they get outdated
not when the language is old and doesn't change
C++ has changed
Funnily, with a good book that's actually not the case... Since language ideas hardly change.
coldfusion books from 8 years ago are still relevant
17:45
pretty sure 11 brought a bunch of new features
Like C++ has changed, but the old books are still considered quite decent, as the new features are more easily understood if you understand the basics like generic (template) programming.
true, i mean concepts are probably the same
It's like reading a book on js that doesn't have await/async - but still talks about promises..
You can use that first and then "easily" add the await/async on top of it later.
@paul23 would you suggest the accelerated for me or "A Tour of C++ "? i obviously know js pretty well but not sure if that counts
I don't really know, like I said: it's been over 10 years since I really used C++
17:47
@paul23 might pick up old habbits
Yes. I mean you're are right. Books would be helpful. But if i can find something more recent then i usually opt for that.
I took most from effective C++. (and it has a modern variant). It's quite complete but not easy.
have you tried rust?
i was going to try go, but i can't stand that they don't have a package manager. You just use github URLs. i feel like left pad could happen all over again.
nope, haven't found a compelling reason to do.
02:00 - 18:0020:00 - 00:00

« first day (3716 days earlier)      last day (1457 days later) »