Few years ago, I went to make myself a public transport card. You need to supply a photo for it. I filled in the online form and just took a picture with my phone and attached it. Then had to go get the real card but the photo was missing. So I had to redo the form. Alright, I filled it in again, attached the photo and checked. Turns out it was just base64 encoded and attached directly to the form.
Which produced a huge string because the photo is however many megapixels to begin with and base64 inflates the original size with about 1/3rd on top. The resulting string was so big that the system just cut it short at some point breaking it. The photo is only 3cm by 2cm or around there, so I just resized it. Didn't need that many pixels.
And the greatest thing ever is that nobody even looks at the photo. When the transport control people come in, I've tried giving them the card upside down or just putting my thumb over the picture. I've never been asked to reveal the photo.
BTW, yesterday I found out that C# has learned from TS and added a ! as in bar = foo! to tell the compiler foo is not a null. In C# this operator is called the null-forgiving operator
I'm not a fan of these "alternative approaches". Yes, you could do it differently but it's not better. It might be worth showing off the alternative approach and explaining why it's bad, for example. But just presenting it makes it seem like it's to be considered with the rest.
It doesn't use shuffling but it's the same underlying solution - generate an array with all options, then try to randomise its elements. It's just slower than a proper shuffle. — VLAZyesterday
@Cerbrus yeah. Btw, do we not have a "sum an array of objects by key" canonical, I wonder? Sounds like we should have one, but oh well, I keep getting surprized in that regards all the time
For quick context - somebody needed unique random numbers. Three answers suggested "generate the range, then shuffle the array". And this one answer showed "An answer that does not use shuffling:" That's a direct quote of the entirety of the non-code content of the answer.
@Cerbrus that's why I practically only answer TS-related questions about complex types or weird compiler behavior - venturing out in the JS tag is just too depressing
Uh, checked the question. We don't have exactly the same scenario. Well, at least from the dupes I can think of. It's not too far of any of the group+sum scenarios (you do the same thing anyway - identify key, identify number, merge number with the running total for the key) but I'm wary of just slapping something that shows off rather different code.
We don't have a good dupe for the operation. Because ideally, the thing in brackets is all you need. And then can figure out how to identify the key and value for yourself.
With maybe a couple of examples of different data structures. Enough to explain the problem in detail and then how to tailor the solution to yourself. Right now we have "I have this dataset, how do I do it" with usually a bunch of answers that don't explain anything. So, you have to work backwards starting with the answers, see how it applies to the question, then figure out how to adapt for your case.
frankly, I don't understand why people keep asking those basic questions - ain't the whole point of our craft is to solve problems? Like, it's basically the only worth-while things
Any idea how can I get the average of the numbers on each month.
let techScores = [
{
"2021-01":[78,86,100],
"2021-02":[100,100,92],
"2021-03":[86]
},
{
"2021-01":[68,100,84],
"2021-02":[82,92,82],
"2021-03":[86,100,100,90,100]
...
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Kind of hard if you're a brick layer. Or legal assistant. Or a store clerk. I mean, those can still offload the work to somebody else but it's kind of obvious when somebody else shows up. IT is frequently described as sort of advanced googling. I've seen programming described less so but still often times in the same direction. You just need to do something that works and you can copy the code. Or ask and be given the code.
Also, from the outside many seem to believe "computer work" involves a lot of faffing around. You watch YouTube videos all day and maybe put in half an hour's work a day.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Sorry, my point is that if you hire Gary the Coder, he sits at his computer and produces code. It's not as clear how that code was derived.
and, well, I am O.K. with googling stuff - we do that constantly. What I don't understand is getting into IT if you don't get the kicks out of breaking down problems into digestible chunks, then implementing them
case in point: "how do I get the average of the numbers on each month". What's so hard about it? The argument about being new does not fly with me - one can be knew to programming, but one can't be new to thinking (well, I suppose one can, but then again, why choose IT)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine You're right. Googling is not all we do. It's iterative problem solving. Even non-programmers would be doing this - there is some problem, they first need the correct terms to describe it. E.g., Error 1002. Which might reveal more terms. E.g., Hardware fault with USB stick. Which might lead to even more. Until you find the solution, e.g., turn it off and on again.
It's the same core skill for tacking programming. I need to do something with an array. I'd google around and find the terms "grouping" and realise that's what I want. So next search is about "grouping array". And then I realise it's not just grouping, I want some sort of aggregation. Slowly, over multiple searches, as better and better keywords are added, you'd get to a range of solutions.
Exactly. Point being, it does not matter how much one has to google (heck, I keep forgetting the syntax for Git commands or CSS shorthand properties on a daily basis, for example), it's just a minor part of our craft. It's just "applied thinking". "ok, I need to do A. To do A, you need to do B,C,D. To do B, you need E,F, etc"
one may not know the correct terms, be not aware of best practices, not know what the standard library provides, etc. But as long as they can think, they can do anything in a reasonable timeframe
Decomposing tasks seems to be exceptionally hard for many. There are a lot of questions like "My if inside a for loop doesn't work". And there are probably at least three things that can go wrong - does the loop execute at all? Is the if condition correct? Is it maybe a problem that the code inside the if executes but doesn't produce the desired effects.
Actually, four problems. Some times nothing in the code works because OP has syntax errors and hasn't even checked the console.
Yeah... And the fun fact being is that "decomposing tasks" is just a fancy term for "thinking". It is how thinking works: by dividing complex problems into easy ones
"There are excellent suggestions for using proper tools to install the sink. But here is just an alternative - try nailing it to the wall, then pour epoxy all over it to hold it into place"
"What have you tried about installing the sink? This is not a sink installation site."
What does the fact that I don't even find the examples funny as I am sure that's what they would (and possibly do) look like tell about my views on humanity?
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I have a call to some third party, so in my service I have to store some information, until another API is called. This another API is in same flow. So I'm trying to do something like using cookie etc, based on key I will be able to access that information
hmm, whatever grinds your gears, I guess. Not sure why you need session cookies here, though - looks like the information can be temporarily stored in-memory in a simple Map. Are you using session cookies for authentication to your service in the first place?
@TheJOKER then you probably are better off without express-session, it's not really a replacement of in-memory storage. Any reservations about just DIY'ing it with built-in JS features?
Fun story: I once almost killed our server at an old job because I was slightly careless with recursive copy. I wanted to copy all hidden files from one directory to another, so I did cp -r a/.* b/ well, that copied .config1 and .config2 but didn't stop there. Since I told it to recursively copy everything it found, it went through each directory. Including the .. directory. Which is the parent. Then proceeded with .. again. And so on. It was copying everything.
I was wondering why copying few small files takes more than 10 seconds. Then we started getting alerts for not enough space, as everything on the server was copied to a single directory.
Mine wasn't THAT bad. Bunch of sites went down for about 10 minutes. Not a big deal.
Same company had one guy who managed to do something similar but with mv and moved everything. Including the top-level directories. Like /bin which is where mv is, so it was no longer available, since the directory wasn't there.
@VLAZ my favourite version of it is "oh, a library has any as the options parameter type. Let me quickly PR the DT repo ... [many hours later] ... f***"
@KarelG There were some riddles in the beginning. But later on it's just comics. As of recently, there are also short animations (1-2 minutes long). I open up and catch up on the comic occasionally.
Hi, can someone tell me about react useEffect. I have some functionality that I want to be run only when foo changes, but in my useEffect I want to compare the foo against the bar, now if I don't include the bar in the dep array I get a eslint warning. Have I misunderstood the dep array?
password validation with regex is wrong. At best check for some characters but that might also be excessive. A better validation would be to check complexity. But still. Allow people to come up with the password they want.
Also, that regex you posted most definitely attempts to check for email. It checks for stuff then @ then more stuff then 2+ characters at the end for a TLD
The Dev channel has been updated to 104.0.5112.20 for Mac, Linux and Windows. A partial list of changes is available in the log. Interested in switching release channels? Find out how. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues. Srinivas Sista Google Chrome
The Dev channel has been updated to 104.0.5112.20 for Windows, Mac and Linux. A partial list of changes is available in the Git log. Interested in switching release channels? Find out how. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues. Srinivas Sista Google Chrome
@MileMijatoviÄ ofc it is considered valid since it checks for: start of the string, followed by zero or more chars followed by a digit, followed by zero or more chars followed by a case-insensitive English alphabet char, all without "consuming", then consumes one or more English alphabet chars case-insensitively or digits, followed by end of string.
Or, put simply, it requires one English alphabet char (case-insensitive) and one digit
Thus, 0a or a0 are both valid
so... question: why would you consider the above regex to require special chars to match if it does not mention them anywhere?