^ I wonder if this is Feeds being slow and picking up things from two weeks ago, or it was the source that didn't publish until now. But I sort of assume it's feeds. I doubt the source would publish the 23rd of September entry in October.
Feeds is also not posting the entries from 2ality. And there are two subscriptions for Node.js (vulnerabilities and the releases) but we seem to be getting only one of them.
I think there is some problem. I remember reading that feeds will stop pulling content if it fails some amount of times. Because the assumption is that the source is unreachable. Maybe that's what happens here. Dunno, I'll investigate more later.
I'm after a bit of advice here. I am currently trying to use cannon-es with three.js to model a table with extendable acutaotrs for each leg. I want to be able to extend each leg to show the tilt given on the table with the gui slider. I can't see how I would add the sliding constraint to each leg/rod? WOuld it be easier potentially with another library?
"Ask a question - AL Chat is your AI-powered assistant." me: I loathe talking to computer only support and not having a real person to talk to society: Let's add that to every thing!
I am all for variable types but is there any reason not to use a combination of type inference for primitives and strong types for everything else (typescript)
Example
```js var x = 10; var response: Response = await Fetch("test"); ```
myFunction(param: type, param:type|null) {
var fullURL = new URL(param).toString();
var resultResponse: Response = await fetch(fullURL, {method:"post", body:formData});
var data = await resultResponse.toJson();
}
I used a type in resultResponse because I wasn't getting autocomplete in the IDE and I was getting an error on var data = await resultResponse.toJson();
at one time I argued for a bi-platform support for a javascript implementation that would work with client and server. i couldn't get enough support at the time
so you had the platform and you would write client and server code all together. the compiler would then produce the separate outputs
The goal was to have JavaScript in the page that was marked server side and that would turn into the related code like a route.ts page. Except node js didn't exist at the time. So no one had that frame of reference
Then any variables you had you could bind them to the view
on teh front end, it could also render the page directly with jsx, and would fetch data via the same data layer only over http instead of directly
the biggest problem at the time was client-side payload size
we could instead just omit it entirely and rely on express rendering, for a far better user experience overall
we still had react on the front end on each individual page for handling the needs of the given page, but it seemed unnecessary to have the routing happen on the client side as well
the server could render the page, cache it, and just return it immediately for future requests, where as if the client is rendering it they have to do that render work every time
put another way
i'm comparing a browser rendering html vs a browser loading javascript that builds html and then tells the browser to render it
yea it's, if you want every page to load and render quickly, which is important for a website that cares about SEO, you can't really just live with the initial load being slow to make the rest of them fast
it seems to work. in indexed for loops if you popped an item off the array the for loop would miss items at the end of the array or error because the length was no longer the same
Array doesn't have a removeItem like method right?
myArray.remove(item)?
nevermind just going to use filter instead of for loop