« first day (5107 days earlier)      last day (36 days later) » 

9:32 AM
||> console.log("hello", "world", )
@VLAZ undefined Logged: [ '"hello"', '"world"' ] Took: 1ms
When did they make a trailing comma in function calls allowed? I mean, I like that. Huge fan of trailing commas. But I thought it still wasn't in this year (or last?).
And I doubt James is running the absolute latest Node, either.
 
2 hours later…
11:38 AM
@VLAZ I remember doing this when I first started JavaScript around 4 years ago.
Trailing comma was allowed in arrays and objects, e.g. [1, 2, ] or { a: 1, b: 2, } And was allowed for ages. Except old IE versions (I think at least until 9) didn't work with it. However, it was not allowed in function calls. It was definitely planned to drop that restriction for function calls, so its in-line with objects, arrays, etc.
I just didn't think they got around to accepting/implementing this.
OK, apparently Chrome 60 did add support for a trailing comma in function calls. Maybe FF was a late adopter, in that case.
 
3 hours later…
3:05 PM
@BenjaminGruenbaum its all good -- recently got remarried -- send me a whats app message some time :-)
 
4 hours later…
7:07 PM
 
2 hours later…
8:43 PM
guys I created a CSS room and got a question
how do we do an mdn link?
I might create a regex room
If we want to answer regex here then we need to add that to the topics list right? then again, chat is not as pedantic as SO so I would guess it doesn't matter as long as no one has an issue with it
Or I could cast any questions as JavaScript questions
var question = "My RegEx question" as JavaScriptQuestion;
@1.21gigawatts 1. Find the MDN link 2. Paste it in chat
Test:
I seem to recall seeing links that would show a bigger display like a summary
Not all links embed. In fact, I think it's mostly links from SE that do that. And few others, like XKCD.
Also most image links. But not most other websites. You can do a markdown link, though [link text](url)
@1.21gigawatts Sounds like an awful idea. Regex questions are often context sensitive. Asking for how to match something will depend on the language. Asking for how to match something here will mean people who know JS can help. But we probably can't help with a regex in Python. The Python room would, though. A general regex room will need proper context for each query. Also, people who know that context. And I think most the wide experts aren't in chat.
There is another problem - even if we assume the room works out and gets traffic, it'd just attract just the worst traffic. Most the regex questions on the site are already scraping the bottom. The room will offer an additional even lower bottom to aim for.
Right now, you can go and blindly downvote every single newly posted regex question on the main site and that will be the correct vote more often than not. The regex tag is just bad. Might even be the worst of all tags.
There's a reason the original room doesn't exist anymore.
could always request for it to be unfrozen, at least one of the RO's still exist in chat
it even had a website
we still ahve a github, but noone maintains it
9:38 PM
it says there's one person in the room (Queen bee)
but the room is locked
I think it must be a bot or something
Well, if there is not a lot of activity we can say post your regex questions in the javascript chat
I created it because I didn't see a regex room. So maybe the search on the rooms page should show that frozen account and then it can have a message there "This room is frozen" You can post in JavaScript room
the search works, but, it doesn't show frozen rooms unless you click show frozen rooms
9:55 PM
@1.21gigawatts Yes, Queen is a bot. Well, more accurately, it's an account that few other tools use to post to chat.
Does anyone know why I can't make an array in TS typescriptlang.org/play/…
Because you've declared a 1D array and you're trying to make a 2D array?
any[] vs []
yeah that's it
Oh, wait. You didn't declare a 1D array. You declared literally an empty array (well, empty tuple). So, the only thing you're allowed to assign is empty arrays.
But with that said ...views will always give you an array, if(views) is never false and if (Array.isArray(views)==false) is never true
The whole function should probably be:
function validateViews(...views) {
   var viewItems = [views];
}
Assuming you do want an array with a single element which is another array. If you don't need to wrap it, then the function doesn't even need to exist.
10:03 PM
tis a great example of logic that i'd always avoid. views would never be a or b
fortunately in this case it couldn't be anyway
10:16 PM
Yeah I had to rewrite that
I can't remember the syntax for that for loop that has both key and value
for (var [key, value] in view) { }
I'm taking a ...views parameter (these are HTMLElements) and then trying to iterate through them
What I want is to get the value of the array not the key
@1.21gigawatts for (const [key, value] of views.entries()) {}
[HTMLElement] is a tuple with one element in it, You probably want HTMLElement[] - an array of any number of HTMLElements
@1.21gigawatts Oh, then you just want for(const value of views)
10:40 PM
ok so this works for (const view of views)
Instead of in I used of. I don't need the key, value in this case
*
*
 
1 hour later…
11:41 PM
Are all the input elements HTMLInputElement?
There isn't a HTMLCheckboxElement?

« first day (5107 days earlier)      last day (36 days later) »