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22:00
But I'm already a Journeyman H.E.T so I'll keep my $60/hr wage, and when I get my Journeyman in Refrigeration, I'll be making some pretty sick cash as a Dual Ticket Journeyman :D
!!glare
ಠ_ಠ
Hahaha
Holy fuck!
I love it.
ಠ_ಠ
make that the !!seriousglare
22:00
@Gacnt Huh. Nice!
!!seriousglare
@SomeKittens That didn't make much sense. Use the help command to learn more.
!!learn seriousglare "<> ಠ_ಠ"
@Gacnt Command seriousglare learned
!!seriousglare
22:02
<b>ಠ_ಠ</b>
poop.
Nobody else is playing Final Fantasy XIV :(
i.imgur.com/Kg9swG6.png you guys are missing out
I look like a Jedi
!!forget seriousglare
@Shmiddty Command seriousglare forgotten.
22:11
!!learn seriousglare "<> **ಠ_ಠ**"
@Shmiddty Command seriousglare learned
!!tell gacnt seriousglare
Is it just me, or is the syntax the OP is using in this question not completely broken?
@gacnt ಠ_ಠ
2
Q: jQuery - existing of document parent

user460114Found a few similar articles, but can't seem to get anything to work. We have this code as follows: parent.$("#toTop").trigger("click"); However, we need to check for the existence of the parent element as it is throwing an error in some cases where dom setup is different: parent.$(...) is n...

22:12
@Alnitak smells like backbone
sure ain't jQuery...
it's jQuery mashed with backbone
I think it's inside someone's window.open
blah.$() is so ugly.
yes
and yet it's COMMON FOR BACKBONE
so much hate
I have
22:13
Your sentences all being split up makes it seem like you're choking on your hate
i.imgur.com/NRiLnbx.gif // Is this a computer for ants?
Is this for real?
or doing a Yoda impression, he is
We're having a 'go crazy' idea planning session for our upcoming sprints next week. My idea will be get rid of backbone.
4
@Gacnt doubt it
@Gacnt sure, why not? embedded systems!
22:14
Makes more sense, that does
@phenomnomnominal I'm not a huge fan of having to explicitly declare observables in Knockout, but I'd much rather take that over Backbone
Ideally we'd be using Angular
It just makes so much more sense for everything we do.
one of my colleagues demoed me some Angular stuff today - looked real nice
Yeah I think Angular is a nice fit for us
I've been pushing it for a couple months now. The problem is that, since we're under the corporate umbrella, starting from "scratch" is a hard sell.
In reality, we'd only have to rewrite the UI. We still have all of our stored procedures in place.
(though many of them could stand to be cleaned up)
22:19
The only think i don't like is the stuff like: <a href="" ng-click="archive()">archive</a>
we've spent so long avoiding it
@Shmiddty Angular and Knockout are very different. Knockout is just a databinder , Angular is a framework, it handles everything
@phenomnomnominal Distinguish web applications from web pages please :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum oh you.
@Brett Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@phenomnomnominal +1 for that
@phenomnomnominal It's an excellent tradeoff from "compiling" templates from HTML strings
22:22
@phenomnomnominal Have you ever done gui in anything but HTML?
@BenjaminGruenbaum A little bit in C#?
github.com/Zirak/SO-ChatBot/issues/76 What do you guys think input please
@phenomnomnominal Used WPF?
Stuff like Angular is how it's always done. A web app gains nothing by unobtrusive JavaScript, it's meaningless without that behavior.
@BenjaminGruenbaum nah, it was XNA
WPF/XAML is nice. Bit of a steep learning curve
22:23
@Gacnt Meh, I don't think it's a problem
@Shmiddty You can get WPF/XAML from an HTML background if you know Knockout in a day or two - that's what I did just a few weeks ago. It's really not that hard to pick up.
@Gacnt yeah, unnecessary.
Hokay
Express your opinion on the issue :D
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm sure it would be much easier to pick up now than when I was doing it originally.
observableArray -> ObservableCollection . You do design with grids which is like what we did back when we used tables.
Yeah
22:25
How would you go about converting an app from backbone to angular? Could you do it in chunks, or would it have to be all in one go?
@phenomnomnominal WPF uses (usually) XAML, which is their markup language, needless to say view behavior is defined in, well... the view.
@phenomnomnominal First of all, I'd probably shout 'FUCK YEAH' for about 15 minutes, then do a little happy dance.
@phenomnomnominal That depends on application structure. In all honesty, I would not convert an application from Backbone to Angular unless I had a good reason to. I dislike Backbone, I think it gives me nothing and takes more complexity than normal JavaScript, but if it works it works.
I think converting your app from Backbone to Angular is probably a poor choice unless you can justify it outside the "Backbone makes shitty structure and hard to maintain code" argument.
It works yes, but there's just a sense of impending doom when it comes to technical debt.
We're constantly having to hack shit to get things to work.
Backbone and Angular don't shouldn't mix. You're either doing one or the other. I'd build new features in Angular and keep existing ones in Backbone.
Start migrating slowly, keep everything in tight source control.
There's probably smaller issues we could fix first, like not supporting zepto AND jquery...
With Angular you need neither.
22:29
@BenjaminGruenbaum What about the "it will make feature-implementation more agile" argument?
@Shmiddty That's an extremely poor argument in my opinion. Sorry.
Simpler maintenance?
Never underestimate the value of working code, never implement code changes unless you need to, never waste developer time on things that aren't going to increase income business wise.
That's just business common sense.
Look Out! Its a Sharknado!
22:31
There are times where code needs to be replaced, but his code is already using Backbone, while I dislike it, it does separate concerns and it does work at the moment.
this isn't a short term project though, and long term maintainability/extendability is important and valuable
You know how much I dislike Backbone, it's something that has been superseded now that we have a better understanding of how web applications should be structured. However, I'm not a fan of making changes, especially expensive ones.
Well I just want to watch the world burn.
@phenomnomnominal How long do you think it would take you to migrate the code base to a point that you trust it with end users in all supported platforms as much as the current code?
That's a bit loaded, because every feature we add I trust our codebase less.
22:34
That's one of the thing that always bothered me about backbone, you're forced into making models that are Backbone.model instead of plain JavaScript objects. That makes sharing code between Backbone and non-backbone things hard.
@phenomnomnominal Do you write TDD?
I do, the rest of my team...
Do you have integration testing?
I'm in a bit of a shitty situation in that I don't trust the JS of the rest of my team
and im the most junior
Only since I've been pushing it hard
22:35
No one ever trusts the code of anyone else on their team.
if they test it you should.
Yeah, that's part of what tests solve, I don't have to trust your code, I can simply verify it.
yeah, and we don't really have that
At the moment i'm just, unit test unit test unit test
Yeah, if you're making a push for something it should probably be that.
and we're building a automation suite with selenium which is going well
22:37
Yeah, that's a good thing. That's what I meant by integration testing
we have a full time tester who is doing that, but obviously there's other work for him
Having a spec that the whole app has to pass before a build is pushed is crucial
yeah, it's slowly coming along
ideally we would get to the point with enough coverage that we can make big changes without too many issues
I honestly think that moving from Backbone to Angular should be pretty low on your priority list. If you don't trust your code base I'd start by writing agnostic tests to all your modules.
If your features all have good test coverage, that would make switching from Backbone to Angular a lot less scary, you could do so page after page, incrementally.
yeah that sounds like a nice idea
i'm fairly religious in my testing
and they're now part of our acceptance criteria for stories, so that's good
it's going back and doing the old stuff that is the pain
it's an egg & chicken situation
22:40
I dislike agile, stories are stupid.
Sorry :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum I love it
we're so productive
Hah, yeah, agile does that. You get a sense of productivity.
in 2 weeks we implemented the feature that took the other mobile teams 6 weeks
What feature?
delivery address/instructions/contact details for purchased items as well as credit card details input and saving/loading + paying by credit card, and all the validation shit that goes with that
as well as revamping our error/notification system
3 devs, 9 days of work
22:44
In nodejs, if a user uploaded, say, a profile picture, would it be put in the filesystem or is it inside something like redis? And is redis also functional as a nosql db?
I guess it just works different here.
@lawm Redis is a nosql db, just a simple one.
@BenjaminGruenbaum But apparently you can store file objects?
Or would those be uploaded to a filesystem and keyed in?
@phenomnomnominal The problem with Agile is that you end up wasting time. It's full of common sense advice but I think its structure is geared towards making you feel productive.
@BenjaminGruenbaum what don't you like about agile? How do you guys do things?
Where is the wasted time?
5 minute stand-up daily and once every two week sprint we have an hour sprint planning meeting, an hour long backlog grooming meeting, and an hour retrospective.
@phenomnomnominal It works like this: I go to work, I arrive when I want, I leave when I want - no one is keeping direct track. We have meetings once a week, I know what I have to implement and work in coordination. Developers meet up thinking architecture when they need to because they need to. Everyone focuses on getting things done, people work hard and very fast.
Work is done out of a sense of commitment and because we want to see the product succeed.
I often discuss things with our CTO at eye level - having architecture debates. Everything is possible and there is never only one way to do it.
22:48
our head of technology is at every one of our meetings, even our standups
If you want a second monitor, or a new mouse pad or a new graphics card there are never arguments about it, you just go, get it and charge the company. Everyone eats together and we have fun days every once in a while where work pays for everything.
yeah very similar to us too
Steve Yegge talked about it.
Basically, everyone has a sense of personal responsibility and has a lot of actual responsibility.
I'm sure he did. The good parts of Agile are what you'll most likely do anyway, and the smart teams naturally avoid the bad ones. So it's not really Agile, it's being good at what you do.
With agile taxonomy.
22:50
@Zirak Yeah, you sent me a link to that a month or two ago, was a nice read. I sympathized about what he said on bad agile, and I can confirm some (but also can confirm some as false at least here) about what he said on Google.
I'm failing to see the downside of what you are describing @BenjaminGruenbaum
The fact you can get up, leave a project you don't enjoy and go work on another one is awesome, that's the one thing that was really interesting to read.
@Shmiddty The downside of what? I'm describing the working conditions where I work.
posted on July 12, 2013 by arthurevans

A host of new DevTools features were introduced at Google I/O 2013. Now they're live in Chrome stable and ready for use!

22:52
@phenomnomnominal asked you what was wrong with agile
^ those values are in my contract
Scrum every day - silly. Backlogs - usually pretty silly. User stories - usually silly.
I'm a fan of daily standups
All the charts.
A good development environment is a direct result of number 6.
22:53
Do you really have to know what everyone on your team is doing every day?
I love a daily stand up
Yes absolutely
@phenomnomnominal OMG THEY SAID "DICK"
Because if they're stuck on something, someone else can help them
@Zirak haha, i know right, wild.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Not all the time. But it's a indication of a company that values information flow
Yeah, if they're stuck on something they should ask other people to begin with. A team should have good communication. I consult other members of my team often.
22:54
@KalvinKlien Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
I'm much happier now that we started standups because I feel involved, instead of a contracter with a salary.
@SomeKittens Right, but if a team communicates well - which should probably be the top hiring criteria, it's a waste of time.
Yeah it's not like we all sit there with headphones on all day and only talk during standups
(which i've seen)
@SomeKittens That indicates a deeper problem with the work environment imo.
(I've never worked in an agile environment, I have no idea what any of that means besides what I can assume on context clues)
22:55
It's not a waste of time, it formalises the communication
do you actually stand up? at my last company we did standsups squatting to discourage conversational reports
it formalises the informality
it's the first thing you do every day
it gives you the, oh, i had an idea in the shower, we should do this
@BenjaminGruenbaum Startup, founder's a Theil fellow (20). Standups have helped so much.
it gives the product owner a snapshot of how the team is doing, where we are for the sprint, what issues we are having, and gives him the opportunity to fix them, because he can't be there for us all day
@SomeKittens Startups are the last place you should have communication problems, then again - if that works for you go for it.
22:58
@zz3599 Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@BenjaminGruenbaum no one wants to have communication problems :P
startups usually suffer from communication - since it usually only flows in one direction in the beginning
Founder is used to working on his own, it's just an adjustment period.
@jbolanos Not from my experience.
user1125394
@phenomnomnominal are you a good sprinter?
user1125394
22:58
below 12'
@BenjaminGruenbaum I've done 6 startups - and usually they don't want to hear how we want to mess up their vision :)
@cx you're very funny.
Don't get me wrong, I 'sprint' a lot, my specialty is coding features fast .
I make a bitchin egg salad.
where do you even get bitchin eggs?
22:59
@jbolanos I'm sorry for your bad experience :S
...must I have to spell out the obvious?
user1125394
ah scrum sprinters are not jokers
@jbolanos Start your own then. THen you get to bitch at others :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum they weren't bad - just because they wanted me to do things a certain way didn't mean that's how I did them - 70% of pissing off the boss is proving you were right
@zz3599 huh?
@jbolanos There was just a nice blog post about it, don't remember where.
23:01
@BenjaminGruenbaum I run screaming when a startup calls me - unfortunately, they tend to be friends since I've been doing them for so long. I need to go back to Product Development
> So the consultants, now having lost their primary customer, were at a bar one day, and one of them (named L. Ron Hubbard) said: "This nickel-a-line-of-code gig is lame. You know where the real money is at? You start your own religion." And that's how both Extreme Programming and Scientology were born.
@jbolanos I love startup environment.
@phenomnomnominal That sounds about right :P
Religions do make a lot of money.
Well, the pseudo-religious religions.
Like Catholicism runs
@BenjaminGruenbaum I do too - but 3 in a row is my limit
:)
@phenomnomnominal I see why you'd like Agile being in a junior position in your team, that makes sense.
23:04
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm still waiting for one of them to sell so I can collect 1.5%
@BenjaminGruenbaum the main thing is that it gives me a voice
Agile gives room to opinion voicing that environments should have and somes don't.
Yeah, exactly.
Although i think that's a cultural thing too
making decisions on their merits, instead of who came up with them
Agile enforces some culture which should be there anyway.
Opinions: I'm pretty sure I'll be staying here for a while. Team and codebase have grown on me. Should I seek a title, and how soon?
23:05
> 5. Decide & act on merit
Agile is Java. It enforces some good ideas sacrificing productivity in my opinion.
#7 Do you want the project done or do you want a status report?
@SomeKittens A title?
^*2
Just like Java agile is full of good ideas that tend to fail in practice. Also like Java it gives you a sense of productivity.
When I worked at Restoration Hardware I literally had no guidance for 2.5 years. But I filled out a bunch of status reports and quarterly reviews.
23:07
we have no other reporting
@copy Yeah. Like CTO.
we have no charts
Do you have a product backlog with user stories ?
@SomeKittens I see. But no idea
23:08
Do you move things from the product backlog to another list of things for sprints lasting two weeks?
but that's because we're trying to catch up with the features of a 14 year old site
they go straight from the backlog to our sprints, yes
@SomeKittens Why do you want a title?
I think Agile might work just for developers that are not me.
Technical Producer is still my favorite job title :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I genuinely think you'd enjoy working in our team
But that's probably just because we're good people
and at the end of the day that makes all the difference
23:10
@phenomnomnominal I'd probably enjoy working in a lot of places :) I like working in teams and I like coding.
The problem is that the impression I got is Agile is full of people that need a methodology to give them vision.
It doesn't magically give you that
@Zirak Job security.
And if you don't have that to begin with it wont work
Yeah, and if you do I feel that it gives you cruft.
It gives you structure, which is a necessary evil when you work for a listed company haha
23:13
Basically, there's no CTO of Zaption right now. I'm trying to figure out the best time to go for it (so no one else can take it).
I've heard stories of employees silently hoping to be C-level or VP of something, and then watching the title go to wooing in some new engineer
@SomeKittens Kill anyone who gets in your way
@jbolanos Sounds reasonable
@Zirak That article is frackin long.
23:15
I'm sure I'm stealing it from someone, maybe Joel Spolsky, but there seem to be a big separation between programmers, and people in general, on the subject of "tidying your bed".
@Shmiddty It's a nice read.
It just made me envious.
@Zirak I'm confused. What?
I've contracted at places that promised contract to hire only to have them give the slot away and expect me to keep working contract
You basically have the people which tidy their bed in the morning, and the people who don't. And both groups are annoyed with each other. The people who tidy their bed say "how can you live it untidy?", and the people who don't say "well, it'll be untidy by night, so why bother?"
And this gives you a very broad view over two schools of programming. You have Java people who like to tidy their bed. And you have javascript people who don't.
23:17
@Zirak I don't make my bed in the morning out of principle, but my shoes are aligned perfectly before I walk out of the bedroom :)
It's about some definition, some reassurance...that doesn't really matter. But to those people it does.
I'd say that you have Java people who'd like to think their bed is tidy but are actually pissing all over it.
2
:P
So maybe Agile is like that.
Java people are the kinds of people who have like 80 pillows
I dunno. If it works for you, call it "doing jumping jacks with Aunt Mary" if you wish.
23:18
@phenomnomnominal and 14 sheets.
Yeah, of course if you feel agile works for you by all means go for it.
and to actually get into bed takes so much effort it isn't worth it
Intervention: "Every time you've started programming Java... you've been using too many pillows."
those are the people I want to go to their house and hide a pea under their mattress
haha
Don't get me wrong, I still read a lot of books on 'how to develop software', I just think a lot of people writing these books are not making a lot of sense above common sense a lot of the time.
23:20
(Gary Larson - The Far Side)
I'm stealing this shamelessly from somewhere. I can't remember from where.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Any good ones you'd recommend?
What does it take to get hired by Google?
@Shmiddty Either A.) Know someone at Google or B.) Get acquired by Google
@SomeKittens Would you like a more theoretic or more practial perspective?
balls.
well, I should head home now.
ttfn <3
23:22
@Shmiddty Getting a math degree helps :)
@SomeKittens I can recommend anything Bob Martin ever wrote
"Clean Code" is pretty good (once you ignore the language medium)
@Zirak Uncle bob wrote some good stuff, but he also wrote some utter bs.
@Shmiddty I've turned down interviews at google - they like to play games with interviewees and if your company get's bought by them expect to get treated like crap if you don't 'measure' up
His boyscout rule is the most ingenious thing.
@jbolanos @Shmiddty I wouldn't listen to this advice.
23:24
Me neither.
I was at StubHub when eBay bought them - we became the bastard children - sucked ass - we couldn't hire anyone or buy anything for 6 months
@Zirak Yeah, I like that one. Although it's very naive.
It's general in spirit, but you can really apply it to the general case. It doesn't say a lot, it doesn't force anything, it's just...what you should be doing anyway, because you care.
Yes, exactly. I feel like reading these books is like reading 450 pages of trivial.
I mean - come on. IIRC "Clean Code" has has a whole chapter on "don't be a retard when naming stuff", a whole chapter on "don't be a retard making functions" and another on "don't be a retard when writing comments" - that's basically most of the book.
23:29
There's a general feeling I get that most of programming is just common sense, but actually programming is difficult (since we do difficult things). So people expect that there's a certain catch, that it can't be that it is so hard or so ugly, so they read and write a lot of this stuff that doesn't say anything beyond what you already know.
I liked the art in that book though. Gaining a lot of dust somewhere :P
It's like how you have a slew of "how to be a good author" books. There's no trick...there's just writing
I think that's a sound comparison.
After all, both authoring and programming is "just writing".
It feels like more of those 'self help' books than like actual good advice.
23:30
That's why I never continued reading through Code Complete
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's next on my list, after I finish Warren Buffett Speaks
I actually liked code complete, it wasn't very useful but I think it's well written.
Oh wait, Clean Code is next. I'm halfway through Code Complete, probably won't continue
Don't read books you don't relate to.
!!continue watching Gunbuster or go to sleep or write some code to feel like you're worthy
23:32
@Zirak continue watching Gunbuster
Lurv you
I liked Code Complete, (it's great advice for those without proper code mentors). It's just not what I need right now.
I'm off to sleep, gnight
night
Is there any reason that logging an object would show all the properties, but when trying to access the properties in dot notation, they would log undefined?
Logging non-primitive variables is sometimes delayed
23:41
I'm trying to access a sub-object. Stringifying and then parsing the object results in expected behavior.
Exactly
Is this just for logging? Later on, I try var acl = item._acl || {}; which results in acl being an empty object.
The logging gives you wrong informations
I'm afraid I don't fully understand.
a = {}; console.log(a); a.x = 5; // might log { x:5 }. I don't know when and under which circumstances this happens
23:46
ah, wonderful. I love race conditions. The good news being that the bug is elsewhere in the app.

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