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14:00
does IE10 have full ws support? :p
@jAndy Not sure about that, have to look it up
@jAndy not yet
IE9/10 dont have any ws support
IE9 still has issues but there tolerable at least HTML5/CSS3/DOM/ES5 works in IE9
I was just thinking about that ie6countdown site... that means we can't write pure websocket apps for IE users in the next 10 years ?
IE10 pre2 does have web worker support
:p
14:01
@jAndy of course you can
you can just tell ie users to enjoy 3x the latency everyone else has
If you dont want lag use a real browser
If a user chooses a slow browser that's their problem not mine
what are you saying? emulation a bidirectional datastream with http requests ?
hf
If only business' using IE6 would let someone like you and me (a web developer / computer science geek) come in and upgrade them to a newer browser, having it work with their business software just like it was on IE6.
Yes
Emulate tcp using long polling XHR
Or if major web sites like Google or Facebook suddenly forced users to upgrade to a more modern browser.
It works, it's just laggy as hell
If a user purposely downgrades their own experience with a slower browser. Then that's not my problem.
14:04
@Raynos: you don't get it do you ? :p that is not how economic systems work. Customers don't care what YOU or WE think, its exactly vice versa
That's like saying crysis 2 doesn't work on a pentium 4. Wah wah wah
and that is what its finally all about, money
Wow, what a crysis
@jAndy what's the problem with emulating tcp using xhr ?
Think about it differently
what are the alternatives to using websockets? ajax.
you write a cool app which just say, we don't care about you, go fuck off and the same second some other guy/company comes around creating a web-app less awesome but supports all those customers
guess who is winning in the long run
14:06
So what's wrong with upgrading the ajax to websockets where possible
@jAndy but I'm doing both
It'll support the customers and it will be awesome for the people who have an awesome browser
well I didn't want to argue about that particular topic (even if it's just a mess and I think impossible to fully replace a bidirectional stream with HTTP)
It's great to be cutting-edge, but it's vital to directly contribute to the goal of a company.
The goal of a company isn't to emulate TCP with XHR long polling
The goal isn't to turn customers away.
The goal is to make as much money as you can.
At all times.
@Incognito that's not what were doing
That's a business.
were not emulating TCP with XHR long polling
Were upgrading the XHR to TCP where possible
Providing a better service to a subset of employees
14:08
Replace that with any other tech concept. None of it matters to a business.
They don't care about you using SHA1, bcrypt, md5 or cleartext passwords, they care about increased profits.
The whole point I'm trying to make is
Don't code to the lowest denominator, shim and emulate older browsers to behave like modern browsers
I know companies don't care about this. That's why they don't micro manage
And yes I know how the business sector works, and it doesn't work like this
I just don't agree with their opinions
Hmm... i wouldn't know how to write the backend to use websockets
I'd still go the other way. Create a site/app on the lowest browser you want to support and then add features on top of that for those who can use them
@jAndy I agree in part with that.
You should still and always do progressive enhancement
But I personally say use the HTML5-shim and use <header>, <nav> etc today
But how far should you go? Technically, if you want to support all browsers, you should also support lynx which is text-based...
14:12
benefits? to using <header>, etc?
@NicoBurns look at socketstream
@Michael I'd actually really like to have lynx support, I hate the graphical web.
@NicoBurns semantic HTML
@NicoBurns SocketStream
thats a project decision. If you're going to create an awesome application which needs some technology as dependency you have to go the way to say we support IE9+
or IE8+, whatever
@jAndy you dont have to do that
you can still support IE6
14:12
@Raynos yeah, but nothing actually reads semantic HTML yet
Your just emulating new features in IE6 right from the start
@NicoBurns screen readers
accessibility etc
not really, you can't emulate everything
There are limits
I thought that <div class='header'> might be a good interim solution
its hideious
There are no downsides to use <header> apart from an extra script and running a bit of extra code in older browsers
But do you really care.
It wont be noticably slower in IE6-8 because they are painfully slow anyway
and IE users are used to the web being slow.
14:14
speaking of which, does anyone know how to do a 100% width/height fixed position div in ie6
apart from users without javascript enabled having no styles!
Dont bother
if we kickoff a new project, we sit together for a day or two and think about any tech level we need to have the best and greatest experience .. of course in the first hour we are at Chrome 14 beta and IE14 :p
Just write it semantically and let IE6 render your page like shit
but I think its a good way to create a project
chrome is actually at version 14 :p
14:15
The whole point is never limit yourself to only use the technology of the common denominator
@jAndy I like to ask two questions once we get a concept going, what can we do to make this [insanely unlikely favorable scenario]?
Start emulating features that have a high benefit / low cost ratio right from the start
And the other question, what can we do to make this a total failure? What can we do to financially damage the company?
last question is easy
hire me
Well I'd agree with that, but I think I'd still offer styles as a basic feature to non-js browsers
14:16
Refacotring some CSS. The css makes me sad
non-js browsers lol
Still support non-js
Who are you supporting? ethiopia?
well, I meant with js disabled..
@GregAgnew non-js is important
your CSS should be doing styling.
your HTML should function
14:17
booo tables ftw
If you have core functionality in js for a website your doing it wrong
Web applications are different
hmm... it's hard to get around for some features
i only build web apps
I tend to make user side front end 100% work without js
but more lax with admin side
14:18
disabling js is probably the one thing even I would say.. "Go to hell" if youre doing it.
but why?
how many users do you really get with javascript disabled?
do you have stats on that?
@jAndy I disagree on that ;)
I've no idea, but it's not that hard to support
of course you could still present an OK looking site
I also think your damn website should work through curl
14:19
without any functionality
Your HTML should work
@jAndy I completley agree. Same with IE6
IE6 is a different story
I practice progressive enhancement and really push on that but I couldnt care about legacy browsers
I agree, for websites, I view JS functionality as icing
(within reason of course)
14:20
Does everyone use jQuery?
how do you guys test ie6 these days?
ie9 doesn't have an ie6 mode :(
VM
JS Functionality is at the core of all my applications. The web is not for static pages or sever-side scripting anymore. Cilent side applications are where its at.
I hate jQuery
I love jQuery
@Phil ack, I was hoping to avoid this, what OS do you run in it?
14:21
If its ie6 I'd use xp
that VM runs XP
I don't use jQuery either, but it does seem to be good
For a project I've been working on, I've been using plain Javascript...read a good book called "Javascript: The good parts" that really improved my understanding.
might have to set that up soon
@Michael I need to buy that book. 6th time it's popped up
14:22
nicoburns.com/wymrtedemo is supposed to be working in ie6, but I can't properly test it at the moment
@Phil Yeah, it's really good...it's a quick read too, no fluff.
I think it was written by someone from Yahoo
1
Q: How to catch onload event on css styles?

IldarI load css var ss = document.createElement("link"); var url = 'http://site.ru/style.css'; ss.setAttribute("rel", "stylesheet"); ss.setAttribute("type", "text/css"); ss.setAttribute("href", url); document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0].appendChild(ss); I want to call function after css loading...

that is why I love jQuery (even if other libs will do the same). however I still like the convinience syntax
Crockford mhm
and actually the vanillajs part has to be like double the code provided
@NicoBurns browserling
14:24
if thats even enough
@jAndy Wow thats a lot less code
I agree that the DOM is verbose
I just dont think jquery is the solution
@Michael: as I said, double the js code then it might come close to the truth
I would prefer the vanilla js over the jquery as lined their, although I think the vanilla code on the answer is too large. I would obviously have my own AJAX call function
@Raynos Wow, that's amazing, incredibly slow though
14:26
However jQuery is not bad, just make sure you learn js/dom aswell
3
@NicoBurns yes, its a VM streamed through TCP into your browser
the alternative is have your own VMs
Its good enough for a once a week IE test
Having your own VMs is a pain in the ass
@jAndy Where do you live and what compensation would you like?
it also seemed to be streaming an ieTester window which kind of defeats the point, but nevermind
still v. impressive though
@Incognito: too far away (Germany) and too much :) j/k - I'm actually pretty happy on my job here
@NicoBurns oh wait it is? I thought it had a VM :(
I've been debating moving to Germany.
14:30
i think maybe it has ieTester in a VM :p
Hello
Germany was recently ranked as the least funny country ;)
:O ?
@Michael: I can't confirm :p
oh I wouldn't say that, I've been working at a language school, the german's in the "sterotyped speed dating" sketch they put on were hilarious
14:31
lol
var ChuckNorris = Object.create( Infinity.constructor );
see
we are funny
@anyone has any IDE in mind which makes cross browser CSS/Design atelast automatically ? or some source where i can find how to do this and that in each browser ,.. CSS ONLY javascript i can handle.
@jAndy huh? i don't get it
:(
@Darkyen just use use modernizr
14:33
But I'm a Javascript noob so...
Write CSS3. Slap on selectivzr and IE9.js and tada IE stops being shit
Looking at these stats, is this a high number or a low number of visitors to look at a job app?
oh perfect place to ask this, What's the point of prototype.constructor?
@Raynos Thank you ^_^
14:36
I tend to do function Foo() {} then Foo.prototype = { // stuff }and noticed in dev tools it exists by default (when viewed as dir(Foo)) but then I end up overwriting by assigning the prototype obj
@Phil yes the prototype exists by default
@Phil For creating a constructor method?
the only property you care about is Foo.prototype.constructor = Foo
I actually try to avoid the property .prototype whenever possible. the concept is great but the implementation of ES3 is just aweful
another reason why es5 is so great
I'm sorry I meant, prototype.constructor = Foo exists by default
and then I end up overwriting it (obv) by assigning my own Foo.prototype = { // stuff }
I meant in reference of when does it get used
with respect to*
14:41
If I remember correctly, the book I read says you should create classes in Javascript like this, instead of using prototype:
function Foo(p1, p2){
  var privateField;
  return {
    publicField: 'foo',
    getPrivateField: function(){
      return privateField;
    }
  };
}
var foo = Foo('one', 'two');
This way, you can create private members.
there is no "you should"
but that pattern is a pretty nice concept anyway
It also talks about what it I think it terms "modules", which are functions that make use of pre-defined, constant data. The pattern they discussed allows you to declare this constant data only once and in a non-global way:
var escapeHTML = function(){
  var replacements = {
    '<': '&lt;',
    '>': '&gt;'
  };

  return function(str){
    //do the replacement
    return str;
  };
}();
I thought that was clever.
That pattern is a factory the one where you have privateField
No, but it declares the "replacements" variable within the scope of the outter function, so it's only visible to the inner function.
The second pattern is merely creating static data
14:51
And it returns a function.
There both useful patterns :)
you may also enjoy this one:


// This will call a function using a reference with predefined arguments.
function partial(func, context /*, 0..n args */) {
  var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 2);
  return function() {
    var allArguments = args.concat(Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments));
    return func.apply(context ? context : this, allArguments);
  };
}
Notice the last line: }();
Anyway, yeah it's cool
@GregAgnew highlight it
how lol
14:52
fixed font button
@GregAgnew So it allows you to create a variable which remembers the parameters of a function?
I use it mostly for event handlers
for instance: if I have code:

function foo(){
this.bar = 5;
x = 10;
y = document.createElement('button'):

y.onClick = partial(z, this, x)

z = function(w){
return this.bar + w;
}

}
oops
If you click y, you get returned 15. So you have a function with a predefined set of args, that gets more args (the event object, on button click), and then gets called with a specific context, (usually the class that makes the event handler)
ohhh, that would also be very useful for setTimeout
exactly
Mind if I use it in my code?
14:59
go for it
0
Q: Converting Doom maps to JSON

RoryHarveyThis is a really cool demo of a Canvas Doom Engine made back in 2006: http://canvex.lazyilluminati.com/84/play.xhtml Here is the e1m1 map in JSON format: http://canvex.lazyilluminati.com/84/map1.js Does anyone know of the tool used to convert Doom maps into JSON? I can't imagine this was done...

0
Q: If all content is on a single page and hidden/shown with JS would it make sense to use hashbangs?

TimI have a page where the general structure is <a href="#section1">section 1</a> <a href="#section2">section 2</a> <a href="#section3">section 3</a> <a href="#section4">section 4</a> <section id="section1"> <h1>section 1</h1> <p...

@NicoBurns What are you using setTimeout for?
Rather than setInterval?
a single call?
lol
That's not what I mean.
@GregAgnew use .bind instead of partial :)
15:01
71
A: setTimeout or setInterval?

bobince Is there any difference? Yes. A Timeout executes a certain amount of time after setTimeout() is called; an Interval executes a certain amount of time after the previous interval fired. You will notice the difference if your doStuff() function takes a while to execute. For example, if we rep...

z.bind(this, x)
is that jQuery?
There's a native function called Function.prototype.bind
It's ES5
It does exactly what partial does
I probably should use setInterval for my code actually, but it's modifed from setTimeout code, and I haven't changed it yet
use requestAnimationFrame if you need it
15:02
I use it for fading out an element, waiting for pasted data to process, and for getting image dimensions when dynamically added an image to the document
hmm... most of my usage isn't changing anything visible, but I could for the fading I suppose
you should only use those for when your re-rendering the screen
for computation only stick to timeout
setinterval has issues with code taking longer then the interval
hmm, well setTimeout is working well for my purposes at the moment, I think I'll stick with it - if it ain't broke, don't fix it
i will probably change to using greg's "partial" function though, much better than manually creating an object everytime I need a timeout with parameters
Probably although I recommend you use .bind instead
15:07
(function betterThanInterval() {
	    doStuff();
	    setTimeout(betterThanInterval, 100);
})
^ This is what I am doing
isn't .bind a jQuery function?
apparently its both
No
.bind is ES5
$.proxy is the jQuery version
Where ES5 is modern javascript (IE9, chrome, ff, saf5, op11)
Use the ES5-shim for IE8 support
No thats different
15:13
ac, I hate using shims
that binds an event handler
@NicoBurns there's two attitudes. Go back to the 90s and write your code like it's the 90s
Yes I see that, but you understand our confusion now
or bring browsers from the 90s into today by using shims
hmm, let me rephrase that, I hate using other people's shims
as they ussually bring a lot of stuff I don't want
Ah
well shims emulate standards compliant features
if a shim brings in propietory junk then its not a shim
shims just make a legacy browser behave like a standards compliant browser by implementing standard compliant APIs that it should have
15:16
yeah, code.google.com/p/rangy is particularly impressive
A complete js implementation of ranges
But I don't use it, because it is smaller just to wrap the browser native implementations
Oh you should consider shims on a one by one basis
but the ES5 shim is a must for me :0
Ah, I may take a look
15:32
yet not at the same time
is that surprising?
not that IQ is great anyway
user1385191
that's a pretty skewed graph
user1385191
any browser that's popular is guaranteed to be near the bottom because of median IQ
interesting that ie8 comes out higher than ie9
Opera surprises me
15:40
i dont think thats how statistics work matt
user1385191
more people = less IQ
user1385191
think about it
uh?
normal curve?
more people = gunna be in the middle ?
its an average... as long as the have more the 2k users/browser they are pretty good stats. and considering they have 101k+ users stats. I'd say its pretty correct. Whats happening here is a correlation that people who dont understand how to upgrade their browser and generally less intelligent.
are* generally less intelligent
Also, median IQ should be 100. Which ie 6-8 are clearly below
15:45
yep, agree their conclusions are current
*correct
user1385191
perhaps I should have said "misleading"
user1385191
popular is always going to be stupid
user1385191
browsers that mostly developers use are going to be very high
Thats under the assumtion that developers are smarter then all other people
user1385191
15:55
well, we are paid to think for a reason
I would imagine that as a skilled job developers are smarter than an average person
There are many other skilled jobs though..
true, but the average includes everybody
Hmm, what do you guys think of my link editing UI? nicoburns.com/wymrtedemo - I'll leave you to work out how to edit the link as a test of how easy it is.
user1385191
it really needs padding

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