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00:00
that is the best thing i've seen all day
m59
m59
YOLO?
make sure you die before you get old!
@MagnusBertilsson 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.
00:50
0
Q: Is my Javascript Object Oriented? I thought it was

FajitaNachosThis was my first attempt at writing object oriented Javascript. It's a minesweeper clone in JQuery. I thought I had done an ok job, but I just received some feedback that it wasn't written in an object oriented manner. I don't expect anyone to read this line for line, just looking for general fe...

01:22
why the hell does something like grunt-contrib-watch have dependencies on 3150 modules
@Luggage 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 am thinking it literally should be 50 lines of code without any dependencies
:P
so work meeting tomorrow and I've spent the whole week working on my semicolonifier plugin
least now I can have semicolon'd JS without having to type semicolons
if anyone would like to check this extremely useful ST plugin, I've made it public github.com/UltCombo/Sublime-SemicolonifyJS
don't you use jshint
yeah
But JSHint just throws the missing semicolons at your face
01:30
but very rarely and then I just add it :P
Now I took it a step further and automatically insert those where they're missing :P
yeah same until a few weeks ago
you had finally had enough? :D
Now I started making some ST snippets as well, just didn't feel like putting semicolons on those :P
the demo gif shows an iife and an anonymous function expression, as those can be part of a larger expression (or obj property value) I didn't include the semicolons in the snippets and didn't feel like typing them manually so yeah
I should add ST3 compatibility when I have more free time, though my python knowledge == null
01:54
@RandyGreencorn 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.
Anyone here use oDesk for JavaScript work? I'm new to JS and need some help getting a few things done (fast). Good experiences? Bad experiences?
never heard of it
 
2 hours later…
03:47
0
Q: Primordial js newb wants to know if code is dry, optimal or improvable, and if it resembles a pattern

BillyI wrote this as an academic exercise over on CA. It is supposed to tell a true story about two drag racers, one in his 80's who beat a young world champion in cars that traverse a 1/4 mile in 3 seconds at 300 mph. It is structured to let the old man win every time because it is based on a true ...

Not sure if.. technical.io
I'm getting one, I think :)
m59
m59
hey @BenjaminGruenbaum, I'm glad you popped up. I'm killing my brain trying to figure out if something belongs in a service.
 $rootScope.$watch(function() {
        return $location.path()
      },
      function(path) {
@Shmiddty Yes, in C# I have - also in NodeJS, and also client side stuff. That's pretty much it though, why?
m59
m59
Does that go in my controller and the $http call it makes in a service?
@rlemon I'm up
@m59 What are you trying to do?
m59
m59
04:02
that's what does my routing. I watch location.path() and load the page's data from the server according to the path
I was watching some angular talks and they said it was the best practice to put $http calls in a service rather than the controller
which makes sense to me.
but I'm not sure about the watch itself.
Definitely not in your controller.
m59
m59
ah...
What's wrong with the normal way to do routing?
m59
m59
but if the watch is in the service, what updates it in the scope?
As far as I know, the normal way requires you to know what pages exist, right?
Like, with ng-view and the router and stuff
m59
m59
04:04
Mine are in the database, so I can't define a route.
You can use params, or generate the route table dynamically.
m59
m59
Hmm. Any suggestion on how I can figure that out? I looked for it forever and never found it. However, what I'm doing works perfectly. It's just a single http call on path change.
look at $routeProvider
Check the example in $route (the script.js file)
m59
m59
That looks like all I've ever seen route do, where you type the path and have it do something.
Right, you type the path or change it by clicking something or triggering a change in code and the app routing changes, isn't that what you want?
m59
m59
04:09
What I mean is, literally in the code, you're typing a path.
You get to use params, the routes are dynamic, plus - since you're also doing server side you can build them yourself..
Yeah, if you change location in the code it'll route, try it and see
m59
m59
hold on, we're speaking different languages jaja
hah*
Are you talking about this? when('/Book/:bookId', {
Because I don't have when
I know you don't, because you're not using routeProvider, you're re-inventing it
m59
m59
I mean, I can't have a when.
No need to do that if I understand your use case
why?
m59
m59
04:13
The admin panel user types in the route they want in an input.
That can't end up saved to my js file, lol.
It goes to the database
so, I watch the path, then look that path up in the db
If I get something, then the page works, if not, 404 page
just like any site would do.
well, that sounded lame. My api does include an error property stating that the page was not found.
but anyway..
6
Q: AngularJS dynamic routing

GregI currently have an AngularJS application with routing built in. It works and everything is ok. My app.js file looks like this: angular.module('myapp', ['myapp.filters', 'myapp.services', 'myapp.directives']). config(['$routeProvider', function ($routeProvider) { $routeProvider.when('/'...

m59
m59
Ok, this looks interesting :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum first selector has a lot options and when i selected it ,selected option value pass to the php via ajax and send back the response and display the 2nd selector .but if 2nd selector has one option i can't select it but if 2nd selector have a lot option and i can select one and it value pass to the php via ajax
i'm using  $(document).on('change', '#CouserFinder',function  ..........
and create another ajax inside the complete function
m59
m59
@BenjaminGruenbaum Ok, I'm closer to what you're getting at. I'll have to think on it a while. I don't see how I can get quite what I'm looking for.
His CMS is weak sauce in comparison :) but he did say it was light
m59
m59
04:27
If I get it at all...I think you're saying that I could take a piece of the url and use it like an argument. I admit, I did just think of an issue with my cms
Right now, you can go to the admin panel and type whatever you want for a path, which is GREAT.
since the watch is just going to look up the whole thing in the db
and give you that page
like about/history/startup
though, that nesting is generally a bad idea :)
anyway, it'll just get that from the db, so np there.
but if the main content is a plugin that does something more in depth than the norm, it's going to start needing normal angular routes.
Actually, it's like the output end of the cms is a wrapper for angular apps :)
Also, Angular routes give you free stuff.
m59
m59
man, this is a tough spot. I just realized why Joomla does one thing it does (which I hate)
More generally, conforming to a standard way of implementing things gives you better support and more readable code
m59
m59
there has to be a beter way
m59
m59
04:32
Well, Joomla deals with components, which it consider to be what a page "is" - the main content. And the rest are little addons.
let's say it's the users componenent
and it is set to this page
site.com/people
nm!
Middleware is the way to go, think of what express (more concisely connect) does in NodeJS
m59
m59
Hmm
wait yeah, what it would do with seo friendly urls is site.com/people/johnny (for a certain profile)
Ah, that's a whole other question
m59
m59
and that path is handled by the component itself.
In an SPA you have to generate static versions of all these pages yourself and serve them to bots
m59
m59
04:34
SPA?
Detect user agent and 'crawl' your own site with selenium, generating static versions for no JS browsers (but mainly bots)
Single Page Application
So much censorship haha
m59
m59
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yep. Though, could I not write a php script to take that same content and dump it in a non-templated way?
@m59 You could but now you're maintaining two code bases
m59
m59
04:36
@BenjaminGruenbaum I thought of a way to handle it that works with what I have. I don't really have to do anything.
ok goodnight!
cool, whatever works for you
Night
m59
m59
It's just able to consider what it's looking at and apply a decent tag to it.
Does google still look at h1 and all that?
m59
m59
If it ever got fancy enough, I'd go headless browser, but I think what I have in mind will work out for the most part.
The important thing is that clients love it. It's worth the difficulties.
Hmm. It still looks like what I have going on is awesome for general pages. Can I make it respond only to sub pieces? like this:

`site.com/some/path/lookForThis/paramHere`
04:53
0
Q: drag and drop to draw diagrams in a web application

ranganaMITi'm asked to develop a web application. where i need to drag and drop an icon to a main window from a side panel of the application connect them using arrows to draw a diagram. finally i need to generate xml tags for the diagram. process them as xml and send to the back end server to validate....

05:12
@Alec 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 have a question about Variable scope. I'm attempting to modify the variable defaulturl within a function so that I can use the value assigned to it in another function later on.
	var defaulturl = "gah";
    var data_to_send = { data:           cipherdata,
                         expire:         $('select#pasteExpiration').val(),
                         burnafterreading: $('input#burnafterreading').is(':checked') ? 1 : 0,
                         opendiscussion: $('input#opendiscussion').is(':checked') ? 1 : 0,
                         syntaxcoloring: $('input#syntaxcoloring').is(':checked') ? 1 : 0,
                       };

    $.post(scriptLocation(), data_to_send, 'json')
Here is it posted on pastebin so you have syntax highlighting: pastebin.com/TaPX7Q6K
Does anybody here program in Forth?
Please answer the following question:
0
Q: What is the most common filename extension of a Forth source code file?

Aadit M ShahI have seen people save Forth source code files with the extensions .4th, .fth, .frt and .f. Which is the most common filename extension of Forth source code files?

05:40
Would you call Facebook a responsive design?
Is that a bad thing?
I am looking for a good tutorial on responsive design with a sidebar.
Plenty of frameworks out there with examples of how it can be done
Man, I am so sick of CSS frameworks
Some of the worst style declarations I've ever had to write have been overrides for stupid styles applied to CSS frameworks
Forth looks horrible
@AaditMShah
what wrong is forth with?
it's just a verbose golfscript, isn't it?
It's stackbased so yeah, looks like a weak form of Factor
Isn't every language a verbose golfscript?
@Zirak no. Only those stack-based ones
: FLOOR5 ( n -- n' )   DUP 6 < IF DROP 5 ELSE 1 - THEN ;
That's...intriguing
05:59
not very readable; I know
I thought you'd like it, since you like PERL and all
{;5}{1-}{6<}if
It's readable, just not very clear or concise IMO
Postix is still a bit annoying to my brain, I've been trained for verbs to be followed by nouns, not the other way around.
I don't mind postfix, but I find it hard to track the stack
a b c+* is fine. expr.~\-\@+ is much more interesting
If I have aligned two block elements next to each other, how would I make it in responsive design so it automatically falls to the next line instead of forcing horizontal scroll bars?
my fully automated doc parser is finally making some progress :)
@TheGuyWhoCouldn'tTalkToTheGirl media queries, most likely
in the future, flexbox
Anybody got an idea how to deal with "internals" classes from which another class inherits when those classes are not exposed to the outside? (with "deal" I mean in regards to a doc browser)
They obviously need to be parsed too, which isn't the problem, but obviously you can't link to them directly unless you included them in the output. Right now I'm thinking about just copying over their methods and members and marking them as "inherited" and then just listing the name of the class as on of the bases
06:25
Main secretary at the ultra fancy Nokia HQ has an iPhone, I think it sums the situation up pretty nicely
@Steve 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.
@NareshTank 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.
@TheGuyWhoCouldn'tTalkToTheGirl Float em both left or right. When there isn't enough room, the second one in the DOM will be pushed under the first
@Leo 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.
if I have everything on a single viewport without scrolling (or custom frame scrolling), is it okay if I use position:fixed?
@DaveChen I guess, but why would you?
06:35
looks better when I resize on mobile devices
Why not just use
position:absolute
@DaveChen resize on mobile device? What mobile device allows you to resize the browser?
resize the viewport, during resizing, the elements seem to move around; where fixed does not
What do you mean 'resize the viewport'? Do you mean like going from landscape to portrait?
What device are you using?
iOS, while resizing the screen (two fingers), the whole screen zooms in -- instead of actually resizing...
And you're trying to do what?
06:42
@DaveChen the only 'resize' event on mobile devices is rotation.
user1125394
indeed
Other than that, you zoom.
Also, I wouldn't advise the use of position:fixed for anything on mobile devices, its pretty broken: bradfrostweb.com/blog/mobile/fixed-position
user1125394
> hopefully this diagram will aid you in understanding
06:50
@Zirak I am not too sure what I just looked at, but the credit to Bandit is lovely.
user1125394
openflow/SDN would simplify so much all those networks things
$("a[href*='w3schools.com']").css("background-color","salmon")
I'm going to put this in a userscript
or a userstyle
Do it
done; here's it in mozilla format:
@-moz-document domain("stackoverflow.com") {
a[href*='w3schools.com'] {background-color: salmon}
}
3
07:01
ew
testing it?
Roger
How would I bind that to new instances... $('document').on('change', function(){});?
if you do that as a userstyle, you don't need to write any javascript
if you don't mind that... perhaps you wanted to specify some selector?
How do ya assign userstyles?
07:05
in stylish: manage installed userstyles -> write new style
didn't find any more automatic way
It's a bit odd how browsers don't have custom styling built-in
07:22
!!man 1 curl
Damn it
huh, that man page is old
Interesting, how can curl be missing on man7.org?
I hate it when a question gets not one, but three pity-upvotes
1
Q: Parsing a JSON object-within-an-object in javascript

JascinationI have a JSON object that looks like this: var json = { "cj-api": { "products": [ { "$": { "total-matched": "231746", "records-returned": "999", "page-number": "1" ...

wtf!?
2
Q: Getting all documents of a database in CouchDB

user1684434The .get() method of the Cradle library required me to provide an _id. How can I get a document from CouchDB, using cradle, when I don't know the _id? CouchDB provides an _all_docs method, but there's nothing in the cradle documentation about this. How can I get all documents from a single Cou...

07:34
@OctavianDamiean I already have, yet I don't remember having.
@BenjaminGruenbaum IMHO Forth is an awesome programming language. Yes, postfix notation is hard to read. However concatenative languages like Forth offer an entirely new perspective into language design.
In particular concatenative languages lend themselves beautifully to chaining and function composition - something that functional languages like Haskell solve using monads and the dot operator.
For example consider the following JS code:
D(C(B(A())))
In Haskell it can be written as:
D . C . B . A
In Forth however you simply write:
A B C D
Now you tell me which one is the most readable?
what about J's D C B A?
(or, in verb form, D@C@B@A)
@Wayne'sWorld 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.
@JanDvorak The order is still inverted - A is executed first but it's written last.
07:43
@AaditMShah the innermost should be closest to the argument
Concatenative languages are executed left to right. No ambiguities.
I flagged that question for moderator attention.
do you read "A, then B, then C, then D" or "D of C of B of A"?
@JanDvorak It is. Arguments in Forth come before the function. Hence postfix.
functions are normally read outside in
in english
what about prefix notation? *+3 2 1
07:45
If you want a language that looks like English then choose Python or Ruby.
I love ruby
There are concatenative languages which use prefix notation. Om for example.
Personally I don't like the syntax of Ruby, or CoffeeScript for that matter. They are too verbose.
Ruby is like a Scheme disguised as an Englishman.
@JanDvorak Like, for real?
@OctavianDamiean yep
You'd be the first one I know.
07:48
the lambda syntax is weird but it's more conscise than javascript's
(and I mean lambdas, not blocks)
Forth's lambda syntax is the most concise. For example:
map [2 +] list
Lambda's are simply expressions surrounded by square brackets.
list.map {|x|x+2}
I still prefer point-free programming.
lambda = ->x{x+2}
list.map &lambda
Are you scared of periods?
07:50
I love dots
@OctavianDamiean Me?
What does point-free programming have to do with periods?
lambda x: x+2
Wouldn't it just be better to write [2 +]?
The parameter x is implicit. Hence point-free.
07:53
@AaditMShah how do you use complex expressions with implicit arguments?
ah, right, the stack
Ah! TIL tacit programming == point-free programming. :D
J: x+2
where x is the entire array
the corresponding lambda verb would be 2&+ or +&2
@JanDvorak Say you want to implement the following expression in Forth: (a - 4b) / 6 + c as a function (c a b -- result)
That function would be:
: f 4 * - 6 / + ;
So you would do:
c a b f
nice, but what if you wanted the arguments to be in the A,B,C order?
what about f(a,b) = 2*a+3*b ? You need stack manipulation there
Then you simply write:
a b c -rot f
07:58
@AaditMShah D C B A in coffeescript
Indeed you do:
That's just a syntax thing.
: f 3 * swap 2 * + ;
stack manipulation quickly goes out of hand IMO
I've written stack based code, it doesn't scale well in big code bases, the biggest problem is that you have more global state to worry about.
08:00
@BenjaminGruenbaum Indeed. However the order is inverted. Plus you can factor out any part of the code you want.
@AaditMShah No, it's not inverted, it's how you'd write it in Math when using function composition too
That's because most stack based languages are very low level. Everything is a global. However you may have a stack based language with well defined scopes.
Which function are you composing on which?
@AaditMShah Yeah, it's just not a very good idea :)
It's inverted because you're executing D C B A in the reverse order - A executes first, then B, C and finally D.
Hence you have to read the expression backwards.
you're taking the imperative view
I prefer the functional view
08:02
In concatenative languages the entire program is one big function.
@AaditMShah No, I don't
@JanDvorak Concatenative languages are more functional than functional languages.
I don't read it as do D then C then B then A
I'm reading it as: take the composition of A on B on C on D and execute it on the input
@AaditMShah then you should read outside in
08:03
A of B of C of D of the input
No. You got it all wrong. We're trying to do: D(C(B(A())))
In Forth it's written as: A B C D
Hence A is executed first.
Oh, if we're doing D*C*B*A
I still read it as: compose D on C on B on A and execute it on the input
That's how I mentally conceive it, and how we treat these statements in Math classes.
Except it'll actually be:
08:05
(When no computer is involved)
D C B A * * *
No, that's just fitting it into a stack based approach.
The last thing I want to think about when I'm coding is how the computer is reading my code.
The point is writing it like D C B A * * * shows that the entire program is just a bunch of compositions.
The other way shows it as much, except I don't have to think about how the computer is parsing it.
I've written stack based VMs before, I know how to 'think in postfix' and how to write stack based code.
It's great for being a base for a bigger system - where the stack is underlying and you can use it for stack frames and other useful stuff.. I'd never use it as a high level language though.
It's not that Forth is useless, it just looks pretty horrible as a high level language compared to languages like JS
It can be translated as:
1. `D` operates on the stack `()` and returns `D`.
2. `C` operates on the stack `(D)` and returns `(D C)`.
3. `B` operates on the stack `(D C)` and returns `(D C B)`.
4. `A` operates on the stack `(D C B)` and returns `(D C B A)`.
5. `*` operates on the stack `(D C B A)` and returns `(D C B*A)`.
6. `*` operates on the stack `(D C B*A)` and returns `(D C*B*A)`.
7. `*` operates on the stack `(D C*B*A)` and returns `(D*C*B*A)`.
08:10
it would be easier to code with two stack, however.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe. But like any language, it's up to the programmer - if someone finds it more readable, that it fits his way of thinking better, then it's all good.
@AaditMShah Right, but why would I want to think about that when I'm writing my code? I don't care how it's translated... I only care how expressive and robust my code is.
@Jan Forth has 4 stacks: hyperpolyglot.org/stack
0
Q: how to link javascript file to wordpress

sarahhow to make this script code in external file <form class="form" method="POST" action="porcess.php"> <fieldset> <legend>Contact Form</legend> <input type="text" size="30" placeholder="insert your name" id="namef" name="namef" required="required" aria-required="true" pattern="^([a-zA-Z\u0600-...

@AaditMShah it's still more verbose than golfscript
08:11
@Zirak Let me rephrase that, I find Forth pretty horrible and unexpressive.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Precisely. Code written in Forth is very concise. However you do have to get used to the syntax. That's all.
@AaditMShah No, that's not it at all :P
@JanDvorak Because it uses if...else...then?
@JanDvorak That's not much of a challenge
@AaditMShah because it uses dup and rot instead of . and @.
08:14
Then simply do:
: . dup ;
: @ rot ;
user1125394
!!> var x=1; x--+--x
@BenjaminGruenbaum Forth might have a horrible syntax but it is very expressive. Take LISP for example. A lot of people hate LISP because of its syntax. However it still remains a fact that LISP is more expressive than Python, Ruby, JavaScript, etc.
@AaditMShah what's the relevant XKCD number?
@AaditMShah Who hates lisp because of the syntax?
08:18
Don't remember. The one in which a programmer falls asleep and discovers that LISP is the God of programming languages?
@AaditMShah How would you explain we're not all doing LISP?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Those who haven't seen the light. =P
Or Haskell for that matter
So all programmers are stupid?
I mean, more 'older' programmers know LISP than most languages, universities and colleges teached SCHEME and other dialects of LISP for ages
No. All I'm saying is that LISP is more expressive.
08:20
It's not like there aren't many people who know LISP and still, it didn't really catch up, why?
Inertia of mind.
People punched cards of LISP for years and still it's small now.
It's not inertia of mind of a whole generation learned it as a first PL
Somehow, people sat down and found C better for what they were doing, and people are still finding other alternatives better. Sure, I like LISP, I'm even learning it right now
It's not about what I like though, somehow the programming world shunned LISP
Inertia of mind from the way we think of Math. People would rather write 2 + 3 instead of (+ 2 3). Hence LISP just doesn't go well with them.
Please... polish notation takes a day to get used to
It's not that complicated.. there are much more complex notions a programmer has to learn when they start coding
Up until you have to deal with first-class continuations, hygienic macros, etc.
08:23
Point being?
Point being that LISP code looks daunting. Especially for a newbie.
For a day or two
first-class continuations are cool (but also easy to get tangled into)
C# has first class continuations that are very well made
I've never used C# though. Can you use it on a Linux box?
08:25
Yeah with Mono
Is it worth it?
C# is almost as horribly verbose as Java.
Not at all, type inference really fixed a lot
That's good to know. :)
Also, first class lambdas, expression parsing, LINQ
For example if you want to write SQL, C# will let you write C# code, break it into a lambda expression tree, and rebuild the syntax tree up as SQL.
An example please. Say SELECT A, B, C FROM Table WHERE A > x;
08:32
db.Table.Where(y=> y.A > x ).Select(x=> new {x.A,x.B,x.C} );
All type safe, all functions, very clear.
All deferred until it needs to use the values.
x => expression is a lambda?
isn't it hard to parse a syntax tree?
That's sweet.
@AaditMShah damn right it is.
@JanDvorak Depends upon the language.
08:34
O/ guys
I have a big head today
Discarding the sexual reference, what happened?
wait, forth doesn't have arrays?
ah, right, the C-ism *(&a+10), except this time in postfix notation
complete with array overflow UB
Lol. Forth is like a high level assembly.
08:47
wrong. Forth is like a stack-based assembly
like Java's assembly, except without objects
Java bytecode is not concatenative. Forth has its own VM.
It's like a high level stack based assembly.
Unlike those heap-based assembly languages.
morning
Evening
08:59
Morning (here) :)
(We currently are playing the "find the opposite" game, aren't we ?)

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