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08:01
var creates the variable as undefined (which is the normal procedure), function arguments are set to whatever was passed, declared functions are set as the respective functions (even above the point they were declared - look up "hoisting")
This could make a blog article : "how to understand variables"
But is there a better name for "activation" ? It's an important point and I don't know what's the right name. I usually speak of "function execution".
@dystroy I'd use "invocation" but I think "activation object" is the official term
@JanDvorak in ES ?
@dystroy yep. I'll look it up
@Bram 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.
08:12
Hey everyone. I am trying to change the source attribute but the source remains blank when I try to change it. It works the first time (when I set it) but not the second time (change).
@dystroy ah. The official term is "execution context"
@JanDvorak Thanks !
btw. I use JQuery but I hope that that is not problem. code: element.attr("src", url);
@Bram may we see your code?
you should probably use the property
when a property is changed, usually changing the attribute after does nothing
element.src=url;
08:14
I will try that.
element[0].src
oh, it's jquery
yes, or
element.prop('src', url)
Okay thank you. I will try it out.
The problem remains when using the .prop function. When I use the element.src, the src of my image tag does not change.
I will take another look for any irregularities.
08:19
very good benchmarking advice stackoverflow.com/a/513259/995876 that applies to JS just as well
setting the src property of a jQuery object is not very useful and probably a bad idea
Especially #5 and #6
How do you mean, a bad idea? I need to change the src of my image dynamically.
jQuery is only wrapping that image
What would you suggest to get the same behavior?
user1125394
08:21
do you have those images loaded?
No I retrieve them from an url.
the source of the image is a url to an image.
user1125394
you could maybe build a new <img> and replace the old one, but I'm not an expert in that
would building an image-tag not be a bit verbose?
@cc you shouldn't have to
user1125394
ok then
08:23
@Bram not neccessarily. $("<img>") is way shorter than document.createElemeent("img")
I see but it is not necessary to replace the image-tag with a new one if you can just replace an attribute, right? Seems pretty ugly to me.
Be careful not to confuse attributes and properties
@dystroy I know of one case when they don't agree - an input value. Are there any other?
I will create a stackoverflow post because I really don't get it.
I tried all the suggested solutions but nothing worked so far. Thanks for helping though!
@user11111111 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.
08:36
@Bram If you post, take care of 1) include all the necessary code in your question 2) build a fiddle
I was just building a fiddle ;)
but thanks for the heads up
Hi, everyone can we retrieve the data from database using javascript
?
if yes, you have a problem
no
not like that
javascript doesn't retrieve data from a database. it asks a server to do it
08:44
actually i'm using websql and javascript for retrieving the data from database
ohh..ok
unless you're talking about node.js
thats sorta like localstorage... exists only on that browser if I assume correctly... correct?
which is the server
i want to retrieve the data from existing database
o/
08:46
@Neil sup.
@Neil IndexedDB?
@ShyamK Ignore Neal. Yes, when you use WebSQL you're accessing a database directly from JavaScript.
yes i tried using indexedDB but it not follows structured query language
then how can i retrieve ?
@ShyamK However, WebSQL is a deprecated technology, consider using IndexedDB instead, there are fair wrappers.
yup... webSQL is dead... indexedDB instead
@BenjaminGruenbaum Sup
@user2384323 so, you're looking for something that'd let you use IndexedDB easily?
08:48
Hi. doesnt parseInt(010,10) suppose to yield 10 ? well it doesnt. But why is that ? I did specify the radix...
First of all, there's an WebSQL to IndexedDB shim iirc.
@RoyiNamir Because 010 is an octal literal...
@RoyiNamir try parseInt("010",10)
Try parseInt("010",10); ^
I already know about the string convertion , but I thought that it should also work for 010
@Benjamin yes i tried, but i dnt know how to retrieve from database
08:49
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, ignore Neal. He wasn't participating anyway
@RoyiNamir 010 is a number, there's nothing to parse here
@Neil You were participating but you were spearding FUD again..
Though, javascript sends an AJAX request, which in of itself, isn't directly accessing a database
that's sending an AJAX request.. I would argue that's indirectly accessing a database
@Neil that's not what we're talking about at all... we're talking about DB access from the browser... that's something we can do today with a local browser. Stop trying to sound clever and read a modern JS book or something.
@user2384323 I've heard good things about IDBWrapper, but where are you stuck in querying the DB itself?
this is what i tried
var DB_NAME    = "database.db";
var DB_VERSION = "";
var DB_TITLE   = "";
var DB_BYTES   = 50 * 1024 * 1024;
var db = openDatabase(DB_NAME, DB_VERSION, DB_TITLE, DB_BYTES);

//Retrieve Rows from Table
db.transaction(
    function(tx) {
        tx.executeSql("SELECT * FROM Data;",
            [],
            function (tx, results) {
  var len = results.rows.length, i;
  for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
    alert(results.rows.item(i).text);
  }
});

});
08:52
@BenjaminGruenbaum There exist both.. you'd be wrong to say that javascript doesn't indirectly access databases as well
@user2384323 Format your code.
8 mins ago, by Neil
javascript doesn't retrieve data from a database. it asks a server to do it
i dnt knw its correct or not
@user2384323 Format your code! (Edit it and press control+k),
It messes up indendation.
Also, your code is in WebSQL and not indexedDB... I haven't seen that in years :)
yes i format
Yeah, thank you. That's still WebSQL though, have you seen jensarps.de/2012/11/13/working-with-idbwrapper-part-2 ?
08:55
oh dear LoL
@Benjamin we can get the data from database using websql
?
You can, but I don't remember how to use it so I can't really help you :P
@AbhishekHingnikar WTF ? very dangerous. poor child
@BenjaminGruenbaum Sadly it's still necessary. :(
09:02
note to self: kangaroos can be dicks sometimes
Is it possible to change jQuery animation to :_slow.....fast......slow...._ ?
@RoyiNamir you mean, easing?
@JanDvorak if that what easing means...
So are koalas (cough @Shmiddty cough)
@RoyiNamir if you mean easing, then yes, there is a way
09:05
@RoyiNamir easings.net
Yea, if you mean easing then easing means easing.
You can add a duration argument to the animate method.
@RoyiNamir .animate( properties [, duration ] [, easing ] [, complete ] )
@Bram That's probably the most interesting non-answer. Thanks for sharing.
09:17
@kumar 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.
user1125394
!!> 1 + null
user1125394
hmm null is neutral
wat?
!!> 1 * null
@OctavianDamiean 0
user1125394
09:18
In mathematics, the characteristic of a ring R, often denoted char(R), is defined to be the smallest number of times one must use the ring's multiplicative identity element (1) in a sum to get the additive identity element (0); the ring is said to have characteristic zero if this repeated sum never reaches the additive identity. That is, char(R) is the smallest positive number n such that :\underbrace{1+\cdots+1}_{n \text{ summands}} = 0 if such a number n exists, and 0 otherwise. The characteristic may also be taken to be the exponent of the ring's additive group, that is, the small...
It's just coerced to 0.
user1125394
1 is the neutral for *
user1125394
nvm I'm tired
user1125394
!!> +null
user1125394
09:20
in typed language null belongs to all types
Uhm, null is of type null.
user1125394
Dictionary<string, MyTestScript> scripts = new Dictionary<string, MyTestScript>();
scripts.Add("foo", null);
twitter.com/__DavidFlanagan Can someone ping him on twitter about the error in "The Definitive Guide"? I don't really use twitter. The current way it's said is not as wrong but it's still wrong
has no Twitter account
> As mentioned earlier, JavaScript strings don't fit neatly into the primitive-versusreference type dichotomy. Since strings are not objects, it is natural to assume that
they are primitive. If they are primitive types, then by the rules given above, they
should be manipulated by value. But since strings can be arbitrarily long, it would
seem inefficient to copy, pass, and compare them byte by byte. Therefore, it would
also be natural to assume that strings are implemented as reference types.
09:23
lacks the intelligence and minerals to go up against a javascript author
everything is a reference except small integers
@BenjaminGruenbaum not to mention you can treat any type as an object type
He is just wrong... -_- and it's a canonical book.
although in firefox doubles are values too
How could I miss that when reading it? It's so much misinformation.
@Esailija It doesn't matter how they're implemented... semantically, for the language, they are values.
BRB lunch
09:25
there is no semantic difference between values and immutable objects (ok, maybe equality by value)
@BenjaminGruenbaum how would you know that
prop access fails?
@BenjaminGruenbaum I can tweet him a link to your message.
@Esailija equality is by value
!!>"aaa".substring(0,1) == "abc".substring(0,1)
@JanDvorak true
no it's not, you just check if the pointer points at the one True object for example
09:26
But we aren't talking about how it's done in implementation, but rather how it's done in the language itself.
!!> true === new Boolean(true)
@JanDvorak false
0
Q: Toolbar UI disabling button masking

M.S.BI have created a new UI for toolbar using sass the problem is that when I use this theme and put buttons on them the Masking doesnt works on the button (Icon should display in white due to masking) and button appears with black colored icon. If I remove the toolbar UI it works fine. here is my c...

@M.S.B 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.
in the language itself it's not simple.. if a prop setting fails you cannot assume it was a primitive
09:27
@M.S.B wow. You were quicker than our bot
lol
if you are in non strict mode it could have silently failed on objects too
please see my question
However there is a big difference, language-wise, between pass by value and pass by reference. And in js' case, it's never the latter.
there is pretty much no difference if we you could do var true = Object.freeze(Object.create(null)) and same for false
09:29
The language is crystal clear... Strings are primitive value types
@M.S.B I was attempting to fix your question but no ... I won't do that. You didn't even care to use punctuation where necessary.
@Esailija yes there is...
Immutable objects are not the same ad value types
@Zirak not true. Objects are passed by reference.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Where in the Definitive Guide was that?
@JanDvorak you don't know what pass by reference means
09:30
Bah, Eating bbl
@JanDvorak They're passed by value as well, I think you've seen my canonical proof of that.
@BenjaminGruenbaum pass by object / equal by reference is semantically equivalent to pass by value / equal by value
function change (o) {
    o = { a : 4 };
}
var something = { a : 1 };
change(something);
something.a !== 4;
at language level you mostly observe that strings are equal even if they are not internalized and that you cannot attach properties to them
what else could you see?
@JanDvorak uh, what?
09:32
@Zirak great link. thanks. ( easings)
Enjoy
@JanDvorak The objects' reference is passed by value, not the object by reference
@Zirak what if I wanted that something.a=== 4 ? is there a way ?
function change (o) {
    o.a = 4;
}
Oh god.
0
Q: Convert string into an array

skrlnHtml I have followig html: <span> Array ( [namePerson/first] => firstnamedata [namePerson/last] => lastnamedata [namePerson] => firstnamedata lastnamedata [person/gender] => genderdata ) </span> Goal Can I somehow achieve something like this? var myArray = $("span").text(); ...

So full of fail.
09:41
Hi guys
after a long time
@AurA I'm pretty sure he knows what an array is. He's asking how to make one from the html above. — Archer 2 mins ago
well, he doesn't know what an array looks like in js though
My respect to Jeff Atwood is reversely proportional to the amount of articles, written by him, that I read
@Zirak i do agree with some parts of this article
in english, how do you call the deliverables where you see the website in photoshop?
09:45
dammit, I'd need to reread it, but I think I agree with the whole thing
the mockup is the deliverable before that, the barebones thingie
But he seems to equate "learn coding" with "getting a job as a programmer". What if someone learns how to code...for fun? A terrible thought, I know
but once it's in photoshop with colors et al, what's it called?
then one will do that anyhow
@C5H8NNaO4 there are languages where an object variable is the object itself, not a reference to it. I call that "pass by value"
09:46
this article was written when all this "everybody should learn to code!" - bullshit was all over the web/news/whatever
@BenjaminGruenbaum any followup?
PHP arrays are "pass by copy-on-write"
My antagonism to his post is best described in his bolded line:
> Please don't advocate learning to code just for the sake of learning how to code.
@Zirak WAT?
pass by value : the function creates another pointer to the same memory region. and if you set a new value (create a new object like Zirak did) - it does not refelected to the outside that was sent. In pass by reference you actually send the original address of the object. so everything that you do inside the func , reflects to others
09:51
@RoyiNamir then how do you call it when the entire object is copied?
Not entirely correct. In pass by reference, o itself is the pointer to the memory. Changing o changes the memory, so o = something would change what o points to, everywhere.
In pass by value, o is the value of that pointer. Setting it to something else is simply having o be the value of another pointer.
o points to the same memory region. but its another pointer
@Zirak Yea, his write blog articles by all means attitude kind of makes his articles sound very dumb sometimes. We have a word for that in German, it's called bedeutungsschwanger. @GNi33 will understand.
09:52
both me and you can point to the same memory region
pass by value = nothing can change the source
pass by object = object variables are references; changes to an object are visible by the caller
pass by reference = you pass a reference to a variable. Assigning to it changes the original variable value
It most likely does not point to the same memory region. It'd be surprising if it did.
what is pass by object?
But the thing is, you never had to deal with these things in js. You never meet a pointer.
true pass-by-value is highly inefficient for large data structures
09:54
@OctavianDamiean The celebration of his stupidity is the "we are typists first, programmers second" post. I'll try and find it.
Zirak , in your sample : the o in change (o) is a copied address to the memory location where { a : 1 } resides
PHP has pass-by-value with the performance of pass-by-object for arrays - it copies the original array when it's written to if there's more than one reference
a reference comes somewhat close a pointer (how you're dealing with data), but of course its no true pointer
hah, yea I know that one.
09:55
anyway, someone explain quickly the difference in lets say. C99, between a pass by reference (&) and passing a pointer (*)
is there any real difference there ?
both times we're passing around memory addresses
pointer = reference + pointer arithmetic
@RoyiNamir I don't really get your question, nor does it matter. The larger point is that you don't have to think of these things in the first place.
Because you never see a pointer.
agreed.
it wasnt a question. but a statement
next = this-> prevNext ^ prev
next->prevNext = ...
(though I never met a term which is "pass by object")
09:57
reminds me to Bricktop from Snatch... I wasn't asking, I was telling!
^^^ pointer arithmetic. You can't do that with references
@jAndy The honorable cunt? :D
haha yea indeed
Love that movie.
do you know what nemesis means ?!?!?
its awesome
so is Lock Stock 'n two smoking barrels
10:01
No thank you, Turkish; I'm sweet enough.
Listen, you fucking fringe, if I throw a dog a bone, I don't want to know if it tastes good or not. You stop me again whilst I'm walking, and I'll cut your fucking Jacobs off.
Such a great line.
Hurry up, Tommy, before zee Germans get here.
:D
@jAndy & allows you to give a reference, * is the dereferencing operator
Also this is probably my favorite part.
Vinny: Why are we stopped here? What's wrong with that spot over there?
Tyrone: It's too tight.
Vinny: Too tight? You could land a jumbo fucking jet in there!
@jAndy basically, & and * are the opposite operators. One references, the other dereferences.
-3
Q: Jquery and Object

StevenI am learning Jquery and am trying to return lists from json and I keep getting [object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object], errors, can anyone help me with some tutorials as I am obviously doing something wrong

10:09
inb4 someones flags Mike's post, tearing it out of context, and gets Mike banned
2
Close please ...
@OctavianDamiean do you mean [tag:cv-pls]?
0
Q: How to display Colorbox popup in "jQuery ajax() Method" in following scenario?

JSLoverI'm using PHP, Smarty, jQuery, AJAX, Colorbox - a jQuery lightbox, etc. for my website. There is some old code done using jQuery AJAX method to display the message in popup using standard jQuery library functions. Now I want to replace that typical popup using Colorbox popup. In short Iwant to ch...

@JanDvorak no
@OctavianDamiean how come?
10:12
Because the difference is so profound and meaningful, it's worth spending sentences on.
simple example:

#include <stdio.h>

int ret(int*);

int main()
{
    return ret(&1);
}

int ret(int* bleh)
{
    return *bleh; // dereference to get the value
}
@jAndy ^
@Florian :Hi, I'm from India
@JanDvorak thanks, I didn't even think about it like that.
@FlorianMargaine: Can you help me to resolve the following issue?
0
Q: How to display Colorbox popup in "jQuery ajax() Method" in following scenario?

JSLoverI'm using PHP, Smarty, jQuery, AJAX, Colorbox - a jQuery lightbox, etc. for my website. There is some old code done using jQuery AJAX method to display the message in popup using standard jQuery library functions. Now I want to replace that typical popup using Colorbox popup. In short Iwant to ch...

@OctavianDamiean D'ya like dags?
10:15
Dags?
@JSLover stop reposting the same link over and over again, and stop pinging random people
@OctavianDamiean What?
@mikedidthis NOOOO YOU FUCKED UP!
Or did I?
Wouldn't it be awesome if that was actually the text?
10:16
FUCK!
We both fucked up as we needed 3 people :D
@Zirak you mean the imdb link, yes it would be awesome.
Guys, which tools, technology and/or libs are you using right now for production code ? Like, requireJS or browserify for loading modules (AMD or commonJS?), EmberJS, AngularJS or no clientside templating at all ? And so forth..
4
KnockoutJS all the things.
gog.com doesn't have typing of the dead :(
10:19
@OctavianDamiean is knockout fullfledged ? I mean, does it cover modularity, dependencies, loading, etc. ?
Pretty much everything :D
<ul data-bind="foreach: folders"> in KnockoutJS makes my eyes bleed
Very readable though
Inline styles are very readable too
Inline idiots as well.
10:21
@Zirak seeing how hot my wife is, I win.
I still find it somewhat funny, that inline-code all the sudden became like "popular", whereas for years web-developers prayed not to mix code concerns in front-end code
@jAndy it's mostly "document" websites I work on, so nothing special except jquery and a plugin for carrousels.
I don't get templating in views.
my company is thinking about a complete "re-new" our overall front-end code and design patterns, so even if I know about like most tech out there, I'm curious whats really in production
The omnipresent render function that calls Mustache (or whatever) on a template within a view, effectively resetting innerHTML of the said view. What if there are nested subviews?
10:30
@MustafaMuhammadYousif 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.
Hi Dr. Nick!
@copy Remember how you came as the better man in our small "comma first" venture? Well, I just thought of a counter-offer to the comma-first bug, and I'm going to say what it is, whether you like it or not.
//the same error can be easily detected if you put spaces before the commas:
var a = 4    ,
    b = 5    ,
    c = 6
    d = 7    ;
Which is by far less ugly.
But I suck.
what's that bug?
d is an implied global
I never got the whole discussion in the first place.. I don't get whats so wrong with

    var a,
        b,
        c;
its so simple, so clean, so convenient
10:35
ugh just use jshint in your build step
Comma-first was made to help you figure that out that in an instant.
I know, it's ludicrous either way...just choose the style...but I can't get over that comma-first just looks uglier to me.
@Zirak oh. Ew.
strict mode anyone?
@james 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.
add some strict mode into the mix too
I can accept brackets to the left, I can accept tabs/spaces and more stylistic oddities. But I can't get over the comma-first thing.
10:36
you get both compile time and runtime errors then
@Zirak agreed
I'm only Nazi when it comes to parentheses
my bad
if( var ) <- there must be a space padding :P
otherwise I DON'T READ YOUR CODE
nah I'm just kidding, I love the paddings anyway
0
Q: wp_enqueue_script : how to change loading order of scripts?

MatoeilI would like to know how to list all scripts loaded on a page, ranked by order and change this order.

We used the ol' comma param style thing back in C++
dataset.Insert(
    param1
    , param2
    , param3
    , param4
    ...
So removing a param was a matter of removing the line
It looks ugly nonetheless =/
Oh I agree :P
If it weren't legacy code, I most certainly wouldn't have started doing that
10:45
its beyond ugly
room topic changed to !!JavaScript: We would like to put in our vote for "Your code is bad". Everything but JS. – Read rules.javascriptroom.com [ecmascript] [javascript]
!!> !12
@O0oO0oOO0ooO false
!!> !!12
@jAndy true
!!> ~12
10:49
@O0oO0oOO0ooO -13
!!> ~~12
@jAndy 12
@O0oO0oOO0ooO true
!!> delete ""
10:54
@C5H8NNaO4 true

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