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21:03
Scary stuff man
Tom
Tom
21:22
@Raynos what would you call these "modules" that my bootstrap requires automatically so that they can register to events emitted by the mediator?
controllers? routines?
Well I will have a hooks folder
and modules folder
Tom
Tom
21:42
@Raynos how do you feel about setting mediator as a global so it can be accessed in all those sub modules? Or should every module be set like module.exports = function (mediator) { }; ?
@Tom reason says global is cool
purity says global variables are for the incompetent
Tom
Tom
@Raynos huh?
I make fun of people who use global variables in node
so I cant have globals on principle
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what about making every module have a exports.setMediator = function (mediator) { }; ?
I personally dont like that
I prefer
module.exports = function(mediator) {
  // bulk of code
}
Tom
Tom
21:45
@Raynos the thing is that forces you to use the function style, so you cannot have module functions anymore
?
Not really
module.exports = function(mediator) {
  return Object.create(proto, Trait({
    // object
  }):
}
Tom
Tom
exports.setMediator = function (mediator) {
    mediator.on('boot.ready', initialize);
};

function initialize() {
    //main logic here
}
You really prefer yours above mine? really?
Meh semantics
module.exports = function(mediator) {
  init(mediator);
}

function init() {

}
My routes are like that
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what about this?
gist: 1169359, 2011-08-24 21:51:12Z
/* run routines (submodules) */
getRoutines('./routines', function(err, routines) {
    if (err) throw err;
    
    routines.forEach(function(routine) {
        var module = require(routine);
        if (typeof(module) === 'function') {
            module(mediator);
        }
        else {
            if (module.setMediator) module.setMediator(mediator);
        }
    });
    
    mediator.emit('boot.ready');
});
Seems sensible
Tom
Tom
21:52
Right, now both are possible.
@Raynos do you know if module exports function order is important? Aka, will this work:
exports.fn1 = function() { fn2(); };
exports.fn2 = function() { };
no
fn2 is undefined
Tom
Tom
right, that's a shame
exports !== window
You cant programattically inject variables like you can with window["string"]
Tom
Tom
@Raynos so I am forced to define fn2 before fn1
@Raynos what if fn2 uses fn1 and fn1 uses fn2?
No not that >_<
exports.fn1 = function() { export.fn2(); };
exports.fn2 = function() { };
I meant you need to call it as export.fn2()
Tom
Tom
22:00
Ah, right.
So export does have some magic
No
exports is a local variable
Because each module in node.js is wrapped in
Tom
Tom
@Raynos quite ugly though that I have to call exports.fn2(); inside fn1
(function(require, module, exports) { ... }(require, module, exports));
Well you can do the following
var fn1 = exports.fn1 = ...
var fn2 = exports.fn2 = ...
Tom
Tom
fn2 will be defined then?
since fn1 is defined earlier
@Tom of course its defined
that function gets executed after the entire file is parsed
It doesnt get executed immediately
Tom
Tom
22:04
yeah, these things just confuse me
I got it
user1385191
blech, the for(var i = 0... pattern needs to go away
@MattMcDonald whats wrong with that
user1385191
scope
Oh your complaining about no block scope
meh. l2javascript
or use let
then <trollface /> about let only working in firefox
user1385191
it's a Crockford-ism I like
22:08
for(var i = 0, ii = o.length; i < ii; i++) {
  var v = o[i];
  ...
}
Tom
Tom
@Raynos this is a problem:
gist: 1169402, 2011-08-24 22:07:47Z
module.exports = function (mediator) {
    
    mediator.once('boot.ready', function() {
        //UGH! MAKES EVERY MODULE CODE START WITH 2 INDENTS... solution?
    });
};
// Or
o.forEach(function(v, i) {
 ...
});
@Tom ...
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what's up?
Thats a trivial problem to solve
Tom
Tom
Enlighten me
22:09
gist: 1169405, 2011-08-24 22:09:20Z
module.exports = function (mediator) { 
    mediator.once('boot.ready', f);
};

var f = function() {
    //UGH! MAKES EVERY MODULE CODE START WITH 1 INDENTS... solution?
}
Tom
Tom
Well duh. But then you might aswell not use module.exports = fn
why not?
I find module.exports = fn neater then exports.setMediator = fn
Tom
Tom
exports.setMediator = function (mediator) {
    mediator.once('boot.ready', init);
}

function init() {
    //
}
Meh, both our versions need to be given a wrapper to pass on the mediator
Rather ugly..
exports.setMediator = function (mediator) {
    mediator.once('boot.ready', function() {
        init(mediator);
    });
}

function init(mediator) {
    //
}
@Raynos this is where things on paper don't work out as heavenly
...
Y U NO GOOD
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what?
22:20
var Module = Object.create(Object.prototype, Trait.compose(Trait({
    // Your object
}), Trait(EventEmitter)));

module.exports = Module;

Module.on("start", function(mediator) {
   // init code
});
Ugh I should use more standard patterns
Tom
Tom
Lol you find that prettier?
Traits is verbose
Tom
Tom
It's super ugly
Tom
Tom
So it must be good? ;)
22:22
Well no
exports.setMediator = function (mediator) {
    mediator.once('boot.ready', init.bind(null, mediator));
}

function init(mediator) {
    //
}
Tom
Tom
@Raynos yeah, I guess that's the best way to do it
There are plenty of patterns
Oh you forgot this one
require("mediator").once("boot.ready", function(mediator) {
  //
});
Terse, elegant.
Tom
Tom
@Raynos actually that's a good idea. I could make a simple mediator module and publish it on NPM
@Raynos sounds good, right?
Yeah good enough
do double check such a module doesnt exist
Tom
Tom
Well I have no idea what to search for
var mediator = require('mediator');

mediator.once('boot.ready', function() {
    //
});
I prefer that @Raynos. You?
22:29
Yeah thats ok
Depends on syntax preference
I prefer
require("mediator").once("boot.ready", function(data) {
  // this === mediator
  this.on(...)
});
Tom
Tom
what is data?
and what makes this equal mediator?
your API
data is the event data you pass in
Tom
Tom
I think EventEmitter2 defines this
I believe it does as well
Tom
Tom
I will just go with var mediator = require('mediator')
I believe module.exports = new require('eventemitter2').EventEmitter(); is the entire module. -.- @Raynos
22:37
Ehm
Make it better -.-
Tom
Tom
@Raynos better? the above line is perfect
I mean more features
Rather then just an eventemitter2
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what kind of features?
I dont know think of something good
Meh just publish it :P
Tom
Tom
Going to be the smallest module in history
But hey it should work
although I did not test it
the above line will only create one instance as far as I know, since require is cached
22:42
yes
thats correct
hey guys :)
is here someone who know about jquery fancybox very well?
:)
queens of the stone age - no one knows
)))
(rock)
:)
everyone sleeping ... zzz :)
steve jobs just resigned
resigned from what?
:P
22:57
FLASH: Steve Jobs resigns as CEO of Apple
in Tavern on the Meta on Meta Stack Overflow Chat, 11 mins ago, by jcolebrand
http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2011/08/24/steve-jobs-resigns-as-apple-ceo/ and http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/24/steve-jobs-resigns-from-apple/
Its true
and why ? :|
which is the advantage? :/
Are they going to tear down the Apple wall now?
2
hey @Raynos can you spare a moment and tell me if my skype is accurate?
user1385191
23:10
I'm not going to lie. This is wonderful news.
user1385191
I really, really don't like Uncle Stevie
user1385191
the funniest part is how far their shares fell from that news alone
Tom
Tom
@Raynos npm install mediator
@Tom o/
welcome to the npm club
WHY U PUBLISH IT TWICE
Y IT NO HAS GITHUB URL
Tom
Tom
Lol I made some mistakes with the capitals
and I thought I unpublished the wrong one
@Raynos which are there?
23:25
Mediator and mediator
npm unpublish
Tom
Tom
@Raynos yeah I actually did that, but npm is not giving me any debug info
Make sure your package json has a capital M
Tom
Tom
@Raynos can you check now?
Fixed
Tom
Tom
@Raynos do you set the working directory to the directory of the bootstrap file?
Otherwise it is not possible to launch the script from outside the source folder
23:39
Wait what
Why
Build the urls properly
Tom
Tom
@Raynos in your bootstrap you require modules like so: require('./someMod');
this is relative to the working directory
@Raynos how would you do it?
Ehm yes and?
I dont see whats wrong with that
I have my boot strap in the main directory
along with my server.js / app.js
Tom
Tom
@Raynos it means that you cannot run your app from a different directory than the source folder
if you run it from desktop it will look for desktop/someMod
...
then require with __dirname
Tom
Tom
@Raynos you like that?
23:50
its ok
I do it
Tom
Tom
@Raynos what about this: process.chdir(__dirname);
that works great.

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