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23:02
function getBit(value,position,base){
    return !!((1 << (base-position) ) & value);
}
it works, i'm just wondering if it is a good solution
@BenjaminGruenbaum o.O for some reason I had you on ignore?
I haven't ignored anyone in a long time :/
@Zirak err.stack is slow :P
@rlemon wat?
value >> (base - position) & 1, but it's basically the same
I looked into the user list and you were tiny.
no clue how that happened.
And don't forget that it fails if base < position
@copy thanks for the tips :)
gotta love bit flags
23:22
@Nat 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.
how to convert 'false' to false anyone?
@JustDon't eval('false')
!!> !eval('false')
@t1wc true
@JustDon't don't do that.
(that is, don't use eval for this)
!!> JSON.parse('false');
23:31
@rlemon false
!!> JSON.parse('true');
@rlemon true
^ much better
but i'm sure there is a more elegant way
Also, no xss.
23:32
I just don't know of one
Yeah, the real elegant way is to do
eval may be problematic, but it's the easiest to use and remember just for those type of things
I can't really talk about elegance. I just wrote this:
registers.alarm_reads[0/*io_moisture*/]updates[0] = (getBit(bits,4,base) || getBit(bits,5,base)) ? 1 : (getBit(bits,6,base) || getBit(bits,7,base)) ? 2 : 0;
registers.alarm_reads[0/*io_moisture*/]updates[1] = (getBit(bits,0,base) || getBit(bits,1,base)) ? 1 : (getBit(bits,2,base) || getBit(bits,3,base)) ? 2 : 0;
function parse(input){
    if(input === 'false') return false;
    if(input === 'true') return true;
    throw new SyntaxError("Unexpected token " + input);
}
^ likely what I'd do @JustDon't
how do you get false as a string in the first place?
23:35
@rlemon I'd create a function for bits symbolizing what they mean. Also, what's with the ternaries?
the solution to a problem always is change what it gives to what you want or fix the problem (preferrable)
@t1wc eval is used for one thing - parsing JS code.
@BenjaminGruenbaum how about you generate false instead of 'false'? or if you really need the string, you create a variable with value of 'false' and another with value of false
that'd be the way I'd do it
@t1wc user input for example
@Benji alarm limits high and low. I need to check two values to update one.
23:38
@BenjaminGruenbaum using checkboxes? it returns the boolean version, not string version
otherwise I can't see why you'd want to have the user type true or false
better 0 or 1...
then you could parseInt it
And I will refactor that. I'm just testing. I just thought it was pretty ugly.
@t1wc 0 or 1 for a boolean value is a hack.
@BenjaminGruenbaum they are the same thing
@Nat
!!> !0
23:41
@t1wc true
!!> !1
@t1wc no they're not. 0 and 1 are numbers, true and false are truth values.
@t1wc false
!!> !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0
@rlemon false
23:42
I think i'll use that.
!!> typeof 0
you always have the !! thing
@BenjaminGruenbaum "number"
!!> typeof false
@BenjaminGruenbaum "boolean"
23:42
@rlemon that was just to proove that they're treaten as booleans
no ! makes them so
otherwise they are numbers
@t1wc JavaScript is a behaviorally typed language, 0 and 1 can behave like booleans when you look at them like booleans but they're not boolean values.
!!> 0 || 1
that is using type coercion
not a way to justify it
23:43
@rlemon if everything makes it behave like booleans even tho they tecnically aren't, why not use them as booleans?
!!tell t1wc google javascript truthy and falsy
@rlemon Command javascript does not exist.
Yeah, || calls ToBoolean on the left hand side and returns the left hand side if the coersion is false.
for semantical purposes
@rlemon Command goo does not exist. Did you mean: foo
23:44
@t1wc that's a horrible question :(
fuck man
!!> NaN || 'Hello World'
@t1wc 0 and 1 are numbers , the fact you can look at them like they're truth values does not make them truth values. It's a hack from the C days. In C, there is no boolean type, 0 is false and 1 is true (usually, but that's another story)
@rlemon "Hello World"
@rlemon gaaay
23:45
I mean, that is just as stupid.
@rlemon you know the meme: 'if it looks stupid but it works it's not stupid'?
@t1wc famous programmer last words.
@BenjaminGruenbaum maybe
not maybe.
you will learn in time
Lots of stupid things 'work' in JavaScript.
23:47
for now, maybe trust the people who have been there
and are currently making $$ doing it.
Lots of dumb JS coders making money so that's not a good example @rlemon :P
not a great justification, but it works
I've seen people use inline onclick with jQuery often :P
I was primarily talking about you and me.
but yea.
@DominikLohmann 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.
23:48
@rlemon that's what he meant
:P
dude, I've seen your website. you have no say there.
question: is 0 equal to false?
answer:
!!> 0 == false
@t1wc true
!!> 0 === false
@KendallFrey false
23:49
@rlemon I didn't say I was a good one XD
http://cortado.io/
I absolutely love this, it's by a guy who entered the chat and left without saying anything
I want to know what he used :|
@t1wc is a string containing 5 spaces equal to 0?
@BenjaminGruenbaum nope
!!> " " == 0
@BenjaminGruenbaum true
23:50
!!>' '==0
@t1wc true
that's becouse caprica is leashed to html, which ignores multiple spaces
23:51
@KendallFrey yep, strings containing nothing but white spaces are 'falsey', it gets funnier though - try putting it in an if
My favourite is noncommutativity
@t1wc try it in your console.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ...true?
[] is like that too
!!> if("") console.log(" lol, this won't log ")
@BenjaminGruenbaum "undefined"
23:52
!!> if(" ") console.log(" this will however, lol, although they convert the same as booleans ")
ok, you win
@BenjaminGruenbaum "undefined" Logged: " this will however, lol, although they convert the same as booleans "
!!> [] ? true : false
@KendallFrey That didn't make much sense. Use the !!/help command to learn more.
@KendallFrey true
I would just like to say, I am currently manipulating 20 year old software running on QNX4 via my phone :)
23:52
!!> [] == false
fuck yea
@BenjaminGruenbaum true
!!> ![]
@KendallFrey false
you guys just gave me an idea: from now on I'll use empty strings and 1 space strings as booleans! (jk)
23:52
fucking hell
!!> !![]
Ah, the funny thing is these are situations you never encounter anyway
@JustDon't true
!!> console.log( !""+[0], !""+[1] );
@rlemon "undefined" Logged: false,false
@rlemon "undefined" Logged: "true0","true1"
23:53
!!> var x = []; (x == true) == (!!x)
@KendallFrey false
!!> [1,2,3,4,5] + [,6,7,8,9,0]
@rlemon "1,2,3,4,56,7,8,9,0"
` <resizable-panel id="html_col" name="Ouput HTML">`
anyone has any idea where resizablt-panel comes from
Let's not forget the priceless:
!!> [,,,,,] == ",,,,"
23:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum true
@rlemon "1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0"
== is just so broken it's silly :D
funny how that works eh?
I love JS like only a mother can love her mentally retarded son.
!!> x = [] !== true
@JustDon't true
23:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum yeah
!!> [,,].length
@KendallFrey 2
!!> console.log( ([1,2,3,]+[4,5,6]), ([1,2,3]+[,4,5,6]) );
@rlemon "undefined" Logged: "1,2,34,5,6","1,2,3,4,5,6"
!!> 'false'==false
@KendallFrey that's not really surprising though
23:55
@t1wc false
wth? double equal should agree
!!>Array(9e5).join()
@BenjaminGruenbaum Maybe if you understand why, which I don't
@JustDon't "RangeError: invalid array length"
@t1wc it does with 0 though, because it's broken.
!!> "0" == false
23:55
@BenjaminGruenbaum true
@JustDon't "Exception: too many items"
@KendallFrey ES5 allows trailing , in arrays. [1,2,3,4,] is like [1,2,3,4] this is so configuration files don't have to worry about which line is the last, objects allow it too - JSON doesn't.
thankyou
:P
that was quick.
@rlemon yw :P
23:56
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, to facilitate comma-last or w/e?
@KendallFrey for long, configuration multiline declarations mainly.
I'm working on this tonight: pcworld.com/article/2028896/…
waits for hate
I am working :/
on like work and shit
Any good NODEJS Frameworks?
yea...
23:58
Now I'm prepared for those Windows Support scammers
@JustDon't what for? Express is pretty idempotent but I'd hardly call it a framework.
@KendallFrey lol, that'd be priceless
I wonder if TeamViewer runs on Linux
express.io :P
@JustDon't express.js is cool
I love it
23:58
@BenjaminGruenbaum There are so many cool ways to scambait
@BenjaminGruenbaum Na, I don't think it is, I'll probably still end up using it though ;)
@rlemon Is it any good, I've heard of it
eh, i'm new with node.
23:59
I knew I needed express + websockets so I am using this
deadlines and such
ask me again in a month.
I want express and sockets, but i don't want this
app.io.route('customers', {
    create: function(req) {
        // create your customer
    },
    update: function(req) {
        // update your customer
    },
    remove: function(req) {
        // remove your customer
    },
});

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