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22:00
@RUJordan, I am javascript beginner trying to deep understand concepts behind it.
Thanks for help.
You're correct, it will grab the first value in the list
However, if you want deeper JavaScript understanding, don't use jQuery
jQuery is the opposite, it abstracts core concepts so people who learn jQuery before JavaScript tend to be... well... terrible.
or use jQuery while you proactively learn JavaScript. nothing inherently bad about using jQuery...
@Xander jQuery isn't bad. People just mis-use it and bloat their websites.
Oh you're the guy who got snippy with me last week.
yeah ;) that's me
ha hows it going man?
22:04
guid
Actually I am not learning jQuery. I have it in one project and encountered this situation.
you pissed me off, but it's all good in the hood. question was shit anyways ...
I am now reading book Javascript the good parts.
@Xander indeed it was. Remind me what pissed you off?
@ИванБишевац great book, you'll learn a lot from it
:grabs popcorn:
22:05
dude, i don't remember...
i know i called you overly pedantic ...
That isn't a bad thing when you are a programmer.
Oh that's right, because I said you were advocating poor practice by manually iterating an array
@RUJordan, any other recommendation for book?
@rlemon agreed
The definitive guide.
22:06
This one is great.
javascript design patterns ...
Nope, that book is basically all you need. After that, it's all experience and documentation
You will learn best with practical practice
The definitive guide is stale. But informative
@rlemon sorry your popcorn was wasted, but I'm heading home :P
22:08
HTML5 unleashed is a must buy.
Later bros <3
see ya
what @rlemon said
peace
!!afk crocodile wrangling
it should be called HTML5 unleashed the definitive guide to html5
22:10
jQuery definitive guide: Ctrl+c,Ctrl+v
What's rationale for choosing first element in NodeList?
$('input').val().
semantically speaking val is scalar. thus, api developers likely decided to return the first value encountered ...
in the event the query returned multiple results (elements) ...
It sounds logical.
:)
Yeah, it's var hooks, ret, isFunction, elem = this[0];
from http://james.padolsey.com/jquery/#v=2.0.3&fn=val
22:21
^ get that backpack its amazing
> Whhhhhhhhihpsssnhake
lol
this video is amazing
lol french wedge wth
haha when I was a kid i'd roll my shorts into that and chase girls on the playground
haha
In Javascript selector always returns array or it could be single object?
22:24
can be single
returns a nodeList
^ not an array
if selector you mean QSA
If it can be single why in val source there is this[0].
querySelectorAll <- nodeList
querySelector <- single element
22:24
this is some structure like array?
@rlemon +1
because he uses an assortment of functions to return the object. namely querySelectorAll which returns a nodeList
$('#some-unique-id').val();
nodeLists are Array Like Objects, due to the fact they have a length property and numeric indexing.
but they are not arrays. nodeList.map() wouldn't work.
!!> $('#some-unique-id').val();
22:26
@SomeKittensUx2666 "ReferenceError: $ is not defined"
It's jQuery selector.
jQuery is a library to abstract away the logic from Javascript.
$(anything) <- you now have a very special object the library built up for you.
jake weary
so any magic to do so is just the library
22:28
Ok, but I am asking about jQuery in this case.
$('some-unique-id') results in single element or NodeList?
@rlemon you got your shit together :) IIRC last year you did know about the difference between node lists and arrays, but I like how you can phrase that so concisely and accurately now :)
now, hate, you will, jquery forever
@BenjaminGruenbaum must have been a long time ago
I got that lecture in the Raynos days iirc.
Well, namely the part where they're array likes because they have numeric indexing and a length property.
Not just the fact they're array like, and the fact they have .length and indexes, you'd be surprised how many developers know that, but can't make the causal link.
It requires understanding the type system, that there is no magic around array likes, they are array like objects simple because they behave like arrays. It's the foundation of the entire typing paradigm in JavaScript.
Yes, duck typing :)
I know that since I am Ruby engineer :)
Quacks like a duck :)
22:32
@ИванБишевац it's the fact typing is behavioral, not just duck typing.
It's subtle but important difference.
I don't understand that part.
Can you elaborate?
Example?
grabs nachos, w/ heavy cheese...
Well, a type of an object is defined by how it behaves, it's subtle. We don't say that we have a jQuery object that we can use like an array, it's the fact we use it like an array that defines its type.. hmm, how do I phrase that better.
It's exactly duck typing. It have methods like array then we call it array.
If it quack like a duck then it's duck.
Prototype chain disagrees
22:38
It quacks like a duck but requires batteries.
Yes
I know about Prototype chain but didn't read it in detail :)
Anyway now I am pretty confident while reading james.padolsey.com/jquery/#v=2.0.3&fn=val
:)
Thanks guys, you helped me a lot.
Speaking array-like object, what's the advantage of an ALO over an actual array with functions and properties added to it?
m59
m59
23:12
This Google search made me laugh so hard I cried. https://www.google.com/search?q=%3Cblink%3E#q=%3Cblink%3E #brilliant
23:31
0
Q: In Nodejs when using the q (promises) module, what is the value returned by then()?

CheesoI am not asking about the fulfillment value of the promise. Here I am asking about the return value of the then() function. The specific thing I am concerned about is building lists of promises based on conditions, such as: function operationThatReturnsPromise() { var p = q.resolve({ prop...

m59
m59
@SomeKittensUx2666 Who's the guy you know at CodeHS?
@TNW 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.
23:47
Hey room, anyone ever used or know much about Joomla? Do you know what kind of backend it supports? MySQL? Oracle?
23:59
all of them
j/j it def supports mysql
have you used google?

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