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09:00
@sabithpocker No, just saying not to "bang your head" too hard. It defeats the point of learning in the first place
@Neil yes ill try not to :) thanks
god
this girl dogette is driving me crazy
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how does this test sound, i am trying to test if the model is being loaded and in correct form jsbin.com/weranuli/1/edit
the fact is that it doesnt work and says model is undefined
anticipatory bail : Its my first test code
well, that is only a part of it
what are you testing
09:09
sorry i just added the controller
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@sabithpocker Testing that you get the expected return fromt he server is an excellent test, but that's really all it should do
@Neil which means?, sorry its not clear to me
your test and controller look fine to me
the result says "Expected undefined to be 'tasks'"
@Mosho yes, looks fine to me as well, with my limited knowledge
09:14
what does the console.log log?
@Mosho that doesnt log anything in karma, but logs a list of objects in browser
the list of objects is configured using httpBackend.
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dat title!
app.run(function ($httpBackend) {
var tasks = [<list of objects>];
$httpBackend.whenGET('/tasks').respond(tasks);
});
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09:19
and the app works fine, shows a list of items in browser
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no idea :X
I assume scope.test works
good, so i think ill start a fresh project and try again
@Mosho yes, scope.test works and passes
haven't used $httpBackend too much tbh
mostly tested directives
sorry :<
@Mosho okay, good.
I have generated my project with yeoman now, let me get the sample angular project from github and work on that.
09:25
where can I get sample angular project from github?
link please
Thanks
@Mosho thanks i was wondering what the name was!!
np
can't get this track out of my head
!!youtube saeed
09:32
on some mushroom trip?
I wish
what am I listening to
doesn't sound too bad :p
-_-
you're a big boy, I'm sure you can figure it out :P
Sounds nice :)
it was a rhetorical question silly! And you just lost the game
09:36
The first part was new to me, but I have heard some parts before (or it sounds familiar)
Damnit @jAndy
I lost the game.
fucking perfect
keys broke
@towc Damn
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09:46
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@RahulDesai yes, I have many ideas, not related to the question tho
@Mosho I made some changes to the test and now it looks working
nice
what did you change
I created a getTaks which returns a promise $http
    scope.getTasks().success(function(){
		expect(scope.tasks).toEqual("tasks");
	});
09:57
yeah
earlier the rest call was not in any function and probably there was no way to track if it resolved
@towc so, any ideas related to the question?
@RahulDesai my idea is that someone should solve it
but no ideas about the solution of the question
:P
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@towc good one :P
09:58
I realize I'm being some kind of a dick (plz don't star this)
0
Q: Promise that is resolved with debug

user2542231I am in an angular project. What is happening is that I have a promise in the resolve of a route that isn't resolved but if I am debugging the application the promise is resolved. Someone with some theory about what is happening?

How do we usually define Models in angular and fetch contents from REST?
is it just $http call from controller and assign it to scope?
@RahulDesai how are you planning to zoom it?
@towc Good one "What is happening is that I have a promise in the resolve of a route that isn't resolved but if I am debugging the application the promise is resolved."
@sabithpocker I am checking if someone has hacked it already.
;)
@sabithpocker what do I have to do with that?
a lot
;)
10:08
@towc i thought you shared that question above
@sabithpocker nope :P
Would it still be readable if we zoom it? Think about the UX.
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@RahulDesai what do you mean by readable, tell me one example scenario which makes it hard to read from your existing chart
@sabithpocker Well, from my existing chart, if you can see the tiny tiny values at the top part. How would you compare that to the other parts? I call that unreadable.
10:15
@RahulDesai define "tiny tiny values at the top part"
@sabithpocker The pink bar
for example
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@RahulDesai ok, so the pink bar is hard to read when compared to red and yellow at bottom?
@sabithpocker exactly
@sabithpocker I am not happy with the overall display of the statistics. Its just colorful piece of shit.
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10:23
@RahulDesai may be manipulate y-axis onclick, so if user clicks between 15,000-20,000 draw a new chart with yaxis starting from 15,000 and ending at 20,000 thus focusing on that part
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Sid
Sid
Hi all, I have a JavaScript question; stackoverflow.com/questions/24167804/… Just want to know if I've written this question correctly?
If there's additional info that I should add?
@Sid Nope, and I would add that your question is written better than most
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10:46
hey, im sending a java Integer array after its been json stringed; how do i parse it on my site?
currently im doing JSON.parse(json.value) but it errors; value is the integer array
define "it errors"
if json is the string - strings don't have values, strings are values
sec ill post a pastebin
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var json = JSON.parse(xmlhttp.responseText);
showEndGame(json.value, json.place);//json is already parsed?
10:59
@Infested why are you parsing as JSON parts of what you have parsed as JSON?
or value and place are again stringified json?
@Infested It makes sense to convert everything into json before sending it
also, "<%... .toJSONstring()" is wrong; if you exclude the quotes, Javascript will parse the JSON for you.
what?
In other words, no point sending { "numberArray": "new Integer[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]' }" }, you should be sending { "numberArray": [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] }
11:02
moreover, Javascript doesn't even know what to do with new Integer ...
!!nudge 210 find and kill all of the cheese racists
@towc Nudge #1 registered.
because i am json-ing it twice
@towc Nudge #2 registered.
actually, part 4 there should be the first lines
@JanDvorak where did u see "<%.... toJSONstring()" ?
11:09
@Infested You shouldn't need to json it twice is what we're saying
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There are very specific circumstances for which you'd ever really truly need to put json inside json, and those circumstances are hacks to fix problems that the libraries should have fixed. In general it is bad bad bad practice.
@Infested even if it's a plain string, "<%...>" breaks when it contains double quotes. Use <%... .toJSONstring%>
@Neil that's why the SE WS API is doing it at a regular basis
just to clarify, im using jsp
in any case, i cant change the way things are being done, how do i solve this?
what is the JSON you're trying to double-parse? Post a sample of the generated code.
11:20
{"type":"END_GAME","value":[20,30],"place":1}
using google chrome developers tools
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token , multiGame.jsp?mode=CREATE_MULTI_GAME&gameKey=ag5zfmJ1aWxkLWEtcXVpenIRCxIEZ2FtZRiAgICAp-eQCgw&gameNa…:111
changeState multiGame.jsp?mode=CREATE_MULTI_GAME&gameKey=ag5zfmJ1aWxkLWEtcXVpenIRCxIEZ2FtZRiAgICAp-eQCgw&gameNa…:111
line 111
neither value is JSON. Don't parse it.
ok, thanks
$httpBackend.expectGET('/tasks').respond("hello"); does this mean some assertion that 'GET' "tasks" should return "hello" ??
Thank you!!
@sabithpocker seems to me so
11:27
nice hat
Guys, I'm really not all that caught up in the whole design world, but I'm looking at some of the stuff our designer has created and I'm confused.
In order to determine which viewport size we're currently in, he's doing stuff like this:
body:after{content: "small"; width: 1px; height: 1px; margin: -1px}

Is this "common" to use? It looks **extremely** hacky to me
!!mdn window width
so, no. Not at all common.
@JanDvorak Yeah, I'm aware of that. I'm assuming he's doing it this way to avoid having to declare the different sizes in places other than the media queries
11:30
how would that help?
Well, this way your javascript would only need to know the names of the viewport sizes, eg "small", "medium", "large", "xlarge" and you could then retrieve the current viewport using window.getComputedStyle(document.body,':after').getPropertyValue('content');
Though I'm only guessing what the intention was
@JanDvorak That's what I thought, hence my question.
I can foresee a problem with screen readers
a less dangerous hack would be to hide / show various empty elements.
I would suggest moving the viewport logic entirely to javascript and setting various classes on body for CSS if deduplication is the goal.
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11:36
This is interesting, can anyone answer this with an understandable proper answer
3
Q: Why does multiplying and dividing by N "fix" floating point representation?

ggundersenI am working in JavaScript, but the problem is generic. Take this rounding error: >> 0.1 * 0.2 0.020000000000000004 This StackOverflow answer provides a nice explanation. Essentially, certain decimal numbers cannot be represented as precisely in binary. This is intuitive, since 1/3 has a simil...

It's just chance...
Most common operations just lead to roundable numbers
0
Q: in JavaScript, how to wrap a promise in timeout?

mnowotkaIt's a common pattern to implement timeout of some asynchronous function, using deffered/promise: // Create a Deferred and return its Promise function timeout(funct, args, time) { var dfd = new jQuery.Deferred(); // execute asynchronous code funct.apply(null, args); // When the...

Hello again.
oh, another thing, i have a form which obviously has input fields, if the user taps on enter the form is sent forward but for some reason it also adds == to the things sent, why is that and how to make it not happen/remove it?
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11:47
Guys, what is the common way of writting tests for angular? Is it one test(one file) per component or all tests per large scale component(one file)? Component = (directive, controller, ...), Large scale component = (module of some kind, for example messages. Module can contain multiple: controllers, directives, ...)
@dystroy - yes it is, it's because 0.1, 0.2 etc can't be represented accurately in bits, and when doing math you sometimes get strange results because of it, but it would be great if someone could actually explain why in an understandable way, and not just "doesn't work with another number either" ?
@adeneo that sounds like the famous "why is floating point broken" duplicate
npm install karma-chrome-launcher --save-dev what is savedev?
It won't delete your /dev folder
lol jk
:)
i dont have the dev folder :P
11:56
You running Windows, eh?
@JanDvorak - it is, and we probably all encounter this issue from time to time, and solving it is usually as easy as just making sure we round the numbers to whatever we need. But that wasn't the question here, the OP is linking to that exact question, but asking why it happens, and I would like read an understandable question to why some math operations work fine and others don't etc. Other than the long winded "what every computer scientist ..." there's no easy to understand answers on this ?
floating point numbers aren't easy to understand
@sabithpocker adds the library to your package.json's devDependencies key
@FlorianMargaine ok
@sabithpocker what the frenchman said
11:58
read your package.json, run the command with --save-dev, read your package.json again
i have a form which obviously has input fields, if the user taps on enter the form is sent forward but for some reason it also adds == at the end of whats sent, why is that and how to make it not happen/remove it?
@FlorianMargaine did that, its clear now thanks :)
--save adds to your "dependencies" key
and dev is for devDependency right?
atleast imagined that :)
@KendallFrey - No they aren't, I don't really understand how they work either, if I did I would post an answer. tmyklebu claims to understand it in the comments, but won't post a proper answer for some reason, but thinks it's better to just argue in the comments. Someone surely has a good grasp on this and can explain it so normal people can understand it.
12:02
Guys, anyone?
@Eugene depends on how many
@adeneo I kinda understand why it works with some numbers and not with others, but I don't know how to put it other than "it's random based on what number you choose"
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Correlation does not imply causation. :) may be normal people is just happy with that statement
@JanDvorak Eh?
12:07
@Mosho I have module, that consists only of directives, which interact with one another is some way. Not all of them, but most.
I wasn't offering help, I made I joke
or so I thought
@Mosho I got the test working without the function now
hurray
good job
  it('check if model is set to list of tasks', function () {
	expect(scope.tasks).toBeUndefined();
	httpB.flush();
	expect(scope.tasks).toEqual(tasks);
  });
I was actually
about to suggest that
seriously
12:10
Thank you for letting me do it myself! lol
:P
I mean, I don't know why it needs that
but I saw that before
needs what?
i still dont understand what made it work :)
@KendallFrey - but it's not really random, the 53 bits mantissa that represents a number allows for a "0.5" error on the last place of the 15 or so decimals that can be represented. Normally that's not an issue unless you calculate certain bitwise representations where those errors compound and you get unexpected results. Then there's the "guards", the IEEE standard, and how that "half of one unit in the last place" error (that I just call 0.5 in the last place) ?
12:12
0
Q: How to get relation value before ember resolve the relation

BarthelewayI have three models: App.Model1 = DS.Model.extend({ ref2: DS.hasMany('model2', {async: true}) }); App.Model2 = DS.Model.extend({ ref3: DS.belongsTo('model3', {async: true}) }); App.Model3 = DS.Model.extend({ someProp: DS.attr('string') }); The thing is I need to fetch the three mode...

@Mosho one change is expectGet instead of whenGet
httpB.expectGET('/tasks').respond(tasks);
@adeneo I think, in that specific case, it has something to do with the fact that no two floating point numbers are actually multiplied (in his "fix", that is)
I still dont understand what the difference is between expectGet and whenGet in $httpBackend
12:13
@adeneo not truly random, just chaotic
@sabithpocker if only there was a search engine capable of finding the answer for you
@Mosho 0.1 + 0.2
that is not what I meant
@Mosho something like stackoverflow!!
I was going for google
but sure
12:15
@Mosho 1000 * 0.2 and 200 * 0.1
yeah?
!!> (1000 * 0.2) === 200
@KendallFrey true
I wasn't following your discussion, I admit
in this case it sppears to come out at exactly 200
12:16
but he asks why (0.1 * (1000*0.2)) / 1000 works
and 0.1 * 0.2 "doesn't"
something is floating..
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!!> (420 * 0.2) === 84
@KendallFrey true
!!s/floating/afloat/
12:16
@Neil something is afloat.. (source)
!!> (100 * 0.2) === 20
@KendallFrey true
I guess multiplying 2 floating point numbers results in that behavior but a floating number and an int doesn't
hmmm
@Mosho in JS, an int is just a special case of a floating point number
yeah, so it may be optimized somehow
12:17
I wondered about that too
just saying that's clearly the difference between those cases
clearly?
what else could it be
depending on the number you pick
what do you mean
12:19
!!> (0.1 * (256*0.2)) / 256
@KendallFrey 0.020000000000000004
aha
less clearly now
That was very predictable
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12:20
well
wait
still clearly
Because I know what 256 looks like in binary
it still supports my hypothesis
since you have floaties multiplied
256 and 1000 are both integers
yeah but
it does the stuff in the parentheses first
and in the first case, you get 0.1 * 200
in the second, 0.1 * 51.2
"floaties multiplied" sounds like a symptom of retinal detachment
12:22
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@Mosho The 200 is actually a rounding error.
that's why it works
yeah
I guess you could call it an error
but that's what I meant by "optimized"
!!>0.2.toString(2)*1000
@Mosho 1.1001100110011
er
well
nevermind that, but I know what you mean
not really
12:25
not really what
know what you mean
by "optimized"
I said I know what you mean
well
oh crap
nvm
doing math like that (where 0.2*1000 != 200) would suck
so "they" took care of it somewhere
I think the deal is that the floating point multiplication comes up with something between 200 and 200.0000001 whatever, and it's closer to 200
!!> 0.1 * 0.2 === 0.02
12:27
@KendallFrey false
it would suck, or does suck?
I guess they had their reasons for whatever they did :P
The thing is, there's no difference between 1000 and 0.1 in the case of multiplication
they both cause rounding
hmm
!!>0.2 * 1001
@Mosho 200.20000000000002
12:29
I was just about to do that
that's unfortunate :|
!!>0.2 * 1007
@KendallFrey 200.4
@KendallFrey 200.60000000000002
@KendallFrey 200.8
@KendallFrey 201
see a pattern?
ah, darn, that last one fooled me
@KendallFrey 201.20000000000002
@KendallFrey 201.4
12:30
maybe there's a special case for what would be a round number
ok, the pattern isn't quite what I expected
@Mosho There is not
hmm
the discarded bits of the result are the result of the least significant bits of both numbers, and these bits decide how it's going to be rounded
@KendallFrey - This is where the masking comes in to play, and ulps, and that's why you get unexpected sequences like that, there are certain guards in place, but understanding how and when they work is not easy
fuck it, I'm out
12:36
In computer science and numerical analysis, unit in the last place or unit of least precision (ULP) is the spacing between floating-point numbers, i.e., the value the least significant digit represents if it is 1. It is used as a measure of precision in numeric calculations. In radix b, if x has exponent E, then ULP(x) = machine epsilon · bE, but alternative definitions exist in the numerics and computing literature for ULP, exponent and machine epsilon, and they may give different equalities. John Harrison uses a slightly different definition of ULP: ULP(x) is the distance between the two...
That reminds me of the "JavaScript is missing a number" question
Hey guys, i'm currently creating a search to allow users search for their friends on facebook and twitter with an autocomplete like feature(feedbag.io/47p0ge0). Right now i can do this individually i.e either search for facebook friends or search for twitter friends. How can i let the user search for both at the same time?
I have a slightly unrelated question regarding toFixed() -- if I have a number that is 10.009 and I apply toFixed(2) to it, would the number be 10, or 10.01? Does toFixed have its own rounding involved?
!!>(10.009).toFixed(2)
Doesn;t work
12:41
:crickets:
I need a library for this graph
but I don't know what to search for
if I say heat map, not much comes up, I need to develop one like this with each box have list items or text in them
problem is I have to make it work with IE-8
@CustomizedName ._.
@NickDugger - toFixed() rounds the number, so anything from 10.005 to 10.00999... would output the string 10.01
aki
aki
@CustomizedName You can try raphael JS raphaeljs.com
12:44
@adeneo Thanks
aki
aki
@CustomizedName Another good options is to use D3 d3js.org
d3 is bit much for that graph, but it's a good library to learn
I use parseFloat and toFixed a bit excessively in my node POS.
@NickDugger - it's a little hard to understand sometimes, but checking the ECMA spec is actually helpful a lot of times when one wonders how stuff like that works, I use it all the time
Alright, will do. Thanks
12:48
@aki thanks, I was just asking for name of this thing, i think we call it heat grid
@adeneo It's easy to forget how complicated these things can be
You'd think toFixed would be a relatively simple function, but it has to have a predictable output even for invalid inputs
Anyone knows any free library like this heat map
@CustomizedName - looks like a table with a gradient background -> http://jsfiddle.net/67hb2/
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hi. anyone advice if I can successfully load jquery into my repl session: repl.it/Tz6
I suppose it doesn't like cross domain...any way on how to enable cross-domain request here?
aki
aki
I'm so excited this device came out that i have to share it! No mater what i can do, i must have it. tessel.io Maybe you fellows are excited as i am :)
@deostroll I usually do ajax requests to my own server, which then accesses the external webservice
so no chance of making this happen in an online repl interpreter?!
I don't think these people have anything to that effect
the floating question got answered?
13:05
@sabithpocker - not really, feel free to post an answer
3
Q: Why does multiplying and dividing by N "fix" floating point representation?

ggundersenI am working in JavaScript, but the problem is generic. Take this rounding error: >> 0.1 * 0.2 0.020000000000000004 This StackOverflow answer provides a nice explanation. Essentially, certain decimal numbers cannot be represented as precisely in binary. This is intuitive, since 1/3 has a simil...

@Cereal I assume that that is the way you're supposed to do it if you're not insane or masochistic
@adeneo Thanks, but I am more like looking for a zoom in-out heat map, where in boxes, I will have items like "Item-1" "Item-2" and so on.. clicking on items will show me a popup
fiddle yu sent link too is not opening
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docs.angularjs.org/api/ngMock/service$httpBackend can someone tell me what is the difference between when and expect ?
13:21
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How should I deal with this late answer?
0
A: Get host name in JavaScript

intekhabJust write the code in your script: console.log(window); and run the script in browser. Now look in your console. You will see something like Window {top: Window, window: Window, location: Location, external: Object, chrome: Object…} Now expand the global object window and see it's all othe...

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@Qantas94Heavy - that answer should be deleted, it brings nothing to the table five years later.
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13:37
I have used infovivs Spacetree for building a tree. I want to download the children node of parent node downloadable. I mean when the user clicks children 1 Parent node 1 it should download a pdf file stored from root directory. Could anyone suggest me how can acheive that
@PsiOps 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.
@amcintosh 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.

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