I don't think I've ever heard a boss laugh (except for a polite little chuckle at a polite little joke that isn't a joke, it's just one of the things you politely chuckle at)
Nobody even laughed when he accidentally said "pig shit".
@FlorianMargaine well, the thing you learn from this is that you can't actually remove dependencies, they don't magically know about each other and you have to explicitly expose them through 'global' state, even if your globality is constrained to a single function in charge of the program, or it is the DOM itself.
Code is designed to have effects, otherwise it doesn't actually do anything :)
@FlorianMargaine This isn't ideal, but this gives the parent some level of control over their children: jsfiddle.net/Retsam19/k2snrz68
It uses the second argument of createViewModel to find the parentVM of the component to be created, then asks the parent to construct a VM for the child
@BenjaminGruenbaum I mean... I'd like var seResults = new SeResultsViewModel(); var seSearch = new SeSearchViewModel(seResults); or something like this
The project for the challenge is so small I likely won't use components in it, I'm still wondering if to write it with ClojureScript, CoffeeScript or something else for extra fun. In real applications you'd have a separate whole layer and view models would just negotiate with UI and contain a very small portion of your UI's logic anyway.
@TravisJ that's not bad. I wish it had lyrics though
Hey guys, kind of a broad topic, but I was reading about Anonymous hacking the KKK twitter and was wondering how they are able to basically hack anything they want?
Do they use XSS attacks? Brute force algorithms?
Hacking (white hat of course) has always interested me, but it's all so advanced I get lost easily
@SterlingArcher they hacked very little of what they wanted.
Source: I hanged out with those guys when they were more of the real deal back then.
From what I recall seeing in boards - it'd be tedious long work, lots of people would try to find exploits in lots of targets, sometimes they'd succeed.