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21:03
@darkyen00 what more is there to it?
21:20
regex question:
with a string like this: `some\nstuff\nfoo\nbar`
how do I get everything after `some\n`?
^some\n(.*)$?
There is a multiline flag iirc
Oh wait that is m
yep, doesn't work with it
(?:.|\n)*
21:23
@FlorianMargaine You won't like it, but the only cross-regex-engine way I found was using something like [\s\S]+ to select newlines
310
A: Javascript regex multiline flag doesn't work

molfYou are looking for the /.../s modifier, also known as the dotall modifier. It forces the dot . to also match newlines, which it does not do by default. The bad news is that it does not exist in Javascript. The good news is that you can work around it by using a character class (e.g. \s) and its...

(.*) doesn't include \n?
God JS regex engine is crap
@copy nope
@Zirak on...
364 days until Christmas day, and people have their Christmas lights up already. So silly.
2
21:25
!!>'some\nstuff\nfoo\nbar'.match(/\n(.|\n)+/)
@adeneo ["\nstuff\nfoo\nbar","r"]
anyway - hope you all had a good christmas :) unless you don't celebrate it
@FlorianMargaine /^#pgp@Florian\n((?:.|\n)*)$/gm works for me or your specification is wrong
@copy indeed. Dunno what I pasted wrong
Or what Zirak wrote, /^#pgp@Florian\n([\s\S]*)$/gm
21:33
@Dave surely you're going to reference that :)
@copy Nice hidden ping
@PeeHaa tell me about it
@PeeHaa It's horrible. We don't even have a proper way of executing global regexps
I don't care if lookbehind is hard to implement, implement it anyway
(Remind me to write my own regex engine)
@KendallFrey It's a really fun exercise
21:37
ugh, I hate exercise
:P
@KendallFrey Sounds like a proper hard thing to do
Gets nasty when you add stuff like references
backreferences?
that can't be too hard, can it?
Yeah like (foo)bar\1
You'd be surprised
21:39
In general regexps don't look too hard, but some stuff is really hard. Fun though
@KendallFrey Just is.
I know there is hard stuff, but I didn't expect simple backreferences to be one of them
it's just a variable
right?
things like balancing groups is where it gets really fun
@phenomnomnominal i don't know the original source, i've known the quote for a few years i use it every year :P
You can always just check out the source of PCRE, it's friggin complicated-> pcre.org
I think I'll aim to implement PCRE in JS
it'll probably be dog slow
precompiling regexes to js, how cool would that be
Compile to asmjs
Could actually be fast
21:44
remind me to learn asmjs
is it designed to be fast when interpreted, or is it meant to compile?
The latter, but the former works too
In fact, v8 doesn't specifically recognize asm.js, but it still profits very much from asm.js code
Because it's so limited and guarantees that integers don't suddenly become floats and such things
@copy IIRC they've agreed to actually do that
It doesn't compile asm.js more than the standard JIT
A_l
A_l
22:24
little question how can I do in nodejs assert. I want that if it's true it will print some message and if it false it print error?
thanks
22:37
try
{
    console.assert(whatever);
    console.log("Success!");
}
catch(e)
{
    console.log("Error:", e);
}
A_l
A_l
thanks!!
23:34
Arrrrrg! PSN is still down! Fucking hackers!!!
23:45
anybody know if there a way I can do this without form elements:

JSON.stringify an object and then open a save dialog to saveas a json file?
The first half is easy
why don't you want to use a hidden form element?
I could, I just wanted to know if there was a simple way to do it that I wasn't thinking of
Maybe opening a data URL through window.open might cut it
window.open won't let you offer a filename, though
yeah, it doesn't have to be too pretty. I made a particle engine, and I'm just making a basic editor to save different types
I guess a copy/paste pop-up won't do?
What's the way with form elements?
23:50
what I think im going to do
is just have the function return JSON.stringify(object)
and then just fill a text area
haha
Is this a good line of code? The reason I'm asking is that jQuery .html() is an equivalent (?) to .innerHtml in plain JS. innerHtml is frowned upon.
$("#loadHere").html( $(result).filter("#loadMe").html() );
innerHtml is frowned upon for the same reason as $().html is
are you looking for the $().load method?

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