@osmanRahimi 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.
room topic changed to CantankerouScript: Read this: rules.javascriptroom.com. Before asking inform yourself on the XY problem goo.gl/taIqf | Angular is on topic here stop asking. Don't ask to ask just ask. [ecmascript] [es6] [javascript]
Anyone have any ideas why app.get("/", ...) works but app.get(path.join("", ""), ...) doesn't work? The latter spits an error; "Cannot GET /", but that's exactly what the former is doing... kinda odd, if you ask me.
ping me if you have a clue. I'm getting off for the night
@SomeGuy Lets declare a new religion, then beg for minority rights and diss the government for being rude by not giving us a holiday on <the date you have always wanted> bam one more holiday ?
room topic changed to JavaScript: Read this: rules.javascriptroom.com. Before asking inform yourself on the XY problem goo.gl/taIqf | Angular is on topic here stop asking. Don't ask to ask just ask. [ecmascript] [es6] [javascript]
@phenomnomnominal Please keep the room name professional
(Write anything you want in the description though :P)
I have a little problem with some jquery... I have 4 selects, like this : <select class="mapSelect" ...
I get them this way : myCollection = $(".mapSelect");
the item i get with : myItem = myCollection.splice(0,1); gives me a [object HTMLSelectElement] back, but seems like i can't get its id... i'm tryin to do myItem.id, but does not work... .val() neither...
I have a function foo which makes an Ajax request. How can I return the response from foo?
I tried to return the value from the success callback as well as assigning the response to a local variable inside the function and return that one, but none of those ways actually return the response.
f...
you can't return anything from an asynchronous call if the function you return it to is synchronous. It's long gone and has forgotten about the async function. The trick is to not use a synchronous function for your async call. If you do that you can "return" it no problem.
one way to do it is to have some synchronous code that ends by calling an async function. When the async function is done you can make it call a function that takes over where the sync request ended. Makes sense?
basically you can just create and even that's triggered by ajax returning data and continue from there
@Eirinn this is the most basic way to handle asynchronicity. But it's also the source of the so famed callback hell which is often JS and is an absolute nightmare as soon as you start doing complex operations involving many asynchronous chained operations. There are a few solutions, a good one is to use promises.
@phenomnomnominal well, you don't always have to chain many asynchronous operations. When what you do is simple, using promises don't make your code simpler. I don't use promises client side
No but not using promises would mean that any further code would tend to not use promises, which would eventually mean async mess as the codebase evolves.
@Eirinn promises let you keep a synchronous-like flow in your code while still remaining async. Continuation passing is just a bad way to program, anyone can assert this after doing it for a while
I ditched promises and generators for continuation passing not that long ago. I don't think continuation passing is a bad idea while ES6 is not yet standard. It's simple, and with appropriate planning (the same you need for using promises effectively) it doesn't look too bad, either.
@phenomnomnominal ES6 introduces native Promises and (ab)usable generators/iterators for nicer control flow. All that without additional libraries or code compilation steps, at which point, it makes all the more interesting. :-)
When working with JavaScript you have to deal with the fact that you're always going to have to be backwards compatible to a certain extent. Writing worse code because a feature isn't implemented in all browsers yet is silly when you can use something that will eventually be.
Long live supporting IE6. That said, I like to code without dependencies. CPS because everyone can read it and requires nothing makes sense for certain scenarios. I don't ask y'all to agree on the choice, but it is a valid choice and not "bad" per-see.
@RoelvanUden it's a shame because you're smart. You know how to use CPS, but you also clearly know that coroutines are the superior solution, I wonder why you're arguing against them
@Eirinn promises and event emitters complement each other, they abstract different stuff. They're almost mutually exclusive. A promise is a special case of an event emitter exactly like you can think of a getter that returns a single value as a special case of an iterable.
@FlorianMargaine monads represent a value + context, promises are a value + context where the cotnext is time. Although promises in JS are monadic but not monads.
@FlorianMargaine There's 101 implementations of promises and you could prolly find some that don't satisfy monad laws, but otherwise they fit the monadic scheme of returning computations. TLDR in practice (IOW simplified simplistic explanation), yeah.
@FlorianMargaine they are a more general way of expressing what promises and other contextful computations are and how you can interact with them in a similar way.
Just say the Imitation Game btws. Very cool. Nice little digestible summary of an amazing mans life. Didn't quite give enough weight to his accomplishments, but the movie would probably have been too technical if they had done it justice.
@FlorianMargaine I'm not arguing against them. I'm arguing that CPS isn't always an inferior choice as some would like to make people believe. It has advantages in being simple, without dependencies, and clearly understood by everyone (even beginner and less talented programmers). I just don't agree with the statement that "Promises are always a better choice".
@RoelvanUden "dependencies" is kind of a flawed argument, especially when one of the most prominent pro-js arguments is ease of deployment with dependencies. (because of npm/browserify and whatnot)
@RoelvanUden Also, promises are simpler (they're native) the language itself comes with tools to aggregate and race them and they don't have any more dependencies - if anything with promises tools are opt-in and with callbacks you almost always have to use async.
@BartekBanachewicz You'd be surprised how many don't use any kind of package management. Especially in my work field it's really quite uncommon to think about JS deployment strategies (Isn't JS that thing you do in the browser to move some DOM elements? :P)
@RoelvanUden WRT your (...) - not really. I believe it ceased to be that quite some time ago for quite some people. And when your needs grow, so should your needs for dependencies; it's only natural that even client-only JS codebases eventually will need more complex builds.
@RoelvanUden there are maybe 4-5 things you can use promises for in the browser in most cases. Those are usually ajax, animations, RPC, timers, ready events etc. With most of what you model in the browser you need event emitters since things fire more than once (text value change, mouse click, mouse enter/leave etc).
@BenjaminGruenbaum For the moment you need ES6. Since many work on IE9 (and I even go back to IE6), you need dependencies. Then you need to argue that promises are easier, and explain them to people that don't get it. Promises aren't easy for all. I simply went back to CPS in my hobby project because of the dependencies, but 6to5 might make me try again.
I never know if I don't understand @BartekBanachewicz because he's speaking haskell or because he's speaking the strange language of the young people...
It's still a dependency. I'm talking about people who don't even use libraries other than jQuery you know. There are tons of them, and you may need to work with them. You can't go around making things all fancy because you'd be the only understand.gin.
Every other monad comes with a transformer version, and from what I know the idea of a transformer is a generic extension of monads. Following how the other transformers are build, IOT would be something like
newtype IOT m a = IOT { runIOT :: m (IO a) }
for which I could make up useful applica...
@RoelvanUden jQuery ships with promises and does the 5 things I talked about with promises by the way - the exception is ready events which are a promise internally but not externally.
@RoelvanUden that said - writing code with less sound abstractions in order to make it easier is definitely a valid thing to do - look how popular PHP is.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Thank you. That is pretty much the point I've been trying to make, but for some reason, many don't want to affirm. There is a lot to be said for keeping things as simple as possible.
@RoelvanUden not simple, easy. Big difference there. I believe promises are simpler but callbacks can be easier to grasp initially.
There's also the fact more JS developers know callbacks already which is a perfectly valid point on its own
Also since you work at a C# shop I'd expect people to be familiar with Tasks but not with callbacks - but for the general case easy code has plenty of merits.
Otherwise Haskell or LISP would be the most popular language for web development and not PHP
@Chets You should explicitly declare your variables (including x) with var : this will prevent bugs
> Because of these three differences, failure to declare variables will very likely lead to unexpected results. Thus it is recommended to always declare variables, regardless of whether they are in a function or global scope.