We have some code here that we put in most apps that provides "logging" (wraps console for IE8 and timestamps and the like), and it sets a global error handler so we can send stack traces to the server.
@rlemon You call .done with null on error - that's like saying you handled the error.
}).catch(function(err) {
console.log('the only place I did not log the first time');
return done(null, false, {message:'error collecting user'}); <- here, also missing semicolon
});
@rlemon Pretend to be a dead relative of hers. If she gets scared, she obviously believes in the supernatural. If she just kicks you out, then she was telling the truth.
the first log always hits. the second log never hits after I break it (breaking it just means leaving the user logged in for two minutes then logging out)
@Zirak they make me mad because they just scam people. sure they might offer some level of closure, but I don't think they need to outright lie to people to achieve that.
@rlemon Oh yes, mediums and their ilk annoy the bazingles out of me, there's no question about it. But as someone on the other side of it, it could be interesting to visit one.
raganwald had a good blog about the concept of more powerful vs. better in terms of language design. I guess everybody falls at a different point on the power vs. safety continuum
@Retsam you probably accidentally defined "operators" to Optional<T> and forgot to define "is" so it throws but the exception is assigned to a ref and non-null refs are truthy so you end up with it all being true
@Retsam WebStorm and their other IDEs are subsets of IntelliJ. They're cheaper and easier to use, but occasionally have issues with plugins and if you need more than one, IntelliJ is cheaper.
As long as I'm asking for ponies on my js wishlist, I want the ability to modify Object.prototype/HTMLElement.prototype in a limited scope, i.e. an object literal has the methods I want but only ones created in the scope I specify. That would be sweet
Rather just chill at home and convert some Java to C#, since I'm gonna be doing stuff all the rest of the weekend, what with valiumtimes day and the Sleater-Kinney show and all.
Typescript has a fair amount of overhead, so I wouldn't recommend it for small stuff. For large projects across multiple teams, it has the potential to save a lot of confusion by documenting and checking types.
There are parts of coffeescript I like, and parts I really don't like, but the net result is I don't think it's worth the conceptual overhead of forcing everyone to learn a second syntax on top of the JS syntax to contribute to your project.
It's sugar that 1) requires everyone else to learn your sugar AND know JS, and 2) it makes things more complicated to build and run, since you've got to translate the code
it depends. what languages do the people you work with already know? if they all come from a java background or strictly js background, then it probably isn't worth it
@JaredSmith The argument "hey it's pretty much just Python" isn't that good, because you still need to know JS to use it right. The difference is, CS requires you to know two languages, and JS requires you to know one.
I'm not arguing that its perfect, or even that its better, just that it has useful features and that my opinion is that they're useful enough for me to use
and as far as the readability goes you can write obtuse code in any language
Arrows tell you where to go, , does something related to memory (probably moving a pointer one cell over), str constants, 48* sets a register and probably puts it in a cell, @ terminates and/or dumps