« first day (433 days earlier)      last day (4745 days later) » 

00:28
@Incognito I blame you for having to go through interviews. Thanks o/
00:58
@Esailija noConflict is not about conflicts. Its about grabbing the global identifier and then removing it cleanly. It's about wrapping Backbone into an AMD module, it's about a user telling the library "I have you. Please remove yourself from global scope"
Sure I could delete window.Backbone but maybe I need to do more? Just let the library do it
01:12
hey, so this line is returning undefined
roommate = $("#roommate").val()

$.post('roommateSearch.php', 'val=' + $(roommate).val(), function (response) {
alert(response);
i know roommate has the correct value
in the php:
$roommate = $_POST['val'];
echo "I got your value!".$roommate;
 
1 hour later…
02:23
The ink's still wet, so very alpha, but comments welcome.
 
2 hours later…
04:03
I'd like to pick someone's head about js app frameworks
anyone around?
 
2 hours later…
05:46
anyone alive?
 
2 hours later…
07:50
@Mike Barely. I don't know that I'd understand the difference between == and === at this point.
08:11
lol @Raynos the point is that soon you have noConflict for anything, Backbone needs noConflict just as Batman needs noConflict.I will never have anything in the variable Backbone (not even Backbone cos it sucks), it doesn't do a clean removal anyway :P
 
2 hours later…
10:03
RT @stoyanstefanov: Performance calendar day #22: @tobie on Lazy JavaScript Evaluation of CommonJS modules: http://calendar.perfplanet.com/2011/lazy-evaluation-of-commonjs-modules/
 
2 hours later…
11:36
@Esailija but everyone needs a noConflict :\
thats what dem noobs get for using global scope
ur joking, global scope is fine for namespace
@JohnP write your own o/
@Esailija troll detected
lol
pd.make <-- in that pd is global
namespace
and its fine
@Esailija yes pd is global :D
but I would never use globals
I would use require :\
which is a global
11:40
@gsnedders @Raynos @RyanKinal @Zirak @tereško @ircmaxell @AndyE @NickGraver @Incognito @Loktar @Esailija @MattMcDonald

"I wish you a merry $( xmas ) guys"
merry $(xmas).find("presents") to you!
ggaahh, why is writing good code so hard? I could've just said "so yeah, this isn't very scalable, it'll be remodeled every time I need to change something, but who gives a shit". But noooo. Now I've gotta do it the good way. With MVC and crap.
i wish you all jquery fanatics would die
3
I hope the mass @ notice works :p
besides do you even understand why globals are evil in the first place? It's because when you have global state, which can be achieved even without using globals, see singletons and god objects
11:43
@jAndy Your message is the living embodiment of how christmas turned from an event of religious importance (January 1st) to yet another demonstration of peer pressure and derailing of morals (Jesus wasn't born in the 25th, it's the date of a pagan holiday) to mass culture, commercialism, capitalism and even more derailing of morals (Santa? the fuck? Presents? Yeah, very Christian. celebrate throwing away materialistic things.) Merry fucking christmas.
@MylesGray also merry $( xmas ) to you
I forgot some.. arhhh
@Zirak: what are you talking about man :p I'm just not online the next days so I wanted to wish any regular in here a merry xmas (whether he likes it or not is on his own :p=
@Zirak you dont need MVC to get it right
only rails fags need mvc
@jAndy why you o_o;
@jAndy The $ got me going.
I know, that was a very special gift to all my jQuery fans here :p
@Esailija do you understand that its impossible to draw a cross module dependency graph if every bloody module can access every other bloody module through globals?
11:48
@Raynos I don't need MVC specifically, but it's just the lesser of evils. It plays right into MVC's role.
@Zirak you need loose coupling and modular architecture
MVC is an implementation of that
Yes, I know. But when I look at what I'm trying to achieve, I realize that it is MVC
@Zirak fair enough. What are you even doing? PHP?
LCMA - Loosely Coupled Modular Architecture
lets create a committee for that :p
@Raynos yep
11:51
@Raynos I have told you before I use different way to map dependencies
@Esailija that is?
@jAndy Did you see nCore?
@Raynos provides and requires, kind of similar to google closure
@Raynos: I did, looks promising. I can see light at the end of the tunnel for you :P
...holy crap. I just unpacked Kohana. 2.04 MB. Before I wrote a single line. ...I'm just gonna write my own
@Zirak lol? You would use a PHP framework? <trollface />
11:53
Burn. BURN. BURN!!!!
LOVE IT
man seriously, css transition animations should go into the DOM, not CSS layers @gsnedders do something.. go aboard the rage train and push the people at opera :p
its such a mess to deal with it crossbrowser.. you can't really intercept or stop a running transition..
well you can.. but only hack'ish on overwritting the transition property with 0seconds and current computed styles
@Raynos Interesting
11:57
Silex? sounds like a condom label
meh, I'll just write my own. How hard can it be? anticipates destruction, pain and agony
@jAndy: and to you :∆)
@Zirak it might be 2mb but because it contains tons of crap it never uses, so where is the harm :P
unlike joomla that includes 10mb on every page anyway
It can't be that hard. You just override index.php like a bitch, route everything to a controller, the view class just friggin require a file, model class just does database queries.
Controller will be all like "hurr durr, model gimme data, view here's data"
I have shit like active record which takes more than all the core files together
but it's never included
Kohana is like codeigniter, right?
12:07
Didn't try Kohana yet. Just saw that it's 2mb and ran away, knowing I can write the functionality I absolutely need in about 15kb
@zirak: probably less :)
I have codeigniter 2.03 I think it has 1.5mb core of which I am using maybe .. the 15kb :D
@adscriven Don't be silly. There'll be 5kb of silly comments.
It's mandatory
but it's not like jQuery where all the 1.5mb is loaded, only what you need :)
@zirak that's true, looking at some right now :(
// special case for Date
if ($type == 'Date') {
// and add the element!
$parentFieldSet->addElement ( $this->$id );
help ... me ...
12:12
muahahaha! I can use the Observer pattern which was re-invented yesterday for EVERYTHING!
i send my condolences to your colleagues and parents
observer pattern in normal php is stupid since it's not a running application
But it's so friggin awesome, it'll all event oriented!
yay :D
and setting up over the top abstractions is also a waste... it starts, spits out a string, and exits.. why waste the time setting up anything unnecessary
12:49
huh, this is a nice surprise...php doesn't have a finally block. Didn't remember that
@jAndy why do animations need to go into the DOM ?
@Esailija maintenance?
@Raynos ?
you create abstractions for maintenance purposes
sure but I talked about over the top ones
like ORM and Active record
// so that your code is not
<?
  $tables = mysql_query("select * from " + $_POST["lulz"]);
  echo "<table>"
  for ($row in $tables) {
    echo "<tr> " . $row->lulz . " </tr>"
  }
?>
@Esailija ORM isn't bad if used correctly ORM is bad, DM isn't bad
13:03
Sure you have your patterns to separate business logic from views but that's not much overhead at all
smacks @Raynos on the nose You forgot <tbody>!
but creating shit ton of objects on each request that only get converted into strings before exit is just waste of time
it's not a running app
@Zirak browser does it for me
@Esailija then thats a problem with php
Since when do we trust browsers?
yes create tbody explicitly please :p
and head and body tags
13:09
...grooveshark doesn't register "The Piper at the Gates of Dawn" as a Pink Floyd album, and doesn't have the real "See Emily Play".......... forever boycotts grooveshark
Pink Flody sued grooveshark and they had to remove all of pink floyd?
Main site appears to be down atm unfortunately
afaik
Seriously? I blame Waters.
sneakingly comes back to listen to Magic Slim
13:11
Pink Floyd won against EMI, preventing the band's long-time record label from selling individual songs online,[40][41] which prompted the band's removal from Grooveshark.
anyway grooveshark is just obvious warez site how is that even legal lol
sure you can have free music but 99.99% stuff there is copyrighted
or do they have deals with record companies like spotify
...that's a bit stupid. Don't get me wrong, I bought a Pink Floyd boxset and have all their albums (legally.) But they're in no-harms-way (along with some vinyl records...it really sounds different. Shine On played analog and Shine On played digital are just...different), so grooveshark and stuff like that is just convenient.
13:25
Is MDN's Service Unavailable for anyone else?
Been getting that error since yesterday
Had that error two days ago. Works now
Odd
Reloading somehow always does the trick. It works fine now.
 
1 hour later…
14:37
Interview preperation for young companies / startups
What are the big questions I need to be aware off
This is different from the generic corporate job interview questions
I've become old, bitter and jaded.
0
A: Symmetric-key encryption algorithm

IncognitoYou don't want to encrypt with JavaScript, especially on the client-side where it is open to tampering, and has no cryptographically secure random number generator. I've tried implementing one but I had some encoding issues. You tried to write your own encryption algo? You've gone against e...

@Raynos They all lurk hackernews. They all think computer science is the bee's knees. Know algos and data structures. Also know some buzz words, also sound like you're a sage that don't like hipster stuff but have a solid understand of it and can produce meaningful code quickly with it (make that clear)
Tell them REST is so cool.
...
Can I be real?
or myself
What would you say?
Okay, interview time.
Raynos write fizbuz for me.
Now implement random sorting algo.
shit a sorting algorithm
Nex, how long is a piece of string?
14:49
I can implement them btu I cant remember the name
1. console.log( 'fizbuz' );
2. array.sort();
3. string.length;
@Raynos psst, Fisher-Yates
Okay well here's a random png with dots moving, go make code that sorts like that.
@Zirak lolol
Now you go an try to prove array.sort() isn't random sorting.
@Incognito What's a fizbuz?
14:51
In my experience most interviews cover none of the skills you'll use on the job.
@Incognito Thanks
@Amaan It's a game. People say incrementing numbers (starting with 1). If the number is a multiple of 5, you say Fizz instead of your number. If it's a multiple of 7, you say Bubz instead of your number. If it's both, you say FizzBuzb.
@Incognito just wondering what's wrong with implementing something like blowfish for example yourself? There is direct C code in Schneiers book and there is no random
14:53
wow bubblesort is easy
@Incognito im applying to real jobs.
You know "Our small company needs a guy that knows js, node and other tools"
They should ask sensible real questions
lolrly? Bubblesort is easy to implement? Call Geek Monthly!
@Zirak Ah. Where'd this come from? Odd game. (Atwood's blog won't load for me. Internet problems)
I dont expect generic corporate bullshit
@Amaan It's a kindergarten/school game. The "challenge" is to write a program, printing numbers from 1-100 that follows those rules.
It's about 5 lines of code. 1 if you minify and be all Perl
@Raynos I'm also bitter as hell from that one interview I had where the guy asked me compsci questions to implement their CMS based on socket.io. I was like, wtf? Why don't you find out if I can work on that code.
14:56
And that would be hard, why?
Just a for loop with some checks, right?
@Amaan Most programmers can't do it. Look at the front page of stackoverflow.
Or is it about optimizing and all of that?
It's not. That's the problem. A lot of "programmers" coming to interviews don't know how to do that
It's not hard it's meant to show them that you aren't a complete timewaster
Hahaha
14:56
like right away
Ah.
hhmmm...that's one line of valid Ruby code...yikes
It's a door-handle into your interview.
if you look at dailywtf many programmers that don't know what a loop is have a job
:D
@Zirak Explain this skatehamilton.com
14:57
Ruby fucking sucks?
:( yeah man
it also took 3 seconds at least to process that page
lololol
Someone in a group I'm part of wanted to launch his rails app on my server, I've been up till freaking midnight trying to figure it the hell out.
"rails, where everything's easy, unlike PHP. Honest!"
It's a sucky language. But I'll have to admit...it's got good ideas. if statements as operators is bitchin, and I always dreamed of omitting parentheses around if statements and the like
I've never seen so much bs to launch a damn page in my life.
14:59
lol, we should make a C on Rails.
We should make C on hookers and blackjack. First we'll make hookers (can be a protocol server) and then we'll make blackjack (framework for C)
That's a damn fine idea IMO.
"Fast install, easy as hell to start, just this 10k line program as your homepage, this 14mb config folder where you tweak everything. but other than that, so fast!"
@Zirak Dude, never in my life have I had to play with linux's locale configuration settings.
"they sat around like first century greek philosophers considering the aesthetic value of placing control statements before or after a block"
ruby made me have to remove and install and reconfigure locales.
then re-map a bunch of shitty commands because it feels like it's so important.
15:02
Kids, and that's why you (a)get a domain already supporting RoR, (b)not use RoR, (c)not use RoR, (d)seriously...*not* use RoR
Then apt on ubuntu is a sink as far as I'm concerned with ruby. You think it'd just be the latest version? no. you have to get ruby1.9.1, then rubygems1.9.1, and re-map all your /usr/bin to have gem and ruby map back to those commands because nothing works without those bindings.
the endless levels of bs.
Anyway...outside of fizzbuzz, a nice interview question is implementing a simple, naive linked list
What book would you recommend for learning javascript?
Yeah, they like asking for linked lists.
Okay, now what's a linked list?
@Pjotr eloquentjavascript.net is a nice online book. JavaScript: The Good Parts is staple, JavaScript: The Definitive Guide is neat, and Code Complete is a must
@Amaan It's my favourite data model: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_List
What would be the best book to read if I want to learn about javascript and dom....i know nothing
@Zirak Some use cases?
You're making the assumption that there's such a thing as "best". See the 3 js books I mentioned above, and the last if you want to be a better programmer overall
@Amaan EVERYTHING. Really. Everything.
@Pjotr The tag wiki was basically authored by everyone on this site who is competent with javascript.
15:08
Ok, but what cover DOM and javascript well then?
@Incognito it isnt bad to ask a comp sci question. However i dont consider "Meh I know how to use google, and I understand the high level picture of the technique, just not the details" A bad or wrong answer
@Zirak Tell me a few? I can't think of one where it'd be easier than just using an array. But that's probably because I haven't seen real-world applications of anything yet.
You can always see my quickies: gist.github.com/1510466 and gist.github.com/1490195
@Incognito also why dem noobs not tailor interview correctly for job :(
@Raynos They considered it to be, they want to see your problem solving ability. My issue is they don't need that set of skills they're so deeply concerned with.
15:10
@Incognito I like how the backtrace is 67 method invocations :D
@Amaan Easier isn't the problem. Besides, what kind of array are we talking about? Dynamic, fixed-length, typed? Linked lists are basically unordered, untyped and n-lengthed arrays. Without the array access. And the sugar of treating each item as its own entity
@Raynos Interviewing for software is hard.
@Incognito problem solving skills is "Can you research properly?" the answer is yes I can
Look at me, six months later I still haven't found anyone.
I can appreciate questions which are poor because interviewing is hard. I dont appreciate penalizing correct answers to poor qusetions
15:11
@Zirak Oh. I don't know many languages, so understanding isn't as easy as I'd hope. JavaScript and some basic C is all I know
@Amaan Arrays, LinkedList, Stacks, HashMaps, Sets so on have different usage which perform differently on particular tasks. Arrays are very quick if you are only reading from it or inserting at the end. However if you need to insert an element at the front you need to shift every element 1 index, that is not nice.
I'm about to goto the local coffee shop offer someone a dollar above minimum wage and teach them to code.
@Incognito :\ Does your company do anything of value? o/
@Raynos No, things like writing algos.
@Incognito :(
15:12
@Amaan The example I like to give is of a pearl necklace: Each pearl is attached to another pearl. You can easily split it, attach more to it, change its length, everything while not actually affecting each individual pearl, just the one you want to affect.
@Raynos Right now? No, that's why I went to an interview.
@Pjotr Ah. Makes sense. So in linked lists you can just push something in the middle without all of the hassle you'd have with arrays?
@Incognito Aren't you also interviewing other people?
@Zirak pearl necklace snigger
@Zirak Yeah, makes sense. Are these implemented in JavaScript?
@Raynos Want to know who applied?
15:13
you can gif me lulz
I will then sympathetically reply with "What has this world come to :("
@Amaan The beauty of linked lists is that "middle" is virtually non-existent. If you're using one, you give up on caring what's where, and just care about the data represented in each one
@Amaan It can easily be made in js
- Friends who thought I'd just give them a job
- Five spam bots
- Two ASP.NET devs with no JS/PHP experience (specifically asking for JS/PHP)
@Raynos ?
@Zirak I've learnt that I understand better when I see the code. Do you have an example lying around?
@Amaan You still only have one (or two reference if double-linkedlist) to the front (and back) so you still need to loop through until you find a particular element then you can just reasign the pointers....however if you need to delete the first element a linked list does it without having to shift all elements one "down" since you just reasign the "front" pointer
15:14
@Zirak Pearl necklace on urban dictionary.
gamarjoba from tbilisi, georgia
@Amaan Example of using a linked list or of implementing one? I have neither in js, but can make the latter in a few minutes
@Raynos Thanks
@Zirak Implementing
@Zirak Did you ever see the BLOOM filter in JS? I thought that was neat as hell.
15:16
@Incognito :(
Totally overkill for a linked list btw
It's very naive, doesn't do any real checks, so for overview only
Yeah, okay
why the object create? you could have just made a object literal directly
I thought of node as a struct...old habits...
But yeah. It'll probably be better that way
Oh, that's nice. Example helped. Thanks, @Zirak
15:31
You're welcome
Object.create is also very awkward, you need to create 2 objects just to call it lol
no you dont
the second one is optional
@Esailija y u anti christ
@Raynos y u no initialization
if you wanna initialize( almost always ), then you need 2 objects
@Zirak You've made a circular linked-list, right?
at least
15:34
My favourite is Object.create(Node).constructor(data)
@Amaan Nope. head.previous doesn't point to last node. Circular linked lists are neat as well
Yeah, I just realized
Oh, and @Raynos, you're disgusting. Ruining the naivety of linked lists. @_@
That's a double linked list btw. Not a "normal" one
yeah. a regular linked list node only has one pointer (usually next). But this is funner.
15:41
@Zirak all srf1.1 does is implement the scheme data structure and the manipulation functions for them
Thinking of garbing a vanity domain for my blog, thoughts?
@Incognito define: vanity wrt statement
@Raynos Talking about the pearl necklace
@Raynos inc.ogni.to
in.cogni.to
@Incognito do it
Can I get ray.nos ?
15:42
100 bucks man.
Is there an os tld?
no
there is no nos or os
@Incognito 100 buks no worth it
Yeah... I have my real name.org but I never use it.
@Incognito What? Brian.org?
I don't know your last name
Is it Graham?
this.head.previous = node;
Wouldn't this.head.next make more sense, @Zirak?
I'm thinking of them as stylized arrays, so whatever's added later would be next
node.next = this.head;
That would be node.previous as well
Well, I like to think of the head as the first thing you see in the list.
So when you add something, you could either attach it at the very beginning, or attach it at the very end. To do the latter, you have to traverse the entire list
The former is O(1), latter is O(n)
Ah. I was dismissing the fact that people would be using LinkedList.head at all
15:56
@Amaan How'd you know my last name?
Anyway, there's nothing at the site, it's a blank page.
It's not even pointing to my server
@Incognito I don't know. I'd seen it somewhere. (Your Twitter, perhaps?)
Long back
Riiighhh twitter has my name.
@Incognito Why'd you remove the link to the JavaScript guide from your profile?
I was on another SE site and clicked the wrong button-- all my profile data's been removed on all sites.
Oh
I knew your first name from Github, by the way
16:00
Cool
> By all accounts I want to try and avoid any features that would cause cross-browser weirdness to spring up. As a result we'll be making extensive use of libraries (for drawing to a canvas or manipulating the DOM) and using only JavaScript language features that work consistently in the browsers that we end up supporting.
lol "Please consider using CoffeeScript as it solves several of the issues you mentioned. == automatically becomes ==="
16:20
Can't find a decent program to sensibly draw these things for me, so old-fashioned write, scan & upload (directed @Amaan, btw)
NICE
@Zirak Thanks!
No problemo
FUCK YEAH! Unicode has Klingon!
@Zirak To be honest I'm more pumped by this in unicode
16:31
wow. Unicode is so awesome
There's something really cool about Cuneiform, it's one of the first writing systems we've ever had, and it's just lines and arrows (like UML!)
Actually, that's a great idea for a gimmic online timewaster game.
Cuneiform or UML?
The second one must be Cuneiform
:P
Tragically, I think the first image actually translates to "pile of grain"
But, it looks really badass.
Look at all that gibberish. FibonacciFunction, pfft. That's not even a word. And what's Variable anyway? Some pagan voodoo god of thunder?
I can't wait for historians one million years in the future who have no perception of the changes out society made in 5000 years to come look at some UML and equate it with cave drawings, "The hunt went well. The sun gods were appeased. Johnson is fired."
16:41
If an alien race is monitoring the internet, they ought to think cats are our gods and that mankind prays daily to the boobs above.
@Zirak I want to create an absurd amount of fake evidence that there was some entirely absurd civilization just to confuse the hell out of future historians, or aliens.
4
shoes on head, children run the government, everyone is afraid to be seen not eating. etc.
Sounds like a plan! Catboobsians. They were the ones who made the sphinx. They perfected star travel and made the face on the moon and the butt on mars.
then changed their places in the sky
What we call the moon is actually their playground. Saturn is their beach resort
16:46
Writing and speaking system was morse code.
through clapping.
They play football with Haley's comet
football is another name for food.
we'll build a massive indian-jones style temple that at the inner most chamber holds a video of rick rolls.
oh space aliens, we trolled you good.
I have to stop listening to techno, it's rotting my brain.
1
Q: javascript load xml from document with ie9

jrey.pywhat is the best way to change(without jquery) these html/javascript to work with ie9, <html> <body> <div id="xmls"> <xml id="myXml"> <bookstore> <book category="COOKING"> &l...

God damn hipsters and their trendy coffeescript / rails / jQuery screencasts that cost $55
user1385191
s/hipsters/shmucks
@Raynos Just make your own, it's called money.
You like money, yes?
If you have 150 people sign up in a year that's nearly $8k
16:58
Money is overrated.

« first day (433 days earlier)      last day (4745 days later) »