Okay this is very odd... Does node usually manage packages by their own defined dependencies regardless of what your project is using? Ie, ComponentA is using [email protected] and your project is using [email protected]. Will that work?
this problem is weird, because it says all my dependencies are using the same version of something on the source code, but on download, they're complaining. If I clone it and add it manually, it works fine
these weird romances reminds me of that "trending" a while ago. Amazon started to offer novels for its e-kindle service. These novels were about human doing it with dinosaurs ... literally wtf'ed that day
@KarelG there were these two college students, who I can only assume were pretty hot given how bored they were, that decided to write a bunch of absurd romance novels and then people actually got off to them
@crl Nothing in that index. The last one is: [rules](http://rules.urbanup.com/3739087) A list of random crap that people who call themselves 'authorities' or 'authoritative' such as teachers, parents etc. These 'rules' just state things these 'authoraties' wish you would listen/do. But its a free country, so really, you could break every single 'rule' you want to. (except normally there's a punishment like...idk going to jail for...life)
Can we reopen this? It's unfair my answer is the only one and other people can contribute - it's clearly objective and on topic stackoverflow.com/q/26682705/1348195
@ssube you can do that process to any question. Would you think deleting it would make it a different question?
> I guess the essence of my question is how can I tone down the 1.xish of my current Angular projects and use more generic techniques so that when 2.0 comes along an upgrade will be both possible, and actually add value to my project?
the only hope would be to take the two bullets and turn them into specific questions and delete all the generalized "are the controller learning curves more parabolic?" fluff
If we still had too localized, that would be a perfect CV reason. Too broad is pretty good, and opinion based is a fair one.
It's not write me a spec, it's asking how to write code that works in Angular 2 and Angular 1 and what would be the right way to proceed during the migration.
It's not too localized, people will have to write code for angular 1 for at least 5 years and maintain it for longer. It's not too broad since there is a specific solution.
"what can I change today in some code I have assuming some future potential situation" is closable on "in some code" (didn't show it or ask specifics) and "some future potential situation" (too localized)
> There are no more directives or JqLite. This is how I currently understand how to do dom manipulation with Angular, can I start using something similar to 2.0's replacement for directives in my Angular projects today to make the transition to 2.0 less painful when it happens?
Does Stack have any QA type posts/sites, where there is a topic with no right answer, but a lot of people give a lot of good opinions and facts? I am trying to find some pro's and con's to using AngularJS's ControllerAs syntax.
@BenjaminGruenbaum answers for that include "Yes, you can, it's theoretically possible." "No, no such thing will ever exist." and "Sure, use library Foo"
Pro: You know where all the data comes from in the view. You also won't ever run into the dot rule. Con: You add one line in each controller `var MC = this;`
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/06/22/can-we-automate-everything/ CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers Can we automate everything? CommitStrip 1435005696
@ssube Lots of questions would benefit a lot from editing but I believe the question is still on topic as it is. The fact it's useful is established by a view count and it's on a clear problem and its objective solutions. I think there is something wrong in the culture of Stack Overflow where we stopped closing things for the right reason and started closing things as if closing things is a noble goal.
Sometimes I wonder how that time would have been when people wanted the internet to just work and added all kinds of hackish stuff to hackish stuff, and we now have to carry over that shit in the name of BC.