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Be professional, button your jacket, and fuck right off.
Getting offended should be illegal
haha
@SterlingArcher you get offended at the idea of folks getting offended?
@SterlingArcher yes
Not offended, it's just a waste of time
17:01
@SterlingArcher absolutely
> A plea of innocence is guilty of wasting my time.
Being offended says "my opinions trump yours so I'm going to make a big deal about it"
did somebody say trump
Can't stump the trump
Back in my day, if something offended you, you went home and drank about it. Why can't we go back to that functional-alcoholic problem solving?
That's how I deal with it
cause when im drunk idgaf
17:04
did somebody say functional
!!urban trump 4
@SomeKittens trump A polite way to suggest the passing of wind.
@SomeKittens trump Northern to midlands slang for a fart, expelling of wind from the anus.
ok, either works
> OK, so if having [feminist extremist] women in the industry means getting fired for having fun, I don't want [feminist extremist] women in the industry.
!!s/feminist//
17:07
@ssube OK, so if having [ extremist] women in the industry means getting fired for having fun, I don't want [feminist extremist] women in the industry. (source)
The only thing that's always evil is the extreme.
I don't like feminism, because of the extremists. I don't even like that it's called feminism. It should be about equality, not raising women above men to get "justice"
@Nick You're conflating feminism with a few radicals who are detracting from it.
extremists are not feminists. real feminists strive for equality, not degradation and superiority.
Where's my masculinism, then, huh?
17:11
@Nick wat
With any cause that doesn't have a clear definition, there are people who use it to forward their own agenda of bitching and moaning. Those people ruin it for everyone else, especially the people who actually want to accomplish something good.
That's like saying you don't like muslims because of ISIS. Go teach at a Texas school.
Masculinism is unnecessary, because men are already in power. Feminism is necessary because women have been oppressed, and need the activism.
@SomeKittens Well, I did live in TX for about a year and a half...
Follow meninist on twitter lol
it's hilarious
17:12
every non-femnazi feminist I know acknowledges that there are hardships men have to deal with and want to do something about that too.
I have yet to meet one
I've only met the crazy ones
probably because they're louder about it
AKA the Vegan principle
There are hardships men have to deal with.
@Nick Now you've met one
no
Luckily, we can all agree that vegans are terrible people.
17:13
@Nick well that's strange, why do you think all the feminists you meet are aggressive?
Anybody who doesn't eat people is a terrible person.
@ivarni Hey now, this has nothing to do with me; I'm 1000000% for equal rights
I'm cool with saying "Hey, there are gender-specific difficulties that people encounter and we should work together to counteract them"
@SomeKittens I'm not. Gender is stupid and largely obsolete.
Horses are terrible people.
17:14
@Nick Yet you just said all the feminists you've met are crazy
@ssube I eat exclusively vegans.
Gender isn't obsolete, wat
@ivarni Yes, so?
which is why I'm so skinny.
@SomeKittens Ironically, vegans contain less protein than normal people.
@Nick If you define feminist as "crazy femnazi" then yeah, by definition, you've only met crazy ones.
17:15
@Nick Could it be something in your behaviour that makes them mad or do you believe they were born that way?
@ivarni You don't know the people that I know. Some of them are a victim of their environment (not meaning myself)
@SomeKittens touche'
@Nick That doesn't really answer my question
I don't like your questions, so I've answered it my way
Fair enough
@ssube But only when @jAndy isn't here
@jAndy gets mad when you talk about vegans
it's probably the protein deficiency
It's the constant moral drama. "I really want a steak, but I really respected that cow."
in India, it's "I really want a steak, but Shiva will punish me if I eat that cow"
I keep trying to get to the bottom of why people are so against including minorities but I guess since some questions are never answered I'll just choose to assume ignorance.
17:20
> against including minorities
what do you mean?
I don't like your questions, so I've answered it my way
@ivarni The attitude I see a lot is "If the problem existed, then I'd have be morally compelled to do something, but if I put a blindfold on and go NYAH NYAH NYAH, I'll never have to acknowledge there's a problem"
Your question wasn't about a minority
or "If I find something I can't do about it to blame, I won't be compelled"
> The first step to having a problem is setting your drink down and admitting it.
17:24
Alcoholism is never a problem, it's a lifestyle choice.
are all scottish folk alcoholics?
I don't have a problem with alcohol, I have a problem without it
I have never met an interesting person who did not drink
I've never met an interesting person while I didn't drink
I've never drank while interesting a person I didn't do.
17:26
@Nick No, we have people that are sane and those that don't drink.
No good story starts with "Me mates and I were having a salad..."
4
function Thing() {
   this.doThing();

   this.doThing = function() { .. }
}
I've drunk interesting people while I never didn't do.
Is this.doThing supposed to get hoisted?
17:27
Lame
it's a variable, not a function declaration
Right
the function declaration (if it has a name) will be, the assignment won't be
that's why you see this.doThing = function doThing () { ...
which is a bit silly.
@ssube Function declarations always have a name
17:28
@Zirak not function () {
In this case it's a function expression assigned to some variable
@SomeKittens I don't think that works
There's no reason the assignment will get hoisted, it has nothing to do with the function
@copy it does
@SomeKittens That won't work
17:28
!!> var a = function b(){}; b
@copy "ReferenceError: b is not defined"
@SomeKittens I think that's spot on btw, even though I sidetracked.
foo = function Class_foo() { was a valid but uncommon pattern before Chrome's stacktraces were helpful
The assignment isn't hoisted, because it's just this.x = y
@SomeKittens The reason to do that is so that the name shows up in stack traces
17:30
Assignments are never hoisted, only declarations are
@ivarni thanks. That's why folks in the middle will never be nagged into admitting there's a problem. (Which is why all the "equality" versions of this annoy me)
@copy ah, that makes sense
@copy Chrome made some changes to how they find function names that works better with extension/prototype "methods" now, so it's largely unnecessary
@ssube That's good to know
@SomeKittens That's a great xckd, savin' that. Thanks
Good Morning
17:33
Mornin'
Why did you write the apostrophe instead of g ?
Because slang and dialect.
If you're using "equality" as a way to say "I'm better than you" you're part of the problem.
The g is definitely closer than '
@catgocat Because you touch yourself at night
17:34
!!tell catgocat why
@catgocat because you touch yourself at night
@catgoathat Because you touch your hooves at night.
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
  exec(cmd, function(err, stdout) {
    if( err ) return reject(err);
    resolve(stdout); // <- ReferenceError: resolve is not defined
  });
});
wut?
Y U NO PROMISIFY
he is promisifying it. See how he's wrapping it in a promise?
17:36
NO
because this is an older module when promisify was voodoo
but seriously. why is that failing. bugging me
user3119231
hey people!
Hai
Environment? Using a promise library? Tried console.loging? Debugging? etc?
function exec(str, cb) {
  cb(null, 'llamas');
}

function rlemon(cmd) {
  return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
    exec(cmd, function(err, stdout) {
      if( err ) return reject(err);
      resolve(stdout);
    });
  });
}

rlemon('bananas')
.then(console.log);
^ works fine for me in node 4.1.0
17:39
I remember some old version of firefox had a terribly incomplete promise library
@Zirak doubt he's using exec in FF
nope
node and bluebird
It was specific to FF, but maybe some really old v8 version with a flag or something.
what version?
@rlemon above still works for me with bluebird
There's something he's not telling us.
17:42
98% sure you've got a typo
well it is failing on me
Type it again.
I copy pasted my code
Manually type it again
no typo
17:44
throw a debugger; inside of exec
Either you start non-static debugging or paste everything here
whats up guys
the sky, except in australia
wondering if there is a way to detect if an object has changed every n pixels?
could a loop do the job?
@rlemon console.log is like booze - if it doesn't solve your problems you aren't using enough of it
17:59
I am getting Error: ngRepeat:badident Invalid identifier expression for the following line of code.

<li ng-repeat="csv in oldCsvs | filter: { sharedData: { status : 'partial' }} as partialCsvs | orderBy: '-timestamp' track by $index">

I believe it is correct as per the examples in the docs here: http://bit.ly/1KTSVeC.

Not sure why it is failing. Can anyone please shed some light?
how far could one calculate Pi in JS/
@RahulDesai A) Why a bit.ly link to the docs. B) Create a small repro
Arbitrarily far, at least in theory. Are you good at implementing your own numbers?
The original link is huge:
https://docs.angularjs.org/error/ngRepeat/badident?p0=partialCsvs%20%7C%22%3C!--%20ngRepeat:%20csv%20in%20oldCsvs%20%7C%20filter:%20%7B%20sharedData:%20%7B%20status%20:%20%27partial%27%20%7D%7D%20as%20partialCsvs%20%7C%20orderBy:%20%27-timestamp%27%20track%20by%20$index%20--%3E%22rderBy:%20%27-timestamp%27
Doesnt even get pasted correctly, lol
@JanDvorak no
Doubles can hold ~15 digits of precision. After that you need something more complex.
18:06
@JanDvorak strings
IIRC there was a way to calculate arbitrary digits
I thought that would be a good test for my job server
@ssube Bignum implemented using Uint32Array
You probably weren't serious
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/09/17/meanwhile-in-a-parallel-universe-2/
CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers
Meanwhile, in a parallel universe…
CommitStrip
1442513343
I have no idea about SAP guys.
Totes.
18:25
If I ever have a kid, I'm naming it with a real number.
Not an imaginary one?
@ssube strings are nice, but you need to know how to manipulate then for your purpose.
That's true of every data-type :P
no, real, so it's a name of infinite length
i would just be confusing as a name.
I guess that's not Complex.
I'll see myself out.
18:28
@SomeKittens there is a way to compute arbitrary digits. It requires math and I've never tried implementing it.
of pi? yea. pretty sure you hav to calculate them in order and there is no way to just get an arbitrary digit, out of order, though
There are equations that can obtain an nth digit.
without computing the prior ones
Yeah
Uno momento
18:30
@JanDvorak yeah, it looks scary
It's a taylor series equation if I remember
The Bailey–Borwein–Plouffe formula (BBP formula) is a spigot algorithm for computing the nth binary digit of pi (symbol: π) using base 16 math. The formula can directly calculate the value of any given digit of π without calculating the preceding digits. The BBP is a summation-style formula that was discovered in 1995 by Simon Plouffe and was named after the authors of the paper in which the formula was published, David H. Bailey, Peter Borwein, and Simon Plouffe. Before that paper, it had been published by Plouffe on his own site. The formula is . The discovery of this formula came as a surprise...
Math always looks scary at first :-D
math is always scary
You should always be afraid of math.
Haskell helps cope with math, though
18:31
It gives you the ability to take one object, cut it up, and make two objects of exactly the same size and shape.
<3 Maths
too many single-char variables
@DaymonSchroeder only in 3d and up
we should do that to our budget, then.
Yeah.
The Banach–Tarski paradox is a theorem in set-theoretic geometry, which states the following: Given a solid ball in 3‑dimensional space, there exists a decomposition of the ball into a finite number of disjoint subsets, which can then be put back together in a different way to yield two identical copies of the original ball. Indeed, the reassembly process involves only moving the pieces around and rotating them, without changing their shape. However, the pieces themselves are not "solids" in the usual sense, but infinite scatterings of points. The reconstruction can work with as few as five pieces...
The axiom of choice though.
Why. You are so handy.
18:33
unlike many other mathamatical concepts, I don't see that one really applying to our tangible '3d' world.
Can we axiomize the existence of God?
It probably doesn't if you are an intuitionist
;)
I don't think I am.
The hairy ball theorem of algebraic topology states that there is no nonvanishing continuous tangent vector field on even-dimensional n-spheres. For the ordinary sphere, or 2‑sphere, if f is a continuous function that assigns a vector in R3 to every point p on a sphere such that f(p) is always tangent to the sphere at p, then there is at least one p such that f(p) = 0. In other words, whenever one attempts to comb a hairy ball flat, there will always be at least one tuft of hair at one point on the ball. The theorem was first stated by Henri Poincaré in the late 19th century. This is famously stated...
my favorite, personally
I mean in the mathematical sense, luggage.
There are differing philosophical groups in mathematics.
18:34
In mathematical measure theory, the sandwich theorem states that given n measurable "objects" in n-dimensional space, it is possible to divide all of them in half (with respect to their measure, i.e. volume) with a single (n − 1)-dimensional hyperplane. It was proposed by Hugo Steinhaus and proved by Stefan Banach (explicitly in dimension 3, without bothering to automatically state the theorem in the n-dimensional case), and also years later called the Stone–Tukey theorem after Arthur H. Stone and John Tukey, == Naming == The ham sandwich theorem takes its name from the case when n = 3 and the...
I mean, I know the world works in unintuitive ways underneath, and some of them I think I understand.
so it's not just "i can't imagine cloning a ball, so it doesn't apply"
Only in 3d and up you have a pair of rotations that generates a free group
VSauce did a video on Banach-Tarski recently: youtube.com/watch?v=s86-Z-CbaHA
Also, that is one sad looking ham sandwich.
crl
crl
Is it good to do a post-redirect-get in an API?
as opposed to just returning the mutated object as the response to a post?
18:37
Math is very intuitive until you try to apply it to the real world
crl
crl
@Luggage *created (mutated are with PUT)
same thing
*some math
I can't answer if it's 'good'. If it's consistent then that's good.
I happen to just have my post/puts return the new object, though.
crl
crl
18:39
@Luggage well there are other operations done, more complex, but well you're right I could manage to make the response from what I have
my post/put happen to accept the same options as a get (like fetch related objects) and are expected to return the same result
but.. i could see that not working for some
crl
crl
yes, trying to do that too
i have real work to do and I'm trying to do it instead of going to play with graphQL / relay.
trying semi-hard..
am I wrong to disagree with the downvote attack on this question?
-3
Q: Why is this webpage not working?

shankyWhen you click on the submit button, it does not display the alert message. While I want to do it the same when I add and handle a few objects, I want it to do the same. However, it works only when you remove the objects and defined search variable, it alerts with the message. <--!DOCTYPE html> ...

@Claies Yes. The question lacks a clear problem statement.
> While I want to do it the same when I add and handle a few objects, I want it to do the same. However, it works only when you remove the objects and defined search variable, it alerts with the message.
ambiguous nouns ftw
18:50
ok, well I can correct the text, but it's mostly just a translation issue, it's clear that English isn't their first language, but it's still not hard to work out what they are trying to do and what's wrong in the code.
Then it's a typo with an unclear question.
Both are close reasons.
This is what happens when you don't know what you're doing with pull requests:
I finally got it... I was getting pretty mad
haha
it's okay, i have no idea how to use git
i've been using a version of bitbucket integrated with VS for the past few months, and i still don't really know what's going on
@Jesse Git operates on tree-like hashes, hash-like trees, heads, chains, and other things you'd find in a German basement.
5
18:56
just feed it in to the sausage maker
WIP 3D game of life
git = life

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