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17:00
I always forget about Intl
can it do stuff now?
does everyone support Intl?
hey @BenjaminGruenbaum, the next time you get awfully bored, wanna take a look at these suggestions for :: bind and pipeline?
@FlorianMargaine That gets the duration, which is no problem, but if I have a timeline of the day I am having trouble displaying the blocks correctly
So I was watching season 7 of family guy.. and I realize that they predicted Bruce Jenner's sex change years ago. How nuts is that?
I remember reading somewhere that node.js doesn't have Intl
17:00
@SterlingArcher plot twist: Bruce Jenner is actually the producer, so he just told them
Is there an unrevoke() method for proxies?
@ssube read that already
I watch that repo
thoughts? impressions? disgust?
Honestly, I like :: the way it works now, and I only care about infix notation for objects. I only care that I get to do obj(someOperator)method where method is not on the object's prototype.
17:02
> the pipeline operator (let's say ~>, for this example)
"jizz arrow"
like PHP
~o is the jizz operator
what stage is ::?
17:03
isn't pipe | ?
@BenjaminGruenbaum the ~> rfc passed?
yeah, that one
@BenjaminGruenbaum But they haven't decided how :: should work yet, especially when it comes to new (#25) or instance method references.
I'm fine with both of them throwing, the primary use case is just so important all these other ones are negligible compared to it.
17:05
which one do you consider primary?
data ~> map(fn)?
yes
binding a method to an object in a scoped way.
hm. I care way more about getting references to bound methods than the pipelining side of it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I would personally like PHP to introduce scalar methods first
together, though, is where they actually get interesting
@AwalGarg lol
17:07
?
@ssube any other cheap thing that I could use for backculling without having to implement the matrix system?
@ssube why? You could just .bind. This proposal is about sugar and not functionality.
Think about how underscore/lodash could look with it, about how easy objects would be to safely extend. Think about what it means for value objects.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It is sugar, but the terseness makes functional stuff (especially the pipeline/abstract methods) much cleaner.
@FlorianMargaine The Darklord Awal Garg aka Rash never gives up.
17:08
@ssube right, it's basically ```` in Haskell, just infix notation.
The binding references exist mostly to support the abstract methods.
@AwalGarg Is that an anagram of your name?
O_O
well, it is. Please don't go finding the original name :(
I already did
17:10
Yeah, like a year ago
@AwalGarg Why the surprised face? That was just so obvious :P
But nobody will post it here
right
@Zirak because I don't remember talking about it to badgercat
It's right here in your file
@BadgerCat the file they'll tell you doesn't exist?
17:13
She has your personal record
@ssube which file?
@ssube supposedly
hah! I keep forgetting about it
morning
yep, I find it pretty cool
17:14
Morning kittens
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/09/18/pre-commit-hook-some-are-more-equal-than-others/
CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers
Pre-commit hook: some are more equal than others
CommitStrip
1442596310
Is this website up checker working because they append the url in xmlhttp.open?
function checkserver(str) {
    if (window.XMLHttpRequest) {
        xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
    } else {
        xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
    }
    xmlhttp.onreadystatechange = function () {
        if (xmlhttp.readyState == 4 && xmlhttp.status == 200) {
            var checkresults = xmlhttp.responseText.split("|");
            document.getElementById("serverdata").innerHTML = checkresults[0];
it's because they are having the server do it
not the browser
k, ty @Luggage
the browser asks 1 server (same domain) and that server can do whatever it wants
17:22
This might be a good cross-browser solution: html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/cors
@BenjaminGruenbaum Would love to have that in es. When I thought of it, I thought we can "solve" it like we used to put everything in one big object, so we can do Array.prototype.myAwesomeLib.shuffle, but obviously that won't work because of the this binding. Googled and found lea.verou.me/2015/04/… which says "not-possible". Experimented myself and changed that to "possible". But not a clean solution anyways :(
Oh cool, Lea, she's a friend
She's not a JS programmer though, she's more on the CSS side
People good at CSS are god send
crl
crl
ï¼ 
!important
17:32
require "execjs"
ExecJS.eval "'red yellow blue'.split(' ')"
# => ["red", "yellow", "blue"]
Why
"I really want to run javascript in my ruby"
We've all had those days
JS is meant to be an embedded language. Don't see why not, at-least for science.
@AwalGarg memory
JS uses memory way too dynamically to be an effective embedded language today
it's very memory efficient, but stillrather dynamic with it
ruby isn't dynamic enough?
about memory, anyone heard about clojurescript?
17:35
allocating memory is expensive on a normal machine and often not something you can do at all on an embedded one
JS makes that tricky, since hashes and the like are constantly changing memory structures
user406009
@towc Yeah. It's quite cool.
user406009
I love the way atoms work in clojurescript.
@ssube you know I won't understand any of that shit, right?
:P
the thing with it is that it uses a pretty cool memory management system for arrays and objects
@AwalGarg sure you will
17:36
@ssube He's not saying embedded as in "embedded machine", but as in "embedded inside another system"
new is evil
@Zirak oh
@ssube so, Haskell?
every node of an array has an address for example, and arrays if the have the same nodes (like numbers, strings, whatever, not just objects like JS) share the same address
As a scripting language, like Rhino
Also, js has actually been running on embedded systems. Apparently successfully, too. Weird.
which means that in ClojureScript if you had an array with 1000 items, and wanted to create one like the one before, but with one more element, in your memory you just have 2 more things: the new array and the new element
user406009
17:37
@JanDvorak Haskell also has allocation issues like JS.
@Zirak right
@Lalaland but no new
@towc It inherited that scheme from Clojure (obviously), and it's pretty cool. It's called persistent data structures, lemme find a lecture link
user406009
Anyways, anyone thinking of embedding should look into twistedmatrix.com/users/glyph/rant/extendit.html
user406009
It's quite a good argument against embedding.
17:39
@Zirak don't bother, I just care about the basic concept
and how JS doesn't implement it ;)
user406009
@towc Immutable-JS
@towc You should, it's an interesting subject
user406009
Anyways, those persistent data structures cost a lot of allocations.
@towc JS does the same things with strings
17:40
Oh I just remembered I promised to link that to @Mosho, so there you go (infoq link above, we talked about it about...half a year ago?)
it's called "interning"
@Zirak I have so much more on my mind right now, bookmarked ;)
@AwalGarg Thanks for the moz article :)
much more useful
and immutability is a requirement for it
user406009
@FlorianMargaine Nah, copy-on-write
17:41
@Lalaland well, I guess, but it's much more cumbersome to manage, isn't it?
@Lalaland COWs are expensive
Your allocation cost is linear to the number of destructive operations
my usb stick is both a hermes device and has a fat32 partition of 1.9GB :-)
(I allocated 2MB to the hermes part.)
user406009
@FlorianMargaine Yeah, and there are other issues as well with concurrency. IIRC C++ banned COW strings lately due to those issues.
17:42
@FlorianMargaine Hurray!
Windows may give you flack for it, it's weird about partitions on a usb stick
@Zirak is it?
I'm using a DOS partition table, it should be fine
@JanDvorak lol
Looks just at the first partition IIRC
@Lalaland they did no such thing
17:43
the standard library doesn't use COW strings because they weren't worth the trouble
user406009
65
Q: Legality of COW std::string implementation in C++11

acmIt had been my understanding that copy-on-write is not a viable way to implement a conforming std::string in C++11, but when it came up in discussion recently I found myself unable to directly support that statement. Am I correct that C++11 does not admit COW based implementations of std::string...

but you can't "ban" something in a language, especially not one as mushy as C++
@Zirak I guess I should change the order then github.com/ralt/hermes/commit/…
@Lalaland yeah, stdlib doesn't use them
Is it really important to use mocha or some other thing when gist.github.com/awalGarg/34b0b9f9c6f54c1656a4 does everything I need?
17:45
@AwalGarg you don't have to, but doing it yourself will get out of control real quick
@Lalaland I guess you meant "C++ banned COW on std::string", then
@ssube elaborate?
user406009
@FlorianMargaine Yes. I should have been more clear.
@AwalGarg You can roll your own of almost anything, but is it worth chasing down that rabbit hole?
@AwalGarg at some point, you'll probably want to integrate with a CI, then have some pretty graphs, etc etc.
17:46
@ssube Doesn't mean I shouldn't roll out anything at all.
Mocha does a lot of things that are essentially a waste of your time, like handling exceptions and logging correctly
@ssube Moo
So right now, with one test, you can probably use your own
Im not having much luck.. would it be possible to develop a working CORS request ( that just returns a 200, 500 etc for any given URL) using JSFiddle or the like?
But if you use Mocha now, you'll be able to keep writing tests and won't have to rewrite them after you have a few dozen
When you want to test in a browser, Mocha works with Karma, and your tests don't
17:47
@jojo No, unless you can convince every possible site to put in a CORS header for you
I'd use this for my day-to-day modules and leave mocha for bigger projects.
ftr @ssube no rewriting of tests. those three functions are mocha api compatible.
The answer will always be the same. You wan to make web request to arbitray URLs on a different host, then the server must do it
@Luggage, ahh I suspected that.. ty..
@Luggage oh damn.. just to get a response? yikes
I'll ignore any further "can i get the browser to do it if..." questions. It's been answered
No is that answer
aight, I will use a C# WebMethod
thanks bro
17:49
@Luggage can the browser display images?
yes..
@Luggage YOU LIED!
1 min ago, by Luggage
No is that answer
@FlorianMargaine He did? explain
don't confuse him :)
@JoJo it was a joke
17:51
LOL :P
@JoJo keep writing your C# WebMethod
aight lol
he's referring to how SOME requests to foreign sites are OK, like getting images and scripts (used in JSONP), but that doesn't help you
Thanks for the weakmap answer @Benjamin :) I still don't fully understand how it fixes the memory leak though
user406009
@ZachSaucier Yeah, weakmaps are quite cool.
17:55
I suppose I don't really do the type of JS programming that uses these new ES6 features right now
you'll always find need of the lambdas
Sure, some features are always applicable
weakmaps have limited uses (but it's really useful for them)
many other es6 features, especially the sugar, are useful
fat arrows and const are the features I like the most
the ${} in console.log('Text ${val}'); inside a function referring to the parameters is ES6, right? I'm surprised Ben didn't use it in his weakmaps answer I linked
17:58
you have to use backticks, not quotation marks
user406009
The main usecase I have for weakmaps is attaching "metadata" to things.
user406009
Like I have a logging class.
user406009
And it uses weakmaps to track when items are created.
What's ${} called?
user406009
17:59
So when I log, I can tell you how long that thing has been around.
@Lalaland I am still confused when to use a weakmap and when to use a proxy in reference to that type of thing
do you understand, at a high level, garbage collection?
Not very well, haha
"collects and disposes of unused variables" is about what my impression is
then that might be why :). So JS and many other languages don't force you to explicitly say "i'm done with this object, you can remove it from ram, please". They can just tell when it's not used anymore. They do that by looking for variables that still point tot he object.
once no more pointers, the object is eligible to be garbage collected.
right, I understand that
18:05
WeakMap lets you attach data to an object, but it's special in that it doesn't prevent garbage collection like any other poitner would.
it's a "weak" pointer
as in, not a real one
well, it's a real one
right. So a proxy would keep track of it and prevent garbage collection then?
but it's one that the garbage collector can say "ok, you're garbage anyway"
not sure how proxies do thier job or how/if they are realted to this
I just saw a use case of proxies being used to count the number of time something was called is all
18:06
BAM!
{StatusCode: 200, ReasonPhrase: 'OK', Version: 1.1, Content: System.Net.Http.StreamContent, Headers:
{
Pragma: no-cache
Vary: Accept-Encoding
Vary: User-Agent
X-Time: D=8305
Keep-Alive: timeout=15
Connection: Keep-Alive
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Cache-Control: no-store
Date: Fri, 18 Sep 2015 18:05:56 GMT
P3P: policyref="http://www.mylife.com/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="NOI DSP COR NID ADMa OUR NOR"
Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=FE0495BDAF28B1F53DE3D1D1C3313167; Path=/; Secure; HttpOnly
Server: Apache
Content-Language: en-US
I know they're capable of a lot more than just that though
oh, nice, 10k watchers
wahoo
The non-optimized grid
have to go to class again. Thanks for all the help today! Much more useful than some other days I try to get info in here, hahaha
18:09
thanks for the compliment w/ matching complaint?
:)
hehe, the star list if a bunch of derogatory and off-topic stuff, with YourAdrenalineFix ranting about how we jerks took a conversation completely off topic.
This has been a productive day
Yours is on top :-)
Ha! There's nothing star-worthy about my incompetence!
@SomeKittens What's that
!!tell ZachSaucier eval var foo = 'template string'; console.log(This is called a ${foo});
18:20
@Nick Command > does not exist. Did you mean: d, ^, π (note that /tell works on commands, it's not an echo.)
well shit
@copy We're using UI-Grid which has a lot of options to optimize for large data sets, which are currently off.
and so things are sluggish
Oh, Angular watchers, not human watchers
!!tell Nick eval 4+4
18:21
right
this is painfully sexy
@Nick 8
@Cereal it lasts for more than 4 hours?
@Zirak fine
@ZachSaucier "undefined" Logged: "This is called a template string"
18:22
Well now he has to look up 8ish messages to see the code
cap pls
are there any websites that can locate a website that might be down right now? I just want to test against a site that is currently down
he wants to know a specific site that is currently down
lol, yes any famouse sites that are down currently
phpisagoodlanguage.com – forever offline
18:27
just do a DDOS on facebook.
haha
@copy thanks
crl
crl
!!>'․'==='.'
@crl false
18:40
!!> console.log('․'.charCodeAt(0), '.'.charCodeAt(0))
@SomeGuy "undefined" Logged: 8228,46
crl
crl
18:51
there should be a ?? operator in js, ( x ?? 'not x' equivalent to x ? x : 'not x' )
That's literally ||
crl
crl
true thanks, I think it's used like that in c#: x==null ?? 'not x' equivalent to x==null ? x : 'not x'
wait, you mean a ternary?
x ? y : z
nope, nevermind
@crl you mean just x ?? "not x"?
crl
crl
19:12
but js hasn't only null like c#, it has undefined, etc..
Yeah, that would just be the 'or' operator in JS
x || y
crl
crl
yes, I didn't notice
@Cereal make an issue
be careful though, it will check for falsey, and 0 is falsey
as is an empty string
crl
crl
and empty array
19:15
!!> [] == false
@rlemon true
ohh, nvm
I thought you were questioning it
Empty array is trueish
!!> !![]
@copy true
crl
crl
!!> []==false && ![]==false
19:18
Yeah, objects are truish
@crl true
@rlemon github link?
If i am doing 2d canvas stuff, is there a performance benefit to use webGL ?
19:25
yes
how come it has better performance? what does it do differently?
@Dave it does everything differently. It may be faster.
It uses OpenGL instead of whatever bitmap-based stuff canvas uses.
so does it use the computer's hardware better or something ?
usually, yeah
darn, guess i better try it out then
19:28
you can make 2dcontext fast
but webgl is usually faster
i hope its not too difficult to learn xD
I've been trying to take advantage of webgl via Pixi.js, and it's written pretty weirdly. I don't like their api at all
the 2dcontext is getting noticeably slower when i try to get my galaxy more detailed
the way their objects work isn't helpful to any real examples
@Dave it's super complex
use a library
it's very rare that you need to use a graphics API directly
19:30
@Dave link?
sec, let me make a fiddle of it
there's a weird visual bug when rotating it, makes these square shapes appear briefly
arc + fill is expensive
if you can figure out how to do it without (hint, draw once, store that canvas, drawImage)
you should speed it up
so draw lots of little canvas' ?
that's what I do; it's really effective
yup
make each particle its own canvas
19:34
okay. do you see a visual bug when it starts to rotate?
like a strange grid appears
no
@Nick my god this mead is amazing
canvi
My cider is gonna be shit
@Dave That's really nice!
it is like a mix between white wine and ice wine on sweetness, and nice smooth lemon flavour with probably about 12%ABV
19:37
fancy schmancy
you can make it
I have the recipe
supppper easy
1.5kg honey, 3 cups white sugar, 4 cans lemonade from concentrate, water, yeast, nutrient + time === delicious mead.
guys, is it possible to add if statements as a value in an object key?
today I'm bottling it. then in that carboy I'm putting 13L of pressed cider, 1 cup white sugar, 2 cups brown sugar, 3 cans lemonade from concentrate, water, and yeast.
I even tried wrapping that in a function but I get expected expression, got keyword 'else'
should be good, I hope
trying for a lemon/apple cider
19:41
@Asperger What? No.
@JanDvorak that sucks. Would have been great to be able to create new instances of an if statement
How would that even work?
what?
you can put functions on an object key, which is probably waht you want.
@rlemon define "nutrient"
19:43
Maybe you want a getter?
soemObject.someKey = function() { if (1 < 0) return "OMGWTFBBQ!": };
What are you trying to do?
@Luggage actually yes, jsfiddle.net/cc1r3rrk
your first word inside the function: else
well I want to create new if else instances any time I want
that's not valid
19:46
oh crap
you are right
@Asperger wat
try Nick's sample
@ssube diammonium phosphate
19:49
@Luggage thanks for shaking me awake. jsfiddle.net/cc1r3rrk/1
your code still makes no sense. you are re-using the variable 'one' for multiple uses
tell us what you are trying to accomplish. Not you solution, but the problem.
@Luggage actually variable one will change depending on the fed in parameter. If you mean the value of my key, I will make the values dynamic too.
oh.
what I am trying to do is to allow the user, or someone to create breakpoints. Lets say they want that "if" which checks for browserWidth.width < 500, then later create a new object which which checks browserWidth.width > 1200
breakpoints are a development thing.. i'm thinking/hoping that's not what youreally mean
watching TNG, they're talking about Cardassians.. gf from the other room says "why is star trek care about the kardashians?"
so instead of me having to manually add those I would just have to do something like var bigScreens = new one("", "", "");
19:54
I always thought the opposite.. when did Cardassians get their own show?
@Luggage what do you mean by development thing?
a breakpoints is pausing executnio of code, somethign that happens while you are developeing/testing, but not something you typically make code to do
Im not trying to replace media queries but im trying to achieve something specific so I need that functionality
hang on.
19:55
so.. 'events' are what you are dealing with.
@ssube so you gonna make some hooch?
I actually dont mean what you are thinking. I just call it breakpoints since the user can add new window.Width checks
so basically creating a new if statement of that style is what I call a breakpoint since it does something similar to media queries
@Nick makeup aside, dude has a freakishly long neck
aye
ok, well.. every0ne calls those events, you you can use some other programming term if you want
you'll find all sorts of very misleading info in your searches, though
19:57
Ok, events.
This is an apple. I like to call them oranges.
ok, who is your user? an end-user of an app, or another developer using your code?
Just me lol
Since im learning javascript the hard way, without jquery.
but, at run-time or in code, when are you deciding on this 500px threshold?
that is the easy way
So im trying to push myself the entire time
I wrap that on a onResize.
19:59
so.. just learn how to register and listen to an event, and put an if stament inside the handler to filter to the size range you want.

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