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17:00
Use git on the command line, or find a new job, filthy plebs
@jhawins the git for windows app is garbage for technical users, but i've had success using it with a non-technical person. It even handled some branch reanames and other things automatically for them
omg, nick and I agree on something
user1596138
@ndugger How because of sourcetree?
Oh god, this conversation again
josiah pls
using vscode's thing scares me, always worried it'l commit something i didn't want it to. But it makes doing a diff really quick and easy
17:00
@SterlingArcher admittedly I use sublime for pushing always
user1596138
Because you didn't have him check the rebase instead of merge box lol
It's not my job to teach him how to use bad software
Well, actually, since I was mentoring him, it probably was my job...
oops
user1596138
Such an empty statement...
don't teach people how to use bad software
give them good software
user1596138
What's your good alternative to it
user1596138
17:02
CLI is great, but a waste of time often when you can click once or twice.
CLI is faster, it's composable and easy to automate
git commandline is alright and you can do stuff... but if you're dealing with like 50 projects with even more branches, need to create patchfiles for some commits, create Tags for code releases.. trust me, you want a GUI for that
Mm watcha say?
24 hours ago, by ndugger
I want you all to know that I never know what I'm talking about, and I always make everything up.
anybody who tells any different is entirely clueless
17:02
@jAndy I disagree
I have at least that many projects checked out right now
user1596138
@jAndy Some people will pretend you're wrong, but you're right ;P
also, why are you manually creating tags for your release? The build system should do that for you
after the tests pass and all that
user1596138
@BenjaminGruenbaum It executes fast (exactly as fast as the GUI because it runs the same commands ;)), but it takes longer to use.
I write git scripts in notepad, and execute them in power shell
17:03
tagging in gui interfaces is so, so much better. To see commits and id's just in a very nice fashion
user1596138
There's plenty of reasons to manually tag things.
also creating patches in cli ? like always write down the diff into files manually ?
user1596138
Handling merge conflicts is easier in the GUI
you must have too much time in your hands then
@jhawins you can create a key binding for it - it'll execute as fast as clicking a letter on your keyboard.
user1596138
17:04
Patches, staging and unstaging small hunks line by line
@jhawins yeah, that I agree with, reviewing PRs and so.
@jAndy why are you tagging at all?
why isn't your CI server tagging?
user1596138
Ever stage only part of a file? That's a bitch in CLI.
I use p4merge for merge conflict tool. Not some git GUI
@ssube not every project needs a CI server.
user1596138
17:04
When there's a ton of changes anyway lol
I have nothing against Git in a GUI, but only if you already know how to use Git in the command line. Otherwise, you're just button mashing.
they all support that, from Jenkins to the complex ones
@BenjaminGruenbaum where are you going to run tests?
@ssube we we do tag our codebase in some branches for our QA for instance, so they know where a new software releases begins/ends for instance
@ssube on every build, but those don't have to happen on your server.
user1596138
17:05
@ssube You always assume everyone has your exact architecture, OR, that you are using the perfect arch and everyone should be doing it as well. It's a little annoying sometimes ;P
user1596138
Not everyone has the same (or needs the same) build processes, software, team members etc.
@jhawins I assume people have (or should have) tests and ci. That's not a stretch.
@BenjaminGruenbaum The website sucks, but the browser seems decent
It's also to encourage people who don't have tests or a build script to add those, because they're objectively good.
Tests because tests, build to help folks contribute.
17:06
> We have a micro payments channel to publishers, frictionless and anonymous, under construction, for folks who want no ads and who will pay.
user1596138
There are reasons not to do CI.
fuck you brenden
user1596138
Valid opinions exist other than yours
There's a reason most people get a little ashamed when they admit to not having tests.
user1596138
Now you're insinuating shame for not following your practices. Not everyone needs tests, not everyone needs CI, in fact CI can be harmful in certain teams (from what I have read)
17:07
@ssube there is also a reason most people admit to not having tests.
@BenjaminGruenbaum because testing has yet to catch on in small projects? :(
Although I agree with you, sane projects should have tests and CI. The overhead of setting it up isn't that big.
It's just another tool to learn.
I can understand not having CI. A one-person project doesn't need it at all.
Not having tests is a little harder to justify.
@ssube because testing isn't fun, most people would rather not test because they don't realize they'd spend that time debugging anyway.
Not having a build script (gulp/grunt-style) is especially hard to justify.
17:09
@ssube tests require you to know the specification better up front - some people prefer not to have that because it's more flexible from the get go.
user1596138
@ssube Who said anything about small projects lol
Specifying things is hard.
@ssube webpack
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not sure that's true.
I've written tests early and revised them with the API. It can be tricky, but it's better than no tests.
@ssube unit testing requires a positive amount of work.
and webpack counts
17:09
Not writing them is free, often the system is inherently hard to test.
If the system is hard to test, it's been designed poorly.
"How can I possibly test this function?" is absolutely a code smell.
Let's say I'm writing code that grabs data from a Kitten DB table, writes it to a file and then formats it and presents it in a very specific pixel perfect way to the user.
Testing that sort of thing is at least 3 times as much work as building it from scratch as a standalone project.
yes
So why does it seem always like a big jump to jump for me to jump in to a new library or API using just doucmentaton with no guidance of questions >
@ssube well, abstractions aren't free either.
17:11
I want to see all the components and know which languages support which comonents of the API and which don't
Abstracting code makes it harder, having a global db is object is simpler to grasp than having an instance injected to you - and you don't need help from the framework.
a more intro like thing
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's written in JS
@BenjaminGruenbaum True. Once you've started with a lazy design, it's hard to test and hard to fix.
user1596138
@ssube why don't you just make an image of your build servers/desktop environment/code styles/testing practices/fashion style and distribute it throughout the community so everyone finally has a "good" setup ;P
17:12
To argue semantics, though, you don't need a framework for DI.
Im like wtf is all this and only half learn the aPI for what I need
@jhawins I have/am.
The code/testing stuff is in my web template and I'm working on polishing a Puppet module that will spin up a full build/test stack
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, but using Electron
user1596138
Good. You're the one that said no logic in the render method too right?
@copy probably not. No way JS can do that.
user1596138
17:13
Anyway, I need to work.
@ssube yes, but sometimes lazy design is good enough.
@jhawins no, in the template (if your templates are a separate file)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not a fan.
I enjoy making a clean API, writing docs and tests, etc.
That's probably why I got sidemoted from dev to devops
@ssube if I give you a short 3 hour task your code better not have a whole architecture around it.
17:14
Jon has too many badges...
@BenjaminGruenbaum but it will be a module you can include later with some basic doc comments. If I have spare time, it'll have unit tests and lint.
@ssube would you really mock out things like XMLHttpRequest and inject them in a 3 hour task?
Architecture is something you grow, refactoring is a natural part. It's OK to start with "lazy" and move forward.
@BenjaminGruenbaum depends on the language, tbh. With JS, maybe. I have mocks of that lying around to copy.
Yeah, I'm convinced that Brendan Eich's new browser is just bullshit.
17:16
I'm a huge fan of making things reusable because I reuse my own code all the time.
yeah, when it comes to testing javascript code i have a setup that i just copy around.
@ndugger I'm just worried it means he'll have less time to work on JS.
The web-template project I put on github is based on two identical projects I set up for work, and I've based stuff on it since, etc
@ssube I'm a fan of keeping things simple - when that aligns that's great.
user1596138
@ndugger lol so the anti-tracking/ads browser injects tracking code
17:17
@BenjaminGruenbaum Have you ever seen the talk about easy vs simple?
He has such good ideas... first javascript, then a browser that blocks ads but then resells that ad space for his own personal gain. What's next? A browser made entirely in javascript? Oh wait...
Hrm, fuck I forgot that socket disconnects are tricky as fuck
Because there's a huge difference between reload, exit, or signal loss
Yet they all use the same event
but i don't really write that many tests, I haven't quite wrapped my head around the need for having more than say integration tests on an api. I don't care what the methods do within the api call, all i care about is that when i request x, i get x, or that when i do something that should cause an error it does. I don't see much point in having a test that tests whether or not method x calls method y.
user5503464
17:19
pls check this https://jsfiddle.net/7pLsqhkg/3/ .if i want to add price for that particular model ?.i have added text box but when i submit it did't get value i am getting undefined
@ssube 15 times
!!afk
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'd argue that testing and docs fall on simple. Skipping those is easy, but not worth it.
Plus, after enough little projects that end up growing, you get a feel for what you'll probably need.
Someone metioned the logo of the company that I work for news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10939410
//socket routing
let bucket = {}; //i haz a bukkit
io.sockets.on("connection", socket => {
	if (socket.request.sessionID && !bucket[socket.request.sessionID]) {
		bucket[socket.request.sessionID] = socket.id; //nuuu they stealin mah bukkit
	}
	socket.on('disconnect', function () {
        console.log('Client disconnected');
        delete bucket[socket.request.sessionID];
        io.sockets.emit('disconnect');
    });
});
Instead of starting with a bad API and 80% of the work ahead of you, you start closer to 50% and go from there.
17:21
Small world
Does this make sense for a socket disconnection? I have a bucket, and on disocnnection, remove from bucket. Re-add when reconnected
@ndugger Doesn't even build on my laptop
That should recover a session if reload, but remove is exitted
@SterlingArcher doesn't both reloading the page and exiting cause the same disconnect? how would that allow reload to keep the same session?
17:22
hi
Alright, well enough of that; his browser is bad, and he should feel bad.
@KevinB yes, that's why the connection retains the session, so that you can be readded to the bucket with the same session, and your new socket.id
user1596138
lol @ndugger Eich is on the board for Sonobi the company he is injecting tracking codes from too sonobi.com/welcome/company.php
Great, I spend half a day optimizing a webpage and then someone adds a 4500x3006 image that weighs 4.7MB to the frontpage
user5503464
2
Q: How to make chckbox list based on checkbox check nd uncheck using angularjs?

komalI have object which contains mobile brand with models.i have included my object here angular.module('myApp', []) .controller("myCntrl", function ($scope) { $scope.items= [{ id: "986745", brandname: "Nokia", modelname: "Lumia 735 TS" }, { id: "896785", brandname: "No...

17:23
I don't speak spooderman
user1596138
They're just trying to make more money, go figure.
@ivarni welcome to my world, hah.
He should do something more productive, like write a programming language
add in lazy loading of videos/content below the fold, then they add in some huge high quality graphic for the slider at the top.
@ndugger It's just an electron fork ;;
17:25
more meetings
!!afk sprint planning
Even says "This is an electron fork with minor modifications" in the readme
@Cereal Yeah, it's a browser built with javascript, on top of electron, that blocks ads but then replaces them with his own ad slots that websites/companies can micro-pay for their content to show up. This sounds like the stupidest idea.
Nobody is going to use it
lolwut
It's not even a good idea
that sounds absurd
17:28
@KevinB So after tonight, I should skyrocket and start catching up to you.
shouldn't be hard if you run with a group, all i do is solo
@KevinB I run solo too. Firebird's just isn't a speed running set is all. I just need Goldskin and Avarice's, and I'll be melting with this amazing build.
random question guys
does anyone of you use bower ?
because i feel like it's doing the same thing as npm, and would rather just have one
@KevinB why ?
17:32
npm can do client scripts too; I'm with Kevin, I'd rather just use one
@ton.yeung , does it help cut development Time ?
can you do imports with bower as easily as you can with npm?
haven't used bower since i began writing mostly es6 code
imports look inside of node_modules automatically. It does not look inside of bower_modules, or whatever it is. You can probably configure your webpack or whatever to handle it. though
i am talking specifically about "speed" .. I know bower helps you easily import plugins etc , but i want to know if it actually helps in "SPEEDING UP" workflow
@AlexanderSolonik not really
bower was useful for a bit, then folks started packaging their libraries for NPM
now most of what you need can just be installed normally
17:34
if you mean build speed, probably not going to be any different. development speed, depends on how well you know each tool.
I am basically looking for making an exhaustive list of front end modern day tools that help decrease the "development Time" ..
EG.
well, they both do.
why an exhaustive list?
both are faster than using git or copying from git with a browser.
17:35
Gulp, webpack, npm, babel, browserify
that's your list
@ton.yeung not anymore
I use grunt !
grunt is the less hip and cool version of gulp
who needs 15k temp files lying around?
there are some things grunt just can't do (well) because it has to write the file out
the sourcemap-through-multiple-tools bit is a good example
i used it for one project, liked it, but liked the looks of gulp better so used it going forward.
17:37
to do what webpack does (babel, bundle, minify), grunt has to create the babel out + map, bundle out + map, minify out + map, etc
it's one file for each step, doubled for maps
gulp uses a pair of streams
I used grunt for a couple of weeks before switching to gulp, and never looking back
oh, and add require.js to your list as well
thanks guys
Some of the tools in the list will conflict with eachother, but the main points you need to make are for: transpiling and modules/module bundlers
webpack makes require.js unnecessary
Sure, if you decide to use webpack
17:42
@ndugger what does webpack do? in 18 words or less..
if you want to use modules without webpack, you're gonna have a bad time :(
@rlemon replaces r.js. Transpile, concat, minify, bundle.
@ssube browserify bundles and compiles for me
Understands ES6 modules and external deps.
and gulp tooling already has everything else :D
Webpack is to browserify what gulp is to grunt.
Slightly more polished, same shtick.
17:43
ok
dugger listed them both
it sounded like he used them together
that would be weird, if he does
isn't webpack much more generic?
bundling assets et al
generic and composable (better plugin handling, easier pattern matching)
@rlemon Webpack is essentially an alternative taskrunner for your client-side code that will also bundle non-js dependencies using "loaders"
17:44
same advantages gulp has over grunt
webpack can, in theory, replace gulp for most of your build. @Loktar does that, I don't like it.
I don't think webpack is as good at running tests and the like.
I'm perfectly fine with webpack doing all client-side building. Obviously, I prefer gulp for node scripts
Hello guys. Can I ask about usage of Git ?
@Juntae Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
If I 'git clone' in another computer, and edit some codes, then How can I push it?
'git push'
17:48
I did : git init -> git remote add origin url -> git add . -> git commit -m "hi"
and finally, 'git push origin master ' ----> rejected
rejected why? We can't read your computer's mind
the massage is...
The current branch master has no upstream branch.
To push the current branch and set the remote as upstream, use
use what?
git push --set-upstream origin master
so ..
type git push --set-upstream origin master and hit enter
17:50
It gave you the answer...
after that you can just use git pull or git push
but another error message come out. , ,
And are we expected to know that error as well?
Come on, out with it
$ git push --set-upstream origin master
To https://github.com/bexoss/mygit.git
! [rejected] master -> master (non-fast-forward)
error: failed to push some refs to 'https://github.com/bexoss/mygit.git'
hint: Updates were rejected because the tip of your current branch is behind
hint: its remote counterpart. Integrate the remote changes (e.g.
hint: 'git pull ...') before pushing again.
hint: See the 'Note about fast-forwards' in 'git push --help' for details.
hint: 'git pull ...') before pushing again.
17:51
did you select "make me a readme" on github?
no, i didn;t
oh, it's now working
but this is very complicated to me,
it'll get simpler.
once you know what all these terms mean.
are you familiar with another source control tool?
Thanks. I hope it.
No,
First time, I don't know even SVN.
don't go thinking of git (or source control in general) as some 'extra step'. You'll learn to depend on it.
I'm just doing with hobby,
17:55
Lucky you :p
@NickBarone Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
@Juntae you're lucky
You don't even need to know what SVN is in order to use Git
programming, it is fun
CVS is even worse
17:55
Yeah, and Walgreens
Source Safe is the worst.
worse than no source control
haha
the only time i'll ever say that
i could work with CVS, if i had to. I'd hate it, but i could
git will be around in 10 years.
I... broke up with my girlfriend
because of this ,
I spend whole my time on this,
17:58
she wouldn't use source control? i would, too.
Haha.. .she is teacher,
don't know about it .. sorry for understand your joke
english is not my mother language
I broke up with my girlfriend because she used comma first.
haha
It' s 3 a.m. in here,

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