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14:00
In the same way that infinite monkeys on typewriters will eventually output some elegant prose.
ah webRTC sounds neat, but what i really need is just a front end widget that display users, and text nicely, and has some place to attach onEvent calls.
Don't be lazy
i guess ill probably have to roll my own, then have people shout at me that i should have used XYZ widget that would save me hours of work and had support
@Luggage it's just random people asking, random people answering, that's a good norm
14:02
its a trade off of what i want people shouting at me
Such is the way of the internet
start looking at who's asking or who's answering, then you might direct yourself to a psychiatric chat room
I know! Lets start over!
Hi....guys....Is there anything like tokenizer in js that will tokenize js code....some like token_get_all method in php....
Hi guys, i have rolled my own javascript chat room widget , do you think other people would want to use it if i made it open source?
14:04
Why is Server-Side rendering supposed to be special?
@Greg no
why not?
(this is where you point me to another js chat widget that is so much better)
@corvid uhh, well, it sort of let's you get the content instantly when you retrieve the initial document... doesn't mean much if you still have to pull in all your application sources before the content becomes interactive
it's still an improvement over client-side rendering (pull in document with references to sources, wait a long time until they're retrieved, pull in content and render it)
But then you have to duplicate your logic
14:11
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm gonna assume you're repping my dope testing obsession skills instead of just being a smartass :P
Am I really advocating client side rendering here? :-(
@ndugger Really that is an awful service for my application.
Then make your own
@JanDvorak you better be
@ndugger Go do a pull up.
14:12
But... why?
@JanDvorak Usually a good idea to offload rendering to the client if you dont have security or bandwidth concerns
@JanDvorak if your data+scripts is cheaper than your markup, make the client render it
@JanDvorak you can always say "progressive rendering", add many exclamation points, followed by many 1s, maybe throw your hands in the air as well \o/
Speaking of bandwidth... sending this message has been retried 1 times
@Greg I've never heard of this before, so use at your own risk conversejs.org
14:17
Hmmm that might have the widgets i need
Stop saying widgets; this isn't 2007
widgets widgets widgets
i love widgets
kill me
they're "components" now
14:17
its 2016 and JS still doesn't have enough widgets
but still actually widgets
... oooh.
@ssube components components components!
i feel like the js/html widget base is somewhere around where C# was in 2005
!!youtube developers developers developers
14:18
@JanDvorak Something went on fire; status 403
@Greg because it's not 2017 yet!
the youtube command has been broken for a week or so now
@Greg If you want a larger list of JS widgets, just search for "jquery plugins"... You'll get what you're looking for, and then you'll cry yourself to sleep.
@ndugger It'll be broken until something working comes around for the Google search api.
@Greg come back in a year, there'll be a component manager of the day, we'll just look up #team #video #chat and pull out something that you can throw in with a few lines and grab a beer on Mondays
Can't @rlemon just scrape the search page?
14:20
a business man in UAE has spend 4.3 millions euro for a license plate that only contains this: "1".
@FilipDupanović ever heard of React?
i was like "GG"
i.imgur.com/CEF7Kxx.png Microsoft really needs to chill
@ndugger Thank you for asking me to search for widgets on google, i had not thought of this before, and my opinion on JS lacking widgets was not formed by doing a review of the current UI base and comparing it to the 2005 .NET of C# which i also am not familar with.
@Greg it's not great, but some of the React-compatible Material projects are starting to put together good stuff, since they actually have a standard front-end and back-end to work with.
14:21
@KarelG On the upside, it could confuse the hell out of some of the cops' electronic systems.
@Greg I don't think you read very well. I did not suggest that you search for "widgets" on google.
@ssube Yea thats good, i've been seeing alot of progress in the last year or so, especially with ecma6 and node js bringing in more users.
@Greg *that's, *a lot
Hey, looking for a nice programming language to write a TCP server as an exercise for my students.
Any recommendations?
jquery
14:23
The middle letter of TCP is C.
How long can a GET request be?
@JanDvorak meh, if the program isn't able to read the plate, it will be enqueued in a queue for manual checking.
@Abhishrek too long
apparently not long enough, data I can pass in GET
14:23
@Benjamin how experienced are the students and how close to the metal do you want it?
one of our since-fired developers managed to put together some 40k requests, which we had to tweak haproxy settings to handle
You could always have them use some Berkely sockets =D
Berkeley*
But if its a web course, node.js might be an easier introduction
NodeJS ftw
don't write a TCP server in node, it has terrible bitmask/int handling
Are they implementing TCP, or something on top of raw TCP? In the former case, C
:-(
you called homer a son of a bitch.
> Something something Bush did 911
gj establishing the emergency services hotline bush
@KendallFrey hah
I turned on Architechs... and it fucking worked
What sorcery is this gif
so... that's just a copy of the spider-man gif?
the wizards be calling it rhythm
@SterlingArcher BLACK WATER AT THE GATES OF HEAVEN!
@SterlingArcher I used to have one like that, but it was a topless woman with full sleeves firing a 9mm
14:40
@GNi33 did you see Hatebreed dropped a new album?
the gunshots were timed perfectly to match any song
back when titsthatjiggleabit was a site
topless with full sleeves? How does that work?
yeah, but I've only listened to it for a short period
@JanDvorak tattoos
oh. Ew.
14:41
I should give it some more attention I guess
I love a woman with sleeves
@JanDvorak naaaaah.
@GNi33 listen to "Something's Off"
It's goooooood
freaking Hatebreed
14:42
@SterlingArcher there's a girl who I've run into quite a few times now at shows (at this one particular venue) who has a 3/4 sleeve on her left? arm and a dragon on her right? ribs, from shoulder to hip. It's fucking great.
I've seen them around '03. First time I actually saw what violent dancing really means. Some of the guys in the crowd were fucking nuts
First time I ran into her she used me and my roommate to cut in line then bought me a shot of rumps :D
@ssube see I don't meet enough tatted women :(
All the ones I meet are "professionals" or "bearded" or "not women"
Professional, bearded, tattooed women?
@SterlingArcher I had an interesting exchange on tinder yesterday
14:44
Was it a bitcoin exchange?
A scam
@Luggage internet dating, a scam? nowaiman
> Me: I was confused for a moment; your picture of you in a recycling bin makes it look as if you have no legs!
Her: Haha it was a magic bin, it helped me grow them back!
Me: I'd still think you were cute even without legs. Yes, I did just say that.
Her: Oh shit, son. Smooth as butter
!!afk standup
> you were cute even without legs
14:45
> ndugger: I'd still think you were cute even without legs.
@SterlingArcher oh, I like it
@ndugger lmao
will probably not get my favorite Hatebreed album, but that's near to impossible anyways
How do I avoid importing the express modules twice, when separating my routes from my main app.js? Even if I import it in the main server fail after the imports, I still get an undefined error
14:51
@ssube Oh, I totally forgot to try and snap it, but I saw a dude with a squid hat while I was in Dubuque. Granted, it wasn't as nice as yours though.
@SvetanDimoff importing modules twice isn't a problem, node will only load and parse them once.
@ssube So, it knows?
@ssube I see
14:53
@Megaplex lol nice. Most aquariums seem to have them, so I'm surprised more people don't walk around with squid hats
@SterlingArcher ugh
although, did I tell you I'm getting another tank and some more flavors to mix?
I want one with no nicotine just to play with
squid hat? Hegh that must be a funny sight
@ssube Well, Dubuque has the Mississippi River Museum, which is pretty cool. Most of it's pretty static, but they have a couple things that change every couple months. Currently their big exhibit is dinosaurs.
@ssube Does that mean you're going to start doing Vape Offs?
@Megaplex hell no. I just like blowing smoke rings when I'm sitting in the basement playing video games.
sometimes you just want to sit around in a squid hat, eating chips and blowing smoke rings
@ssube I saw some guys doing that downtown here. I was really fighting the urge to smash their vape pens.
@Megaplex I only screw around with it at home or in the smoking area at shows. Just walking down the street, it may as well be a normal cig because I don't own a fedora.
having a vape is bad enough thanks to those assholes, but no longer wanting to smoke real cigarettes is actually worth it
14:57
I smoked cigs this weekend :(
I was super drunk on a boat
And I didn't have a cigar
@ssube The vape-douchebags are really awful here. I'll see 'em driving down the road with their windows up trying to cloud out their cars and shit while driving, or blowing big ass clouds in public spaces alienating everyone.
21 secs ago, by Sterling Archer
I was super drunk on a boat
This is nothing new.
@Megaplex ugh. I'm all for hot-boxing a car, but not with vape. Don't be a tool.
@ssube Or while you're fuckin' driving down the god damn highway at 65!
14:59
vapists >:(
turning it to a normal setting with a thin/looks-like-real-smoke cloud when you're in public is polite
!!afk vape
!!afk Time to take a walk around the building.
VAPE NAYSH YALL
\//\
+a 0.
15:00
@bitten / kick
@ssube you what?
Looks like I won't be walking around my building anymore, the fucking moles have turned the area around the back of our building into a death trap.
@bitten Oh, he was getting all grumpy at your whole vape nation thing.
Does anyone know of a good way to get a range of dates, starting from one date and ending on another?
a loop.
actually.. one sec. i have a real answer
for (let date = 12800000, date < 12900000, date += 1440000)
15:11
@corvid if you want to be cute, you could create a generator that yields sequential dates
or for (let date = new moment(); date.day() < 14; date = date.addDay(1))
@corvid I've used bunkat.github.io/later before. I half like it.
2
later is pretty good, +1
you don't need to instantiate moment; simply calling it creates a new instance
@ndugger and a warning
15:13
really? I've not gotten a warning
Must be new
I've not used it in a while
something about using the global
@ssube they already know C
I have go, scala, C++ and Node teams, fun.
@BenjaminGruenbaum nice, you'll be able to write a new MVC framework and something in C++
plus then some random {{_: _}} from the go/scala side
:D
This is actually quite a fun experiment, I gave 5 teams 5 different stacks which they don't know :)
System.import is es6, right?
15:22
@Luggage sorta. Modules are ES6, System.* is ES6 + some DOM-esque API that doesn't exist yet.
@Luggage that's systemjs, which supports es6 module loading, but i don't think that's part of the es6 standard
hm.. well, I have a few dynamic require()s I need to fix.
I could just use require(foo).default..
webpack and a bunch of other bundlers shim in their own System object, since ES6 defines the surface API but doesn't actually provide any implementation or specifics even
@Luggage ES2015 only specifies the syntax not how to actually load stuff.
System is defined in the loader spec.
So what are peoples opinions on using named arguments in javascript?
15:26
@Greg I generally like it, but didn't know JavaScript did that.
Does it?
yea.. reading babel docs to make it just do to System.import what it does to es6 imports.
Probably not, syntax wouldn't make sense.
Not really, but you can fake it with destructuring
@Greg it wouldn't contribute much if they added them
@BenjaminGruenbaum yup, it does it, and i think you can force people to fill them out as well (or get an error)
15:27
destructuring an object arg does all the good stuff
@Greg how does it look like?
I am generally in favor of APIs that atke a single "options" object.
function foo ({ bar, baz }) { ... }
foo({ bar: 1, baz: 2 });
@Greg JS doesn't do named args. It can take apart an object argument, but that has fairly different semantics.
function ({ arg1, arg2})
15:28
$.ajax({url:url, method: "post", data: data, success: onAjaxDone})
@ssube it does do named arguments, unless your making some sort of technical argument that its just syntactical sugar that enforces named arguments
which i think would still be named arguments.
@JanDvorak $.ajax({ url, method: 'post', data, success: onAjaxDone });
@Greg it's not even sugar, those are very different things.
It's like named arguments but it's not. This isn't even very pedantic.
My issue with named arguments: you have to remember the names of the arguments in the function declaration for every call
My issue with unnamed arguments: you have to remember the argument order
My issue with python like arguments: it is ambiguous
15:29
so why is it not named arguments
because it's a single unnamed object argument.
named arguments pass N arguments, function ({arg1, arg2}) passes a single argument (function.arity === 1)
@Greg destructuring is not named arguments. Just because you can fake something very similar, doesn't make it something else.
there's nothing you can touch and the arity is different
you are just using destructuring to use it LIKE named arguments.. which I agree is a nice way to do it.
15:30
@Greg that's not named parameters, that's object destructuring.
@ssube exactly.
it behaves mostly the same and has all the benefits of named arguments, but it's not named args
does named args have some kind of requirement that object destructuring doesn't provide?
I'm pretty sure ssube just laid that out for you
@Greg 1 vs N arguments
when all arguments are named/in an object, the only difference is the technical arity of the invocation
ah i see
15:32
when you're mixing named and positional arguments, they're utterly different
JS allows you to put multiple sets of named arguments in around positional ones, lemme put together a fiddle
ah its fine, i get what your saying
(arg1, arg2, {option1, option2}) etc?
// basic named arguments with some defaults mixed in
const defaults = {foo: 1, baz: 3};

function doStuff({foo, bar = 2, baz} = defaults) {
  console.log('got', foo, bar, baz);
}

doStuff();
doStuff({foo: 10, bar: 20, baz: 30});
doStuff({foo: 10, baz: 90000});

// JS-specific multiple sets of named args mixed with positional
const defaultA = {foo: 1, bar: 2};
const defaultB = {bin: 18};
function doOtherStuff({foo, bar} = defaultA, baz, {bin} = defaultB, ban = 19) {
  console.log('got', foo, bar, baz, bin, ban);
So what are peoples thoughts on using object destructuring in a way that simulates named parameters as a general way of writing js?
throw that in the repl and you'll see that it's totally different from how named params work in Python, f.ex
still in favor.
15:36
@Greg oh, it's fantastic
If you can enforce it and you're consistent, I'm all for it
I just realized that I'm not going to be learning any more Math at college from now onwards, which I find kind of sad. I'd like to continue learning. Any advice on how, and what?
cc: @BenjaminGruenbaum
I write all my constructors to be class Foo { constructor({foo, bar} = options) ... }
Faux Named Arguments are great.
FNA
What about single parameter functions that will always be single parameter
15:37
use your own judgement.
i have my own judgement
im asking other people for their opinion
I mean it's very situational.
your opinion is its very situational
if it's going to expand later, use an object now so it will stay consistent
so you obviously have an opinion on where it should and shouldn't be used
15:39
if you know it won't, like a single step in a builder chain, then just use normal args
i do too
but im seeing what other people think
does anyone here have experience writing web crawlers? i keep getting 503 errors after it's been running for a while, and i can't figure out why.
how old are you luggage?
Old enough.
@NathanJones 503s from where?
15:39
She's alliiiiiiiiveeeeee
you have a way about you of trying to shut down the sharing of thoughts and ideas instead of encourage it.
@Greg "it's very situational" and "use your judgement" are the best answers to a programming question. There are very few questions here with absolute answers.
@SomeGuy where is your current level of math?
The only one I can think of off the top of my head is "should I write tests?"
The answer is usually "no"
15:43
@ndugger Hush now
@ssube Do you really think they contribute? I mean, don't you think the person asking usually understands that?
@Greg How so? I agreed about your 'named' arguments' but couldn't offer any first guidance on 'other situations'.
@Greg Yes and no, respectively. Many (or even most) of the people who casually visit here assume there's a correct answer to their question, rather than thinking about the larger project and using the best solution for their actual use-case.
You want a firm answer about a very subjective topic
Tests are for losers with no trust in their code
9
15:44
@luggage its fine if you can't, i mean someone might say, hey this google coding guide uses XY as guidelines for that, and this other coding guide usually recommends this
Real programmers run once, and let it ride
@ssube the site i'm crawling is rateyourmusic.com
Saying "it's a good feature to have, but don't abuse it" is a perfectly reasonable response.
Give some examples of functions and I will judge the shit out of their arguments. :)
@ssube Hey, if I want to abuse myself, I'm allowed.
15:45
@MadaraUchiha you sure are, but please keep it private :)
@MadaraUchiha thanks to America :D
@SterlingArcher Finally someone who speaks out the obvious!
well really i was trying to decide if i should use "faux" named arguments for a framework i was working on, i wasn't using them for single variable but was considering if i should.
:P
Dear sweet baby jesus that's brutal
@KendallFrey
15:46
oh wow
If those 'single variable' functions exist along side other functions that take objects and you plan to use them interchangably, then that's a good reason to use objects.
@Greg you need to decide per-function. If it only needs one argument but is the same type of function you usually use grouped arguments for (say, a ctor) then I'd use them.
what does that Groucho Marx quote mean/?
15:46
were you just waiting for me to post a meme Kendall
I enjoyed that waay too much
@ssube i'm already delaying request by 12 seconds, so i'm not hammering their servers
Otherwise, destructuring incoming arguments is pretty unnecessary.
@SterlingArcher I was just reading the chat...
Don't lie
google is shitting lately
> He's going to post a meme, I can feel it -Kendall, 11:46am
@NathanJones that's a long time, yeah. I have no idea, but 503 is typically a proxy error, so something is rate-limiting you (intentionally or just due to failures).
@SterlingArcher I wasn't ready for that I swear
@ssube I think deciding per function is a pretty bad idea, i'd rather have a universal approach than a hodgepodge of the two approaches. It makes the code more clear.
15:48
Notice my memes senpai
@Greg lol
send pie
pie en route
you'd rather apply a blanket standard to everything than decide based on the actual situation at hand?
who are you talking with @NathanJones ?
15:49
I make special exceptions if needed
2 mins ago, by Luggage
If those 'single variable' functions exist along side other functions that take objects and you plan to use them interchangably, then that's a good reason to use objects.
but generally conform to a rule unless breaking it substantially improves the code
@Greg that's how you end up with horrible code that changes every time
@ssube no thats how you end up with nice code that works and is readable.
trying to apply a universal rule makes a lot more "exceptions" than having a couple of situational rules
15:50
@ssube Coding guidelines are standard practice, im not even going to argue with you on it.
ohh, ask ssube how old he is, then.
He seems old and set in his ways.
Amazon recommended emails are retarded "Hey, you just bought a battery phone case? Here's a deal on an off brand one that's a lot shittier!"
@Luggage nobody ever does :(
Sean is 12
15:51
I got an email asking me to review a purchase I made some time ago. It hasn't arrived yet.
@Greg part of having a full set of guidelines is having multiple rules that apply to different situations, otherwise you just have a mess
@ssube I feel like the sitation with using faux named parameters or not for single variable functions is just similar to deciding if you are using camel case or underscore for variable names.
@ssube one or the other might be fine, but mixing them is usually awful.
variable names are vanity, not functional
underscores are for php; keep that shit out of here
as a user of your code, I only care about your public api function names.
and how they take arguments... :)
15:54
@ndugger and Python and a few other, respectable languages
ew, no
@ssube They are functionally equivalent in anything but fringe cases.
@Greg destructuring arguments actually has some significant impact on how the program runs, how you name variables does not
if JS had optional names for positional args, it would be a different story and you could mix and match
@CSᵠ anyone who will listen
@ssube significant enough that you should avoid them in a tight loop?
15:56
but since positional and named are very different things, you need to have some criteria for when you use them
@ssube Ah, so how do they have a significant impact?
@Luggage depends on how often they change, I'd think
I mean the time to destructure on every iteration
@Greg you're passing and destructuring an object
@ssube yeah it's intentional, the page they serve with the 503 says something like "hey we noticed you're using an automated script..."
15:56
@Luggage destructuring an isomorphic object is fast as hell, a polymorphic one may not be
so you need to know what you'll be passing and how
@ssube so this is now a useful discussion
if one of 35 fields in the object changes every time, you may be able to use groups, or you may want to split that one out
if the types change ever, really, grouped/named args will be mostly useless
@ssube but actually, we are talking about single parameter functions
plus the whole debate on how many arguments is too many
@ssube So we'd have to weigh this against the performance loss of destructuring a single field
15:59
@Greg I'm answering Luggage's question
Can you give us an example?

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