I have a chain of streams using through2. I made them totally arbitrary for debugging...they each just push foo or bar, etc. If I pipe in from stdin, the chunks are transformed to bar or whatever is last. If I do stream.write, though, the resulting value is whatever is written. It skips the transforms entirely.
the through streams don't get any chunks
hah
It's the chaining
You write to the last stream in the chain.
// wrong
var x = through(function (chunk, enc, cb) {
this.push('new')
cb()
}).pipe(process.stdout)
x.write('original') // <-- to stdout
// correct
var x = through(function (chunk, enc, cb) {
this.push('new')
cb()
})
x.pipe(process.stdout)
x.write('original')
I have a hopefully simple question. How do you guys automatically deploy your applications when the frontend needs to call an API in the backend. For example, $.get('http://localhost:8000') works in development but replacing that url is needed in production?
I'm currently using ansible with its lineinfile module to replace localhost and instead use a public IP, so most of the process is running automatically, but it doesn't look like a very robust way to do it.
Mainly because I need to be careful about changing my source code in some lines that are needed by the lineinfile module. Do you have suggestions?
I like your approach, but now I see that I need to include the public IP dynamically. I'm currently using EC2 instances, so I need to set the address of that instance.
Yes, I know. I'm still testing the application, so I don't want to use a domain yet. Using an elastic IP is a possibility. The thing I don't really like is that now the code becomes dependent on that address.
Say I visit a webpage which has the following line of code:
<a class="btn">Example</a>
I need a Javascript code which I could run in the Google Chrome console to constantly click that element until it's not present on the page anymore.
My plan is - Go through learn x in y minutes - Go through some basic exercises: 99 lisp questions, some project euler stuff - Build a scraper for something, work with db - Attempt some UI, but not a lot
Minimalistic way of adding values to dynamic properties?
Lately I find myself in situations where I need to change the inline styles of my divs dynamically.
function dynamicCSS(prop, val) {
el.style[prop] = val;
}
If my property is a transform rotate then I would have to format things like ...
Say I visit a webpage which has the following line of code:
<a class="btn">Example</a>
I need a Javascript code which I could run in the Google Chrome console to constantly click that element until it's not present on the page anymore.
@littlepootis you know how to things. If I wanted to run a script that isn't in a file in a single line of the terminal using nodejs, how could I go about doing that? Without having to make a temporary file for it... Thinking in the lines of `js -r 'Math.sin(1) + 50'`
obv I can do echo "Math.sin(1) + 50" > ~/temp.js; js temp.js or something similar, but urgh...