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21:09
hello guys
benefit of isomorphic is a single code base, benefit of the other methods is you're not limited to any one tech @AlexGamboa. I don't think there really is a solid answer, it depends on your stack, ect.
for example if your rendering from PHP you can't really do isomorphic
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score
7
7 examples
2 contributors
can you have a look at this documentation about events, tell me what you think! if there is anything to edit before i feel okay keeping it as it is
@AhmadBamieh Events topic needs needs examples for: "objectification" and "triggering"
and maybe examples that are examples?
triggering? its already there in custom events
@KevinB .. hmm
objectification? what do you mean by that?
21:13
these look like blog entries or official docs
rather than a set of useful examples
maybe removing the images that contain text only would help remove that
it would be cool if you suggest an edit, if not i will tomorrow when i wake up :D
i'd rather not, there's too much disagreement at the moment over what so docs is supposed to be.
Thank you @Loktar
Yea, I have zero intention on touching the docs.
A lot of it i feel is completely useless and should be dumped.
21:19
^ So hard
@Trasiva You were looking for me yesterday?
@MadaraUchiha Yea, some other mods kicked the guy to the curb. Real extremist dude had a SO profile and was impersonating Bx1.
Figured there was a chance you were around and could handle it right away.
Hey guys, quick question. I'm building an agent-based demographic simulation. Persons objects are stored in personArraywhich will contain well over 100 000 elements. As people die, they are no longer useful to the simulation. I was wondering if there is any performance advantages to actually removing them from personArray? And if so, would it be useful to shift the empty index they live behind so that personArraystays dense. Thanks.
21:22
@neoflash Use a Set instead of an array.
Clearing out unused objects is always a good thing, since it frees memory.
A Set has no performance overhead to removing it (I think it's an O(n) action for an array)
A set makes a lot more sense than an array, assuming the person data isn't ordered, at least.
I'll have to read up on it. Kind of new at programming and haven't used sets yet. Can you give me a quick overview of the main differences between sets and arrays.
@Retsam No the data isn't ordered.
@neoflash Sets are not ordered
And you can't have the same element twice.
This means that adding/removing things from the set is a cheap operation.
Since elements of a Set don't have indices or keys, you can't look up an object out of a set
You can only verify that an object is included in a Set or not, as well as iterate the entire Set.
An array is an ordered list.
You can look up an item if you have its number
Removing an item from an array is usually an expensive(*) operation
Adding to an array, well, that depends.
TL;DR: If you have an unordered, unique "bunch" of items, you want a Set.
If either order or repetition are important to you, you don't want a Set.
The third option is a Map; also unordered, each item is stored by some unique key. That's useful if you frequently need to look-up items, as opposed to checking if an item is in a set, or iterating over the whole array/set.
If you use someObj[dynamicProperty] a lot, you probably need a Map.
The biggest advantage so far of a Map over a dynamic object, is that dynamic object keys can only be strings (or Symbols, which are irrelevant for you at this point)
If you want to use, for example, a Person object as key, you can't.
But you can with a Map.
21:34
@MadaraUchiha humm... interesting. It really doesn't matter what order every Person is stored. But I do need to look for items in the whole set/array/map that meet certain criteria and do something to or with them. That is, I don't think I will need to look-up a specific Person, but I will need to frequently find all the ones that are male, or between 30 and 40 years old etc... and then change some of their properties values.
@neoflash Yeah, so you can do things like:
for (let person of peopleSet) {
  if (/* some condition applies */) {
    return person;
  }
}
Or
anyone ever set up nginx to serve files with case-insensitive urls?
let limitedPeopleSet = new Set();
for (let person of peopleSet) {
  if (/* some condition applies */) {
    limitedPeopleSet.add(person);
  }
}
// do stuff with limitedPeopleSet
@NathanJones Never really saw the need, hello.txt and Hello.txt are different files
Which do you take when the user asks for hello.txt? Which for Hello.txt?
@MadaraUchiha this server is for serving static content for a 3rd party product whose code has references to Hello.txt but shipped a file named hello.txt
and not Hello.txt
21:40
@NathanJones But what if I did want to add a file Hello.txt?
@MadaraUchiha are you saying i should cp hello.txt Hello.txt?
in other words you're serving content of a windows pc with linux
@NathanJones No, I'm saying you should fix your integration
@KevinB haha, yes i am.
Case insensitive matches are expensive
Google finds decent matches
21:42
what if everything was rewritten to lowercase? would that be expensive?
for "nginx case insensitive"
@KevinB Yes, because it's a CPU bound operation that needs to be done on every request.
Nginx is built for high load and high speed
It's not noticable with 10 reqs/sec
@MadaraUchiha i did google that, but all i found was how to make specific urls case-insensitive
It is in 50,000+
but i see your point
so far the strategy has been to serve the files as they are and rename the discrepencies
3
Q: How do I serve static files case-insensitively with nginx?

Nathan JonesI'm trying to serve static files with nginx, and I've already tried adding ~* to the location option, but that doesn't seem to work with what I'm trying to do: serve files with case-insensitivity. Right now, I get a 404 if the case of the URL doesn't match the file's name in the file system. For...

21:44
but this is a very reactive strategy
that's the route we took when we moved from windows
1 message moved to Trash can
@neoflash Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
@neoflash with a for..of loop
it sucked early on, but once it's done it's done (mostly)
@KevinB wait, which route?
21:45
reactive
@NathanJones Handle the cause of the discrepancies.
@MadaraUchiha so how would I do this, in a set:
for (var i = 0; i < personArray.length; i++) {
    if (personArray[i].hasMalaria === true) {
        personArray[i].isAlive = false
    }
}
URLs are case sensitive by design
And www.example.com/hello.txt and www.example.com/Hello.txt are two completely different URIs, pointing to two completely different resources.
we had a site built on windows, that was very inconsistent in file name usage. we did a simple find/replace of all urls goign to our asset subdomain and made them all lowercase, then did the same within the folder that contained those files
@neoflash With for..of
21:46
@KevinB @MadaraUchiha ok, i'll stay the course. thanks for your input.
then dealt with the rest of the issues as they came along
@MadaraUchiha Ok, I will definatly look into that. Thanks for the help.
@KevinB Run a migration script once, you're done.
@KevinB If I had any control over the code, I'd do something akin to that.
@BoltClock hey I'm looking for a clear way for a parent element to take the height of the child when the child is absolutely positioned - right now I got display:table but I'm looking for a cleaner way
21:47
Because it would stop working if you didn't think about your file names.
@SterlingArcher BIG DICK BEE
Oh hi @MadaraUchiha
working
how's Israel?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Burning. ISIS took over.
21:48
@BenjaminGruenbaum Tired of Chi-Town yet?
I'm growing a beard.
@BenjaminGruenbaum There's the overflow: hidden trick with floats
I don't know if it works for absolutely positioned elements
ISIS is a joke and run by obama
according to trump
We should call the FBI and report him.
@William and don't forget that there were no radical islamist terror attack before obama, either
those words actually came out of NYC's mayor's mouth
@NathanJones Say what you will about Saddam, but at least that man kept the extremists out of Iraq.
22:01
@Trasiva by being a monster
@NathanJones Do I agree with his methods? No, but at the same time the power vacuum in Iraq made way for ISIS to form. Particularly with how big of a joke the Iraqi army was (probably still is, haven't been there in years).
This CSS issue is frustrating
He was an extremist to his own people.
well, half of them
Right, and again, I'm not condoning what he did. I'm just simply stating that the only reason ISIS got their foothold in Iraq was because there was an absence of complete authority in Iraq that was willing to prevent them from gaining steam.
@BenjaminGruenbaum why do you even position absolutely? just use a transform: translate?
22:12
@bwoebi Isn't that still experimental?
@Trasiva seriously?
@Trasiva they're already working on CSS transforms v2…
@bwoebi I'm not in a habit of asking pointless questions.
@Trasiva I wasn't asking "are you seriously asking that"? but rather "seriously? is that really still experimental?"
Oh, the MDN shows it as experimental, I just looked.
!!caniuse translate
22:17
@Trasiva even IE has prefix-less support for it since version 10…
Yea, I know. I'm not sure if the MDN just didn't get updated or what, but there's plenty of cross browser support for the translations.
@Trasiva the w3 site still shows it as WD, untouched since nearly 3 years
support !== in the most recent spec.
could be a working draft still
drafts.csswg.org/css-transforms < current version…
@Trasiva what does experimental mean? no w3 CR or REC?
medium.freecodecamp.com/… I don't like this article.
22:22
Experimental would indicate that it's not been standardized cross browser and it could change.
it reads like "I only half get it, and here is why I dislike it"
Oh
I agree with him
But his reasons are bad
I do as well.
but I don't like the article
You know it's a good article when it has memes
What the fuck did I just read.
Like, I get what he's trying to say, but I'm not sure a whole lot of that holds water.
I don't work with people writing ES6...but do people store functions in variables on a regular basis?
22:27
what are ternary functions?
functions?
oh
   const result = condition ? returnIfTrue : returnIfFalse;
that's not a function
ternary is an operator
@Trasiva If you wanted to create a module, you sometimes have to
I suppose you could say it works like a function
22:28
Depending on how you choose to go about it
But afaik using a named function will always work as well
@Meredith I'd rather people used a named function. Christ in a tea kettle, those examples he wrote are just awful.
Wes
Wes
\o
I'd still prefer a named function even if it's stored in a var
One thing he does that I can't stand
Using the backtick notation for strings
22:30
I love how he touches on const, but doesn't even knowledge let.
@Meredith You mean string templating?
He's not templating
He's just replacing 's with `s
those were curly quotes
const foo = function foo() {
  return 'bar';
}
Oh wait nvm it's the font
probably due to the blog software
22:31
Yea, that's their code font.
karma angular2, in my component, it is check for the url. I don't know how to get that url within my karma jasmine script?
I'd like to create a single page within browser extension, allowing users to edit chrome.storage objects - can you recommend some "simple" and "minimal" js framework for rendering and interacting with it? I've never worked with any except for angular.
Sometimes the single quotes are slanted, sometimes they're not
That's wacky
I dunno, either way.
!!afk I'm off like a dirty pair of underwear.
That last example is just awful
Idk why so many grown ass men have a problem with justin bieber
22:33
well, he's a bit of an ass
Yeah, a bit
@Meredith The correct question is: Why do so many grown man even give a fuck about him?
what is it?
[As always: decent negative publicity is also publicity.]
damn. Almost colfusion. it has array.map, array.filter, but array.forEach is called array.each
22:38
It's usually called each
Javascript is the weird one
if it weren't for that my cfscript would be identical to javascript
one thing I don't like in programmins articles are those funny gifs
Idk why it's called forEach in js
But it annoys the hell out of me
Wes
Wes
because it would otherwise override jQuery.each(), maybe?
@rlemon you didn't even say hi to me, i'm offended
oi
you're italian, you can't be offended.
Wes
Wes
22:42
:(
ohh man
@Loktar someone mocked a Rick and Morty DLC :D
if only..
@Wes Yeah, something about mothers… :-D
Wes
Wes
:D
you definitely speak javascript
js is love
js is life
22:46
!!s/js/php/
@bwoebi php is life (source)
!!s/life/a midlife crisis/
@rlemon @bwoebi php is a midlife crisis (source) (source)
!!s/php/js/
!!undo
22:47
!!undo
@bwoebi You do not have permission to use the command undo
you have no power here
damn
puts 'omg'
@rlemon If PHP is a midlife crisis, JS is a lifelong nightmare :-)
22:49
Both JS and PHP have warts
I find JS's easier to deal with, is all.
It quite depends on what you're doing
Wes
Wes
i need help with require()'s design. i have a js file that defines a proto, but itself requires other stuff. is it fine doing
var Proto = require("myproto.js")(stuff1, stuff2, stuff3);
var p = new Proto(1,2,3);
or are there better options?
Of course
@Wes You take in parameters... to generate your class?
Wes
Wes
yeah
22:51
ES still has no native asnyc/await, right?
@bwoebi Only in Edge
surprisingly...
@Wes Generally, I'd go with a class generator like so:
doesn't node?
@rlemon No.
I babel most things that are actual products
so idk what node handles on its own
22:52
bye
const MyLib = require("whatever");
const Proto = MyLib.create(stuff1, stuff2, stuff3);

const p = new Proto(1, 2, 3);
i.e. add that extra step in the middle so that it's explicit.
Does JS have good libraries embracing generators for sane Promise handling?
@rlemon Doesn't that potentially has significant performance overheads?
@bwoebi Yes. Bluebird.
not really.
I don't serve millions of people
@rlemon Fair enough.
@bwoebi Bluebird has Promise.coroutine which works exactly as you would expect.
const myCoroutine = Promise.coroutine(function*() {
  yield Promise.delay(2000);
  return 42;
});

myCoroutine().then(console.log); // 42 after 2 seconds
okay, at least JS has that too
@bwoebi If it didn't, you could implement it in, like, 8 lines
Functions shouldn't maintain their own state
It's wrong and unnatural
Wes
Wes
@MadaraUchiha yeah or that. but still looks somewhat wrong to me
22:56
@Meredith well… I agree that something like static in PHP inside funcs mostly is unnatural… but generators are very natural.
@Meredith Example?
@MadaraUchiha Example of what?
so, I have this thing where I want to make a whole server from scratch using nodejs (with maybe fs), from directory management to smtp servers. How bad of an idea is that?
@Meredith A function maintaining its own state
In Typescript, why do people use the private access modifier in the constructor for dependency injection? I know it's a shortcut for setting the property, but why is it needed exactly, how does it work?
22:58
@towc It's an excellent idea.
Especially to reinforce your own understanding of the tehcnologies that make those servers.
Wes
Wes
because encapsulation @SvetanDimoff
@MadaraUchiha You mean every function that uses a generator?
(waiting for the ridiculous "if" or "but")
@Wes Elaborate, pretty please! They're making the property unaccessible for other classes? I don't think that's their primary reason for doing it. It's some sort of a shortcut hack
but.. maybe don't use it yourself
:D
22:59
@Meredith A generator is a function that returns a stateful object
@Meredith A generator is an object, not a function
It's just sugar for writing iterators

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