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00:00
Cc @Loktar @KendallFrey @rlemon
is that you?
boy, you gon lost your damn mind.
Note to self: no shorts under. They bunch up
I've worn a unitard for theater, thong or nothing
user2620028
00:03
you are going to be cold lol
Isn't it amazing? I'm gonna Rick Pittsburgh Zalgo style
I run hot anyways, Halloween in sexy outfits doesn't bother me
this year I'm handing out candy as white trash
it's my excuse to not put on pants
Corn or bust
00:29
@KendallFrey #notkerbal
@SterlingArcher you need to clean your mirror
01:01
@SterlingArcher Srsly.. did jQuery really try to do assembly... My god.
Just.. Jesus Christ
@SterlingArcher hahahha
that's awesome man
Wes
Wes
01:19
\o
how do you call that kind of minification that converts
foo.veryLongProperty.baz = 1;
foo.veryLongProperty.qux = 2;
in
var a = 'veryLongProperty'
foo[a].baz = 1;
foo[a].qux = 2;
let {baz, qux} = foo.veryLongProperty;
baz = 1;
qux = 2;
Wes
Wes
automatic minification i mean, like uglify
iunno
01:34
@Wes you mean with a task runner or something?
Wes
Wes
@rlemon how does that work, though? does setting 'baz' change the property in foo.veryLongProperty ?
@Loktar yeah, i "use" webpack
ohh I thought you were asking how to do it
@Wes no, I was wrong.
read your question weirdly.
Wes
Wes
i used to use a js minification thingy online that converted long property names repeated multiple times, in short ones, like var a = 'verylong', b= 'anotherverylong' etc
for each function scope
that like, in 2005 :B
01:39
@rlemon That's not the same. ...is it?
nvm I should read more when I come back
@Wes closure compiler?
Wes
Wes
also, it did string interning, ie if you had 'string literal' appearing 2+ times in the code, it replaced it with a variable
@littlepootis i have no idea, checking it out now
@littlepootis yes, exactly like that
oooh yeah man I loved the closure compiler
woop woop
I used to do the same shit paste the code in to minify lol
01:44
How do I tell Steam to download KSP 1.2 even though it's not my regular update hours
not sure, I don't limit my pleasure like you do
wait wut
I thought I had it set to inly update games at night
Wes
Wes
do you know if i can run it locally - or something similar exists?
but apparently not
@Wes you could always run it locally.
Wes
Wes
01:46
i mean, automatically through webpack
I last used it 5-6 years ago. It required java.
Wes
Wes
ah
why not just use uglify?
and don't have it remove spaces/line breaks
Now there's a JS port and an npm module. But, it's probably considered dead now. So you're better off using something modern
uglify has an insane number of options
Wes
Wes
01:51
@Loktar because that compressed like crazy
look at the options lol
you can have it do basically no compression at all if you want
the options are really thorough
Closure compiler > uglify, but I doubt supports recent additions to JS
what are you guys doing to imporve webpack's build time? It takes 2 mins at my work.
sometimes 3 or 4 mins.
I'm about to go insane.
@shriek with the watcher?
or just initial/release builds?
initial
watcher..it's like 3s.
or 6.
01:59
My build tool's laughin at ya
Yeah? What's yours at?
oh.
hmm yeah my initial is around a min maybe 2? Release build though is around 5 mins or so.
Watcher is around a second though, sometimes 2 or 3
project size is quite large
Ours is decent. I tried using eval source map but that's no good to actually debug.
02:23
@bitten lmfao
but you probably need js
@AwalGarg Repl, Sh.exec()? Awesome!
@rlemon LMAO
instead use scss!
/me buys you youmightnotneedscss.com
also uses ID's gross.
@Loktar pure attribute style. like it should be
Wes
Wes
ahaha beautiful
02:28
Hey guys!
Wondering if you could help me figure something out
I have a github website that I'm working on which is based off a template
And in the Services Section
Bought it.
immediate regret.
When you click on an icon, a menu is supposed to drop down,and it does
But there is a weird glitch where it jumps down for a sec
I tried yarn. It's fast.
Any help appreciated
I'll benchmark later and compare it with npm on a real-world project.
But it's pretty fast.
02:33
@Jasch1 make it not do that.
Based on the information you provided that seems to be the most logical solution.
02:46
Would you have any suggestions on how to do this?
I looked around and I don't seem to be adjusting the margins anywhere and it looks like that would causing such an issue
@Jasch1 hmm well based on the information provided to solve the problem, I would probably change the code in such a way it stops jumping down for a second.
maybe adjust the jump attribute
Very funny...
lol no one can help you with the information you provided
You can look through some of the source code on github
@Loktar Seriously?
02:50
@Jasch1 LMAO
Stuff I added to the template will be at the bottom
I didn't see the text above it
>
When you click on an icon, a menu is supposed to drop down,and it does
first message I saw.
Stuff I added is at the bottom of the templates
@Loktar Well you could have asked , "um can you give me more information to answer your problem..."
Joke
-------------> phew
Head
02:52
@Dsafds what if I didnt care?
Wes
Wes
is there / there will be a shortcut for subsequences slicing in js? arr[-5, 2] === arr.slice(-5,2) or something like that?
looks like a really common issue when you're using jquery animations to adjust height
I would recommend using css to animate the max-height property and doing it all via css and not JQ/JS
03:07
Thank you, I'll take a look
np, good luck
user6438653
Could someone plese explain express.static(__dirname + '/public') to me?
Yup
user6438653
Cool :)
So express.static makes it so that whenever someone requests a file in the directory, it will return it
This makes it so you dont have to make a route for each css, img, js file that is going to be served
__dirname is a Global var in Node for current directory
user6438653
03:14
Ahhh, right.
@shad0wk It's a middleware function that serves files from your public directory as they are.
Make sense now?
user6438653
Yes
But you shouldn't really be doing it like that.
Use path.resolve.
user6438653
What if I want something like domain.com/?get=core.js?
03:14
@littlepootis whats the dif, I always have used static
app.use(express.static(path.resolve(__dirname, 'public')))
@Jasch1 cross-platform compatibility.
Different platforms use different directory separators.
*nix uses /, windows uses \
I use path.join sometimes
user6438653
Righty-o, that's makes sense.
path.join does similar right?/
path.resolve is for absolute path, iirc.
03:17
@Loktar you still here?
user6438653
Is res.sendFile(__dirname + "/core.js"); okay?
Depends
I think that could be more easily handled with the aforementioned middleware
instead of sending each file
But that would work
Maybe not most effeicent
user6438653
It just i want to make it that on domain.com/?get=core.js? it returns core.js.
user6438653
I only have three files.
user6438653
That will be public.
03:20
Sounds good then
Using query strings?
user6438653
Yes.
Probably be easier to just do domain.com/core.js
Just my opinion tho
user6438653
Yeah, true, okay, I'll do that.
Yeah, do what @Jasch1 suggested.
user6438653
Is there a way to make a request redirect to domain.com/ if not found?
03:22
Yes, before app.listen, add:
app.use(function (req, res) {
  res.redirect("/");
});
but you might not want to do this
Wouldnt that redirect everything?
user6438653
Yeah?
yes, it would.
user6438653
Well that isn't good.
user6438653
It would cause a loop right?
03:23
Not everything, just the things that aren't found,
What you could do
You probably already have a request handler for /, don't you?
Make one for /:any
It only redirects when there is no handler for that path.
5
Q: How do I redirect all unmatched urls with Express?

sonicboomI want to redirect all unmatched urls to my homepage. Ie. someone goes to www.mysite.com/blah/blah/blah/foo/bar or www.mysite.com/invalid_url - I want to redirect them to www.mysite.com Obviously I don't want to interfere with my valid urls. So is there some wildcard matcher that I can use to r...

03:24
Also, that's you set 404 handlers.
Take a look at this
Not sure if answers
Just seems to match your question
111
Q: How to redirect 404 errors to a page in ExpressJS?

Julio GarcíaI don't know a function for doing this, does anyone know of one?

app.use(function (req, res) {
  res.statusCode = 404;
  res.end("404 Not Found");
});
Would send that for everything then
Wait
user6438653
Cool, that's better than uses a regex.
You could make a middleware that checks to see if the requested oath matches the three file paths you have
If it does, do nothing
03:26
It's like a fallback.
Otherwise, do the 404 redirect
Somethign like
or just a redirect
Express executes your middleware in a linear fashion.
So, it something's handled, it will not 404.
All teh middleware will go before the routes though
user6438653
right, that's cool.
Every incoming request will go through the middleware
I might be wrong
Just test it and let us know
user6438653
03:28
Yep
user6438653
This is all I got: ERR_TOO_MANY_REDIRECTS
user6438653
var app  = require("express")(),
    http = require("http").Server(app);

app.use(function (req, res) {
  res.statusCode = 404;
  res.redirect("/");
});

app.get("/", function(req, res) {
  res.end("Cool");
});

http.listen(process.env.PORT || 3000, function() {
  console.log("Server is running.");
});
user6438653
@Jasch1 ^^
user6438653
@littlepootis ^^
means infinte redirects
im off to bed soon
Its redirected to '/'
which goes through the middleware
03:33
@shad0wk No, don't put it at the top.
and is redirected again
Put it at the end, after all the middleware.
Alternatively
or all .use, .get, .verb whatever
something like
user6438653
03:34
okay.
user6438653
Yay! it works!!
user6438653
At the end works
Also, you could just use app.listen..
k im off to bed
im still tryna figure out my jquery thing
app.listen is much easier
agreed
@Loktar That would have been a better response.
03:35
@Dsafds cool
Appreciate it dad
Loktar i took a look at what you suggested
user6438653
@Jasch1 Goodnight.
user6438653
thanks guys.
user6438653
bye
It fixed the jumping part but was still short of what was expected
03:36
Night @Jasch1
@Loktar Your welcome son
Im gonna try to fix my issue for a bit longer
@Jasch1 lame, at least you fixed the jumping
Not fixed
@Dsafds you're
Now its just a different issue
Same concept though
03:37
Come on dad did you even go to school?
@Loktar Yes , was in MIT :P
Damn when did they start letting 15 year olds in MIT?!
> Heyya! I am Amanuel Bogale, 15 year old who loves low level development.
@Loktar Um . Yesterday :P
A fifteen year old has a 10 year old grandson?
Or granddaughter.
I have aged a little since i.. edited my profile :|
03:39
kids these days....
@Dsafds 9 months?
I looked to make sure it wasn't an old profile :p
@Loktar years*
@Loktar SO Has a bug currently about this profile issue :)
@Jasch1 Lol your 10th grade...
Hey guys does anyone know why or experienced the Chrome Dev Tools occasionally not recognizing a js file in "sources"? This keeps happening to me a lot lately
04:04
 
3 hours later…
06:52
@Zirak @littlepootis ty ty. and sorry for the ping spam :D
07:19
@TeeSee that's never happened to me
Hey guys ..if anybody is free could you pls help me with this question stackoverflow.com/questions/39992572/…
07:37
@Neil yeah it's weird, sometimes I end up having to run the code in a snippet b/c it wont show up. Other times it will
all other things constant
07:51
Wow
hey guys
can someone tell me what is the difference between "let", "var", and "const"
someone who worked with
08:14
var is the good old keyword since JavaScript day1 to declare variables. Variables declared by var have a lexical- or function scope. Since a lot of stupid people got troubled by this concept (especially in loops) they introduced let in ES6. let is more like C-style and has true block scope, so variables declared by let are only visible within a block ({}). const does pretty much what it says, it creates an immutable constant variable.
s/n immutable//
we should really stop calling them variables and start calling them bindings instead
@AwalGarg Let's make it less confusing, yea -.-
What does "-.-" mean?
@littlepootis Are const vars mutable?
08:21
Rephrase that question
Their mutability depends on the kind of value they refer to, but a const binding is immutable.
Values bound to a const variable are not immutable if they are objects
@littlepootis correct
const only makes the "pointer" immutable
Yeah const variables are immutable, but I agree it can be confusing with bindings and references here. Like creating an array with const still allows you to modify the array, but the reference to that array is actually immutable.
08:24
I can imagine that being confusing for newbies...
I'm always telling my guys here .. think of a wonderful place.. far, far away. It's called "ECMALand" where all references and bindings will lead to, but you won't be able to get there yourself. All you get is a reference to that place
It helps to think of actual values/objects as containers and "variables" as labels on them.
yes.. far far away in that wonderful place...
08:44
@AwalGarg i see it as a bit of a sarcastic/let down emotion
09:06
Is docs.gitlab.com/ce fucked up for anyone else?
@OliverSalzburg lolyeah
looks like they are missing some css?
Never occurred to me that I could do this
$http.get('foo')
  .then(({data: data}) => {

  });
What else would you do?
const { data } = data;
Before you say anything, I know
09:29
Hey there, yesterday I created this topic, but the question was marked as a duplicate. Could someone give me an answer? stackoverflow.com/questions/39987342/…
@OtakuKyon Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
Have you read the duplicate?
Yeah I did, but I did not understand, since there were details on 404 error
09:57
posted on October 12, 2016 by Axel Rauschmayer

The ECMAScript proposal “Asynchronous Iteration” by Domenic Denicola is currently at stage 3. This blog post explains how it works. Asynchronous iteration With ECMAScript 6, JavaScript got built-in support for synchronously iterating over data. But what about data that is delivered asynchronously? For example, lines of text, read asynchronously from a file or an HTTP connection. This propo

vsm
vsm
10:23
do any one have an idea of using custom parameters on pinterest widget? say on clicking save button, a widget will be loading by pinterest. This widget need to be appended with some parameters like utm_source=pinterest&utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=social. If any one knows, please help me..
@vsm Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
> technical problems
10:53
High five!
11:04
:D
Luckily, we don't rely on their shitty service
We rely on multiple providers which all have equally shitty service!
We used a GSM modem for a couple months, that didn't go down well
We use Twillio, Clickatell and Plivo and I don't understand how all of them can be so painfully shitty
They all have issues with SMS not being delivered, even though their logs claim they were delivered and when you have to reach out to their support, you're lucky to get a response within 24 and it never leads anywhere
All three of them are incredible time sinks and can not be relied on in any way
It is so annoying >:(
Their site is down for me lol
@BenFortune Well, the mail said the website is down
I can't read
Assumed it was just their gateway
11:12
I wish AWS would expand their SMS support :(
Is it possible to loop through all elements in a div?
* loops through all dom elements, but is it possible just for a particular div?
Yeah, it's so cheap
pretty much sums the whole election up. As if it makes any difference who becames president...
The lizard people are the ones doing the ruling, anyway
the who?
The lizard people
I don't care who does the ruling, it's just not the puppet people call "the president"
11:43
Exactly, it's the lizard people
Half lizard half people
did you smoke stuff? :P
lizard people?
Dude open your eyes man dude
The evidence is all over the place
^ Is he just trolling or am I missing something?
sounds like a left-winged nonsense to drag any critical opinion into ridiculousness
11:46
Hillow pee poe, long time no chatty watty
In a class, how can I set it up so that a static member function will have a property?
class Foo {
  static get bar() {
    const func = function() {}
    func.property = "yay";
    return func;
  }
}
That is my current idea
However, who truly believes that Mr. President decides shit in a capitalistic world.. really should walk off the earth.
How did that indenting get messed up? O__o
Have you guys seen mister Lemon recently
?
@OliverSalzburg you mixed tabs and spaces >:(
11:48
@AwalGarg Yeah, I just typed that up in jsfiddle. No idea how that happened
@jAndy That's exactly what they want you to think
and no, I don't think that's possible presently in the class declaration syntax. I'd just assign the property outside the declaration
Wondering if anyone can help me on this?

I'm using webpack to generate the css file for my application. I'm trying to grab the css file from my dist folder using fs.readFile but when I inline the css into the header, it's breaking in chrome because chrome cant fails to parse the sourcemap; the sourcemap is in the css text file. Has anyone encountered this issue and found a solution for it?
@AwalGarg Yeah, that would feel cleaner, but I want the property assignment to be close to the function declaration for maintenance purposes. It should serve as kind of an annotation
chrome fails*
11:50
@BenFortune can't you just do ({ data}) => { .. } ?
that reminds me though, i wrote an awful destructing line yesterday, i'll try and find it :p
@OliverSalzburg fair enough. How about assigning the static function itself outside the class? Or just not using class and using regular functions and prototypes? :)
@AwalGarg leafy
@FlorianMargaine @Loktar Surfin' & Skatin' Yea!
@bitten yeah

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