I always thought it was so weird that they were called AJAX loading icons since the icon isn't related to AJAX at all, but now I just realized it's that you use it when AJAX is loading hahah
A real world example, the SVG format, which is xml. If you edit it with inkspace, inkscape will put it's own properties on, like the window and zoom positions, but it can do that without breaking the SVG format.
The only thing JSON really has on XML is that it's simple and more compact. That said, I like JSON unless I have a good reason to use XML, which I find ugly and verbose.
Well if you have the time and experience there's a few niche's like private investigation and security that have a lot of money and not much competition
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react is pretty good at just handling the view and not imposing constraints on any other part of your architecture. it shouldn't affect the way you write your php
The main thing that bothers me is how we will communicate... like I am thinking to push my stuff on heroku. Accessing my server/database, that is something he has to worry about right?
Typically when your a sever side only developer your main concern is just providing access points or views that your frontend developer can use to make things pretty
@Luggage thanks. Was also wondering a different question. Sending strings to the backend seems fine, but when dealing with dynamic queries it gets difficult to generate strings vs manipulating and using JSON. So was wondering how people handle dynamic query generation for Graphql
@Luggage there may be an extra step with JSON because you'd have to parse the JSON string before you can extract the graphql string out of the response. If you just send the graphql you can use it directly
@Luggage we are using string interpolation and it is giving us a fair amount of hassle. I'm trying to convince the devs here to switch over to using graphql variables but no luck yet
Sorry, I keep going back to that, but it's a very common mistake people make, mixing up a JS object and JSON and thinging they have one when they have the other.
Yeah I know, but what I mean is on the client side JSON objects are objects, so changing them is simple. But when changing strings you'd have to use string manipulation
@david What I'm trying to get my team to understand is the advantage of using graphql vs building your own query parser. Their argument is that graphql does not do any sort of "where" clause building for us, so in our case we're only interested in the where clause being generated and selecting all the fields returned, and they're arguing building that where clause generator (which we have to regardless of gql or not) is better since we wont have to deal with graphql
I'm trying to get them to understand that graphql has other wins, like graphiql, schemas, etc,
I guess what I'm trying to get them to understand that with graphql, even though we don't NEED the other features (fragments, graphiql, schemas), we could use them. We have to write the where clause generator ANYWAY.
You sold me, I've been wanting an excuse to use graphQL, but.. there is value, sometimes, in a simple home-rolled solution that you understand well, so they may not be 100% wrong.
So, keep selling, but lose gracefully if it comes to that.
If they know what they are doing, they can whip up something that does most of what you need.
If not, they may not be able to handle graphQL anyway.
Yeah that's where I'm going with it. My take on it is if we were to build our own solution, we'd have to handle the simple things ourselves. For example, we'd have to build a REST endpoint that accepts some sort of JSON. Then we'd have to parse that JSON for arguments. Then we'd have to generate our where (have to do that in both scenarios).
But we lose stuff like validaiton, schemas (having 1 endpoint), and other stuff
I use a home-rolled REST api. Each object was a "search object" attache dto it that takes all the possible parameters for my 'where generator' and json schema handles verifying it.
yea. You can just glue a few libraries together, though. I have maybe 200 lines of code for mine, and it handles faethcing children (when requested), filtering fields, where-clauses, etc
But yea.. if I was making something new, I would use graphql (or at least evaluate it more).
Yeah but lets say you want to do a complex query. Something more than just (select * from entity where somecol = someval). Something like a join between two tables, etc,. If you were to do that without graphql, you'd create an API endpoint, the UI would call that specific API endpoint, and in that API endpoint is where you'd store your query and return the JSON.
But with Graphql, you export 1 schema that is a collection of all of your object types. So the client never has to go to any other API end point and you don't have to make any other API endpoint.
Yeah but if you're glueing libraries together to achieve what 1 can, then why not use that 1, esp when its made by facebook
Yeah you still have to build the schema for it in GraphQL, but it's exported and served into one final schema and one api end point. So as far as the UI is concerned, it interacts with a single end point
you can make returning 3 fields faster than returning 40 if you structure your data to make that happen. Graphql doesn't specify how you store your data, it doesn't care. So if you decide that you often want to return just 3 fields instead of all 40 you can put an index over those 3 fields and then the DB query will be faster, and that will result in an overall faster API call
not much work at all.. a line of code to register an endpoint. Also.. there is no reason I couldn't turn my REST api into a single endpoint and just accept a list of queries.
// In an hour's work, I could, instead of:
GET /api/users/1, GET /api/hospitals/123
//turn it into
GET /api/query
//body
{ users: 1 },
{ hospitals, 123 }
A half-baked example, but you get the point.
Again, I'm not talking you out of graphQl, but instead tell you that a competent backend dev can make you not miss it too much.
Already did that... tomorrow will be the final sale. Their argument was, if we have to build our own generator that will generate the where clause, why use graphql at all. My counter argument is that the work is the same but using graphql gives other small wins
If they aren't interested, then they aren't going to invest the mental effort in trying to adapt examples to something they are familiar with. You might need to do that part.
oops, i was trying to undo the "hammertime" thing.
@qaispak I gave up on desktop linux a while ago, but with the new macbook being so overpriced and low 16gb ram, I might have to reconsider and try a linux friendly laptop in the future
I am using an angular module called angular-marked, which displays markdown as html. It's nice, but it allows you to enter html markup inside, and even create executing scripts. That doesn't seem right, but lots of other markdown displayer plugins do the same. What's the deal?
The following code gives me the output I want from the .fail function instead of the .done function. But, it's exactly what I want. Anyone know what I'm doing wrong?
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