@Sean That's probably about what I got, and what I'd heard beforehand. Still, I'm not used to having to change batteries in anything after less than 2 weeks
btw @KendallFrey, is it only me, or don't you feel like wanting to stop time, float in lambdas, and want to not have to worry about anything while you try to rewrite everything you know in lambdas?
or through complexity. Training NNs to have an intrinsic evalutation of lambda calculus. Again, parameter-based, it can be recursive (hence copying)...
I'm too young to know what I'm talking about. Sorry for the offensive words
Discrete in science is the opposite of continuous: something that is separate; distinct; individual. Discrete may refer to:
Discrete particle or quantum in physics, for example in quantum theory
Discrete device, an electronic component with just one circuit element, either passive or active, other than an integrated circuit
Discrete group, a group with the discrete topology
Discrete category, category whose only arrows are identity arrows
Discrete mathematics, the study of structures without continuity
Discrete optimization, a branch of optimization in applied mathematics and computer scien...
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@Luggage okay, so I've been staring at this now for a bit. best I can see is I need to put a <Match /> component inside of my paged list and have it render based on what it matches.
Another react question: what's the appropriate way to update the state after all the data is retrieved? It's not right to do it in componentDidMount, right?
You can fire off the request in componentDidMount and use setState asynchronously, if that's what you meant. Wether it's the "appropriate" way is something React doesn't really have an opinion on
@MadaraUchiha yeah the use case here is that I want a button disabled until the data on the next route is fully loaded. So when the component mounts, it starts to load the data and show a little progress bar
I know you can do it with promises, but I've always been told not to
@MadaraUchiha I mean the routing is arbitrarily deep. The only problem I have with dispatching an event is it's complicated to target the right element, and it feels like a lot of overhead to "globally" dispatch something where only a single child will care about it
@MadaraUchiha I have part of it (the part that determines which 'queries' to re-run working in a fiddle. It's the proof of concept part, and not wired up to react at all. jsfiddle.net/4h0h7876/18 and illustrative screenshot: snag.gy/lomfLp.jpg
it's just working names, but setVariables() is supposed to be like relay's setVariables.
@rlemon i'd consider that to be unbound... it wouldn't be bound to the component it's being called from, it might be bound to its props if it was called as props.onPageChange, or nothing if they destructured first
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XMLHttpRequest cannot load myurl. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access.
sorry that was not latest
on solution is to allow access in php services
but i am dev i don't have server access but need to consume this any way
XMLHttpRequest cannot load myurl. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access.
Error:: XMLHttpRequest cannot load myurl. No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'null' is therefore not allowed access.
not unless you want to create a proxy to said service on one of your own servers.
because CORS related issues are well documented. If the server you're trying to connect to doesn't support CORS or JSONP, there's only one other way around the problem.
there is no implementation of turing machines? I thought our normal hardware was turing machines, but with a certain modified set of cards to render the process more efficient for the needs we have...
is it just chips rather than programmable cards now?
I guess that would make sense
still, the chips can be abstracted into certain cards, although not directly..
as in, all of the gates can be implemented with cards using registers, meaning that they're basically the same thing, except one is practical and one is more theoretical