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12:00
so your ajax response is just empty?
you have a scoping issue
@neoDev ajax returns data
but events is not getting assigned to the returned data
2674
Q: How do I return the response from an asynchronous call?

Felix KlingI have a function foo which makes an Ajax request. How can I return the response from foo? I tried to return the value from the success callback as well as assigning the response to a local variable inside the function and return that one, but none of those ways actually return the response. fu...

what is typeof events?
events is a var type
@BenFortune yes but i dont know how to do that
12:07
Have you tried actually reading it?
yes i tried
but in this case where do i create the callback function
the call to returnData() in getAll() doesn't seem to be doing anything, just spews out some data into nowhere
@RayPoward 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.
maybe try return returnData()?
events have a type ?!!! o_O me scratches his head
12:11
someone please help
am so confused
the answer is in that SO post that ben posted here :|
any way to show sample with my codE?
@Sajeetharan getEvents() does not actually return anything at any point
!!> typeof null
@Sajeetharan @CapricaSix YUNODELETE?
12:14
@FlyingGambit "object"
@OliverSalzburg FAIL XD
@OliverSalzburg not all code blocks are recognized by cap
@Sajeetharan you are doing console.log(events) and you actually can see result in the console right?
@neoDev yes i can see
@KarelG Scandalous
12:17
it's not easy to determine that :P
so maybe you are not passing them into your response
@neoDev It's not that, you can't just return from an asynchronous function
@BenFortune please help how cna i do
@Sajeetharan Read the answer I linked.
Nobody is going to write your code for you
How the fuck do you have a silver JavaScript badge and not know about callbacks/Promises/etc
i have done it
sorry
was a silly one
am really sorry
12:20
what was the problem?
@BenFortune SO badges are silly and don't mean anything
@neoDev as ben mentioned i had to use callback
@BenFortune I was wondering the same thing when I saw ̀objectStoreAPI.getAll(commonFunctions.DB_CONFIG.HOST_NAME,commonFunctions.DB_CO‌​NFIG.PORT,commonFunctions.DB_CONFIG.DB_NAME,` - Should probably have the config at one place and use a connection object and not have thos commonFunctions... repeated everywhere
@BenFortune probably angular js + js tagged questions
angular provides abstraction to these (important IMHO) javascript features
@KarelG Their "abstraction" is still A+ promises
12:27
Hello I was whatching google progressive web app. Do you know some tutorial for understan ServiceWorker? I did not get it from google docs
So it's no excuse ;P
keh. i didn't really have delved into that angular ... only threw my first sights on that :P
I have a bronze Angularjs badge :)
So cute!
Why does [..."abc"].reduce((acc, c) => acc + c.charCodeAt(0)) return a9899 unless I specify the initialValue as ''?
12:29
today I was reading that relational databases are no longer good and nosql ones are the future
@neoDev May the force be with you
why? :D
@neoDev lmao
@neoDev link ( if online ? )
otherwise burn it
was a magazine, it had an netire section dedicated to it
12:31
oh, nevermind, apparently reduce skips the first value if initial value isn't supplied
the reasons were that there is need of mutable strucures, and we cannot always know their shape at the beginning..
> Note: If initialValue isn't provided, reduce will execute the callback function starting at index 1, skipping the first index. If initialValue is provided, it will start at index 0.
92
A: NoSql vs Relational database

duffymoNot all data is relational. For those situations, NoSQL can be helpful. With that said, NoSQL stands for "Not Only SQL". It's not intended to knock SQL or supplant it. SQL has several very big advantages: Strong mathematical basis. Declarative syntax. A well-known language in Structured ...

about "A well-known language in Structured Query Language (SQL)."
@neoDev Lol that's absolutely stupid
12:34
they said that there are also nosql databases that use same queries
The fuck does that even mean?
you mean an ORM?
XD
is it Trash can or trash bin ?
both
@neoDev Was this guy on the cover of it?
@BenFortune N1QL
12:36
I mean the place where I could play with Caprica
the room
sandbox
!!tell FlyingGambit sandbox
@FlyingGambit Please go and play in the Sandbox
@FlyingGambit Darkroom
aha Thanks
12:37
so, I got gifted this: google.co.uk/…
I originally though that the black part shouldn't be eaten, but it actually seems like it was meant to... can't find resources online on whether to eat it or not
cheese cake ?
cheese wheel
it's not chocolate
user6619012
user6619012
i need to display "back" near to "save" button, i am using position : relative; left : 230px; is this right way ?
is there any other way ?
so you don't like nosql?
12:39
@towc just eat it, your tummy will either accept or show the way out
well, baby toothpaste can be eaten without it showing the way out, that doesn't mean it should be eaten
is baby toothpaste made of babies?
@BenFortune have you tried this N1QL?
I need to have babies to taste the toothpaste.
@towc look for a video on it
12:42
@towc Lol, the black part is wax
To keep it fresh
that's what I thought, but then why is it called "black bomber"?
wax is edible, so chum chum chum
what to say... I will burn it..
its called bomber because of the aftermath
if your body rejects it
wax is edible as in "not poisonous"
but it's not digestible, I think
I would avoid eating too much of it, unless you want to make a colon-shaped candle
12:45
your body probably knows what to accept and reject
After making the SSL info hard to access, Chrome is now going to remove the plugin screen - and the option to disable plugins.
@Sheepy thats a bad idea
@user5348fh8y5 is that button styled with float: right; ?
@Sheepy oh no
you could put both in a container and use float on that. Then both are together on same place
12:47
@RayPoward sounds like a sound business plan
> Seemingly, Google just doesn’t feel that “ordinary” users need to look at that data these days.
that's same symptom as that case sensitivity search
Isn't cheese cakes bad for health in general ?
@FlyingGambit Not having cheese cakes is bad for mental health.
It makes fat people fatter
@KarelG Well, the stat says ordinary users do flock to and then stick with Chrome. And webdevs too, if w3school's stat is any indication.
12:51
Someone will eventually come up with a custom build of chrome which will not be as restrictive as the original
Most browsers seem to be custom versions of chrome nowadays
Would be cool if someone were to update old opera based on that source code leak, but that will never happen
this means that also using flags those functions will be unavailable?
I use firefox as main browser anyways ... (only at work, chrome is my main)
After putting my resignation, I have started using Tor in office and chrome at home :D
are you so anxious about your browing data ?
12:58
what are you surfing with Tor :p
Well they blocked stackoverflow for 3 days, they recently removed mcafee and installed kaspersky
@jAndy you are very keen to know :P
Opera has a built-in VPN
Indeeeeed please let me, please please let me know!
It's faster than tor if you just want to avoid blocking
eh, tbf, that Tor doesn't make you anonymous
13:00
Then I would have to deal with the installaton and admin rights , with Tor, it somehow never asks me for the admin rights
that 100% anonymity is a myth
@FlyingGambit You mean Opera?
it's anonymous at greater extends due of geographical borders.
@Sheepy there's also vivaldi
I'm really still such a noob about Tor and deepweb stuff, I wouldn't have a clue what the average joe what do in deep web.. besides the usual porn stuff, which you also get plenty in non deepweb :p
13:01
You can use tor for everything.
@Sheepy I am not sure, I don't like how Opera works, it does not give me the feels
@jAndy I heard that you can also buy ddos service plan.
100% anonymity is not possible, but it can be made so difficult that nobody bothers with it
user6619012
@KarelG yes, float : left is there
@jAndy I heard from a video, that there are sites which sell guns, drugs, child porno and actuall murder videos
13:05
even "such sites" must be listed somewhere right... like a DNS server in the www, something has to link or connect to "it" at some point in time
@FlyingGambit He know. The "I have no idea" guys are usually the worst
There are actual murder videos on the normal web.
@jAndy i visit Tor for hack tools, discussion about software vulnerabilities, leaks, ...
so I really don't get why this is so anonymous or people feel save to buy child porn or weapons
@OliverSalzburg Oh I got tricked -_-
13:07
it doesn't really use the dns servers though
@KarelG any good site for that ?
There are .onion sites that are only accessible with tor or gateways
Is there a way to increase the number of countries through which the connection gets routed ?
well yea it's not really a dns entry or lookup table, but even in deepweb you have to have some "access" link or anything which routes you to your desired destination
yes ofc
13:10
that is no black magic...
I use Tor for all of my illegal corn downloads
it uses RELAY_RESOLV cell or something to lookup at the socket exit
// checks specs
I probably need to learn more about networks
Network and Communications ^
We're communicating over a network right now. You're already learning!
Way to go!
13:12
I say thanks to every person that contributed to the invention of Internet
you can just email tim berners lee and say thanks.
He just headed the team
eh, I know what the first characters are of the internet
L + O
then the connection got broken
xD
lol
Even world's first website info.cern.ch is blocked in my company
@FlyingGambit did he? or did he describe the idea, then return to CERN and implement a crude version of it
13:15
anyway I don't buy a TOR/deepweb "site" is really hidden or non traceable.
everyone can thank timmy lee
@rlemon I have the memory power of an old cuckoo
w3.org/People/Berners-Lee He doesn't say not to email him creepy "thank-you" notes
@jAndy ah, I just said that it's a myth. But it's still hard to find visitors of a given tor website because of country borders.
@jAndy According to the video, about 98% of the internet is deep web for us, because Google search engines return only like 0.00...0018 % of the total web
13:18
if you give an IT expert of let's say FBI full access to all routers in all country, it would take some days to find out visitors of a given tor site
I dont know what happened to balance %
@all im trying to import a module but getting the error as module cannot be found
because each tor router stores keys to be able to (de/en)crypt data. You only have to capture them
@SamSam so install it
which process actually resolves an .onion locator?
13:19
i have two file..abc.js and xyz.js
im exporting abc.js
I just don't understand why it isn't a peace of cake to find any site, because at some point a lookup has to be made to return a physical address
@FlyingGambit Do you trust that number? Do you know anyone who get 98% of their daily internet from the deep web? If not, who is accessing that 98%? AI?
module.exports {} -- this i have used in abc.js
import foo from './abc.js';
// or
const foo = require('./abc.js');
assuming they're in the same folder
@jAndy Tor doesn't use IP addresses
13:21
and in xyz.js
abc = require("./abc.js");
@SamSam do you have an = sign in there?
module.exports = { foo: 123 }
@KendallFrey regardless what it uses, it has to locate a site specifically, very physically, much detectable
@Sheepy probably nobody
Hello there
@jhonatan2760 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.
13:22
where?
@rlemon yes = is there
@SamSam should work then
module.exports = function (myparam) {}
I need to learn how to use sprite in javascript
@jacobian google
13:24
@FlyingGambit If nobody is accessing them, what makes them part of Internet? If a few people is accessing them, they need to work very hard - orders of magnitude hard - to make up for the users who don't.
css tricks + sprites
yeah I am creating game here
then google canvas + sprites
@KendallFrey it does ... there are even IPv6 tor sites
yes good. I'll let you know when I had finished making the game then.
user6845426
13:26
Hi again guys :D
@KarelG Tor doesn't require that a server be accessible via IP, if I understand it.
@Sheepy Well consider the websites "some_name_I_forgot" which got taken down by the govt for selling drugs, guns n stuff. People regular to such sites were aware of them
They still made a big amount of money in bitcoins
user6845426
Now he's in prison.
@FlyingGambit Silk Road?
when I first heard of it I thought it was some textiles market
13:30
yes bitcoins cannot get confiscated by the government
like China Town
Silk road is still going, probably being run by the gov
user6845426
@KendallFrey guy who made that is locked up now.
@KendallFrey Yes
I won't forget that name easily, because our offshore development team is called Silk Road
13:31
XD
NSA probably has their eyes on you
what I think when I hear Silk Road
@KendallFrey you can "hide" the IP address yes. The public key is then shared by the admin of that server. That key is then used to "find" the server
Silk road was originally the name of a trading route across Asia that carried a lot of silk
then they turned to hard drugs and guns?
such a common, but sad story
😬
The route still exists
user6845426
13:32
Typical humans. Take something good and ruin it
@rlemon its not their mistake , the sellers could sell anything , just like amazon
iirc, silk road admin got busted when he unintentionally allowed direct access to his laptop
Our team is located not far from part of the road, hence the name
so not by exploiting tor's weaknesses, presumably
@RayPoward there was a nice story about it. the sting operation was outstanding
13:33
at least, that's what the government wants you to think
Silk road didn't directly sell anything, it's a marketplace
@RayPoward yes the cops fooled him
had to grab and run with his laptop in a library while he was still logged into the servers
user6845426
@BenFortune I was always confused of how he could direclty be repsonsible (the owner) if he didnt actually sell anything.
like, they knew it was him, but couldn't prove it was him without his laptop.. still logged in
13:34
The choreography was great
@FlyingGambit didn't really "fool" him. they watched him and had a person planted ready to grad his laptop and run
Did someone spill a coffee or something?
@F.Bar Because he did nothing to stop it
They distracted him somehow
@KendallFrey yea, I can't remember. I think someone just made a commotion
13:35
He encouraged it
I'd have to look that part of it up now
Just for a split second, enough to swipe the laptop
headphones still attached too iirc
!!answer_to_everything
@FlyingGambit 42
13:45
That's the number of the Ruby room O___O
Clearly Ruby is your answer
rails generate scaffold Life
!!> Math.floor(Math.sqrt(Array.from("evil", chr => chr.charCodeAt(0)).reduce((a,b) => a+b, 0)))
@rlemon 20
20 is the char code for CAPSLOCK
coincidence? I think not
CAPSLOCK is the root of all evil
13:52
My firebug broke: i.imgur.com/t12xJ8i.png
Firebug is discontinued ?!
yeah
"use dev tools" they say
!!> String.fromCharCode(666);
"we don't care they don't even have an alternative to firepath" they say
@jAndy "ʚ"
13:54
this looks like a little sideways butt
2
what is that... thing... DEVILS WORK
!!> String.fromCharCode(6969);
!!> String.fromCharCode(616)
@rlemon "ɨ"
@FlyingGambit "*"
@FlyingGambit "ᬹ"
what is 616 for that matter?
13:55
the actual number of the beast
666 is a lie
Devils number
and it is a Korean "or"
indecisive koreans are the devil?
!!wiki 616
you'd think it'd be "but"
Year 616 (DCXVI) was a leap year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 616 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years. == Events == === By place === ==== Byzantine Empire ==== Byzantine–Sassanid Empire: The Jews of Jerusalem gain complete control over the city; much of Judea and Galilee becomes an autonomous Jewish province of the Persian Empire. The Jewish Temple is rebuilt by Nehemiah ben Hushiel (exilarch of Jerusal...
13:55
!!wiki number of the beast
@RayPoward Looks fine
The Number of the Beast (Greek: Ἀριθμὸς τοῦ θηρίου, Arithmos tou Thēriou) is a term in the Book of Revelation, of the New Testament, that is associated with the Beast of Revelation in chapter 13. In most manuscripts of the New Testament and in English translations of the Bible, the number of the beast is 666. In critical editions of the Greek text, such as the Novum Testamentum Graece, it is noted that 616 is a variant. In the oldest preserved manuscript as of 2017, as well as other ancient sources like Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus, the Number of the Beast is 616 (χιϛ), not 666. == Revelation 13... ==
I'm already used to console.log outputting things to console, though
Is this behaviour considered obsolete?
yea console.log is old.
everyone uses alerts now
lemon plz
13:58
!!lemons
👄
@FlyingGambit That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: rlemon
you can use console.warn too
personally, I prefer the sophistication of prompt()
13:58
@FlyingGambit That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: rlemon, learn
document.write ftw
oh boy
that way you KNOW you got a value
i recall that dude's SO post that defends his use of document.write to put html strings on that
it's the only thing you see
@KarelG there are some acceptable cases
13:59
._.
but you really should understand the side effects of document.open first

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