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17:00
if I knew how to get it working well, I would reformat and put windows in a VM
kvm supports it, yeah
maybe when the new cards come out, I'll set that up, see if it works well enough for gaming
</3 I am hating windows from the core of my heart o_o
How should I convince someone we should use lazy loading for modules in a project?
draw angry eye brows on your face
give them a stern look
17:05
@corvid
performance
tamales aren't even that good
you only load whats needed and dont whats not I think that doesn't really need explaination it is a very awsome advantage to have
'twas already working on wheezy
so it's old
interesting. That switch between passthrough video once the machine boots is cool, it means I can plug my monitor into both the real card and the onboard and use the onboard video to control the host.
just switch monitor inputs for the windows guest
oh nice, indeed
17:12
               I've come to suck your blood!
  👁  👁     /
    👃      /
 \_△_△_/
has anyone used cloud9 is it possible to share my code via cloud9 ?
@rlemon the teeth are supposed to be the other way around, no?
he's got an underbite
@rlemon XD that look more like zombie XD
s/blood/dick/
17:14
  O  - brainz...
  -==
  |
  |\
looks like a dog to me
nice, someone made a version with less ridiculous wings.
cc @KendallFrey
pretty...
git graph?
that new ship is much prettier, @rlemon
17:16
yea, github's 'network' graph
git gud
and looks faster
and looks like it lifts more
payload++
much more engines
it's either a git graph or a Factorio guide.
17:17
I'm disappointed in the amount of visible struts.
There is a website where you make a widget and then you click "Generate Code" and it gives you the HTML code to include the JS file. The code it gives you is <script type="text/javascript" src="..."></script>. Do you guys think that including the type attribute in this situation is pointless or do you think it makes it look classier?
@Loktar dude
the game was real nice
the gameplay is cool
@Luggage nice belt network bro
the only thing I noticed that was weird is that the grapple sometimes isn't really on whatever it's supposed to be
some sort of graphical glitch, y'know
like, you see it's on it, but it really doesn't look good because there's a big hole between it and whatever it's caught on
!!s/real\snice/lost./
17:18
@jAndy the game was lost. (source)
@Alesana it's not about the looks. If you want to be sure it will work in every browser that follows the standard, you should include the type
the major browsers don't have a problem with it
Ah, I misunderstood then. I will follow the trend with my app, then!
@towc thanks
np
@Alesana You're using a shitty WYSIWYG interface to generate code, and you're concerned if you should apply a proper mime type to your script tag? You have bigger issues to worry about.
also, application/javascript is the correct mime type now
The type="" attribute is optional on <script> tags for javascript. You can safely leave it out on any browser worth caring about
17:20
not text/javascript
@ndugger oh, that's news to me
It shouldn't be; application/javascript was introduced and standardized in 2006
What's this even supposed to do? iter.map(item => item + "");
all js tutorials are from 2001
@corvid convert the item to a string
apparently
17:24
iter.map(String) would work the same (probably)
@rlemon is this common? Why not just cast to string?
because they wanted to be hacky?
doing x + "" to convert to string is a code smell. Use the toString method, or jump off of a bridge
@FlorianMargaine yeah I'll look at that more I guess
I don't notice it happen too much but I know it does
thanks for the feedback!
glad it runs alright and everything
@ndugger eh [1,2,3].map(String) I would do way before [1,2,3].map(n=>n.toString())
17:26
I'd do your mom way before I'd do [1,2,3].map(String)
not really
fine, I'll use .toString..
!!> [1,2,3].toString().split(',')
@rlemon ["1","2","3"]
have it your way
@Luggage yeah iirc html5 doesn't require it
> The type attribute gives the language of the script or format of the data. If the attribute is present, its value must be a valid MIME type. The charset parameter must not be specified. The default, which is used if the attribute is absent, is "text/javascript".
w3.org
eh that's what you said lol
`.map(String)` is the cleanest
17:28
cleanliness is next to memeliness
@Alesana don't listen to him if your doctype is html :p
!!> [1,2,3,[4,5,6,[7,8,9]]].toString().split(',').map(Number)
@rlemon [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
\o/
in xhtml sure add the type I bet it's required lol
17:29
xhtml 4.01 transitional
those were the days
@Loktar Well I would not be the one that is putting the script tag on my website I am instructing others to so I don't know how they're setup would be
Just to be safe I'll include it
@ndugger meh xhtml 1.0 strict or gtfo
WML4lyfe
xhtml -1 slutty
On a similar note, .map(item => item * 1) what's a better way for that? item => parseInt(item, 10)?
17:32
arr.map(Number)
I prefer parseInt
if you have a math library, it might have an even better parse function
I've yet to run into an issue where not specifying the radix bit me in the ass
not that it doesn't happen.. just personally.
@rlemon same, but the linter yells so I do it :p
fair enough
me neither, I just think the name is more clear
especially parseInt vs parseFloat
17:36
yeah for sure
Number doesn't hint at what precision you'll get
you get "js" precision
@rlemon same
I'd also take .map(Number)
I don't really get this. What this guy has: iter.map(item => item * 1).sort((a, b) => a - b).map(item => item + ""). Can't you just do iter.sort((a, b) => parseInt(a, 10) - parseInt(b, 10))?
iter.map(Number).filter(Boolean).sort().map(String)
17:40
do you need to cast to a number and then back to a string, though?
iirc sort won't work on strings for numbers the way you think
well, that's that for samba, shared folders are working again :D
^ "101" would come before "11" for example
My students are doing a git tutorial, they're trying to commit and vim is singing them the song of its people - their frustrated reactions are priceless
@rlemon sort defaults to sort alphabetically IIRC.
17:44
really?
So you'd still need to sort((a,b) => a - b) or something like that.
@BenjaminGruenbaum dump them straight up into gitflow workflow
I would normally have a more complicated sort. so I just guessed
@SterlingArcher gitflow is simpler than whatever workflow they'd come up with on their own, guaranteed
nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model this is a really good read for gitters (newish)
17:45
@rlemon one of the worst decisions in JS IMO
@SterlingArcher lol
Sprint review went well. Customer is extremely happy with my lead
prove it
@SterlingArcher dude that's the super old version, gitflow has been revised a few times since then
gitlab and github both have tweaks they recommend
Well la dee da
viola
17:49
folks be transcriptin
lmfao
@ndugger you're getting transcript flagged so hard for saying s/blood/dick
good, I want to get flagged
flag me harder
anyone here familiar with vue.js?
Next thing you know, mods will get super butthurt and remove my RO--they've already threatened to do it recently
@bi4nchi I'm familiar with the fact that it's a bit of a joke. It's yet another view library with nothing new to bring to the table. It says it's faster than react, but react is pretty fast as-is, and has much better support. Vue is just one guy.
17:56
Well damn.
So, 'no'.
I haven't heard anything bad about it, yet.
yeah, I've heard good things, but I don't see why you would use it over React
Especially with the performance gains that React Fiber claims
I just don't see a good reason
But no good reason to avoid, so I don't think we treat it like jQuery. Yet...
I have yet to see somebody say "so Vue wants me to add inline event handlers with inline html with inline JS to run event handlers," so it's beating jQ and Angular
17:59
People say that about react..
People say a lot of things, but people are wrong

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