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22:07
@AsafFisher what's the issue? computed property names that allow undefined?
I am looking forward to the day when, while installing graphics drivers, icons on desktop won't misplace due to res changes during installation.
I get used to my icon layout, but I cannot reproduce it.
people still use desktop icons?
i like my icons.
i just type what i want into the search bar
screw finding an icon
once I realized I never visited my desktop, I did away with the icons.
22:11
finding icons means minimizing so much
everything is a term or a keypress -> search away
especially when you can bind your F keys to launch programs
@rlemon, so I tried to implement surface tension, and the particles developed this pattern. prntscr.com/g6zsth
@Tobiq that be how real water do
not that pattern, but patterns.
really???
These patterns are amazing, is there some form of maths that theyre following?
22:14
the math you gave it :P
I'm not sure about water drops...but surface tension leads to soap bubbles and minimal surfaces
surface tension is what makes a water drop a drop
it's holding itself together
I guess
I usually think of cohesion when I think of that, but those are the opposite sides of the same coin
but those are less pretty on a lattice
jesus you know im working in JS
I know :D
but I wouldn't think to program a lattice gas model with JS either, so...
22:19
I wanna do a solar system simulation with all of these particles
that would look epic
like 50k particles
see what forms
I have to warn you, there's a lot of particles in a star
solar physics and particles physics are also very different
and probably none of it is liquid :P
all im missing ATM is gravity
eeeeh
good luck:D
bye
22:21
@AndrasDeak lol thanks
Theyre not doing any physics
still cool.
have you adopted webgl yet?
it's more of a demo of how much faster it is
yep
canvas.arc can barely paint 1k
@Tobiq that looks pretty nice
whenever you see a pattern and go "oooh, pretty", it's more often than not a fractal
22:30
yeah thats what i meant by this:
These patterns are amazing, is there some form of maths that theyre following?
yup
that's why I came back
@Tobiq do you need to arc all of them ? any way to "cache" the result in a ghost canvas and reuse that ?
even caching and repainting caps at like 7k
I'm not sure about the sign of your surface tension
it reminds me of brains: largest surface for fixed volume
I don't think what you posted has surface tension, since it clearly not even a liquid
22:32
Acc = GM/R^2, right?
using that
I have no idea
@KendallFrey how do I make it liquid lol
@KendallFrey surface tension in the sense that each dot is a molecule in a liquid, sort of
and fortunately even metals have surface tension
ok lets call it a metal
@Tobiq I don't know nearly enough about your code to say
22:33
works for me
But since it's a solid, maybe heat it up a bit?
simulated annealing
play them my mix tape
mix them my play tape
We're going for liquid, not plasma
22:34
i did a thing with that once, simulating crystallisation, adding heat to get over local minima
the code was really bad
it's a pretty robust technique
the waves from before look epic
oh that's pretty neat
Thats old, without surface tension
Instructions: Click and drag to place points. Number keys to add heat. 1 is cold, 9 is hot. 4/5 is liquid, 6 starts to evaporate. There are other keys too, letters and shit but I can't remember them all... jsfiddle.net/8jKES/1/show
22:37
JS wouldn't be my first guess for molecular dynamics simulations
Yeah, I'm a special kind of special
wanted challenge
9 billion, jesus christ
is it running in real-time?
most definitely not
22:41
@Tobiq What did you do to try to simulate surface tension?
ya, fork it nice job
I assume that a couple hundred(?) thousand CPU cores were utilized for that
Repel if inside eachother, else attract based on inverse square of distance
for all near-particles
Do you have elastic collisions?
yeh
i turned the friction of surface off
the triangular image was with no energy though - 0K.
I'm going to do everything I can to render 100k particles.
22:45
That feeling when system restore fixes a relative's PC issue.
Apparently van der Waals force is 1/r^6 rather than 1/r^2
that might give a better surface
really? is the surface tension force
ill try that now
I think that's what causes surface tension, in general
Welk I'm drunk again
thanks, for letting us know
22:47
hide yo goldfish, hide yo midgets
little people
I was at the bank and some lady thanked me for being a software guy. it was weird
hey.. world needs more software guys and girls..
and other
software people
22:52
i dont know if this looks any different @KendallFrey gyazo.com/bd58e11d77c4307a1259b533c2d9cb5a
thanks software LGBTQ non binary gender flora and fauna!
@Tobiq Nothing's sticking together
oh lemme up the anti
it was weird because I live next to a military base, and people usually thank military people for their service. It just felt wrong.
22:54
2 hours ago, by rlemon
@Zirak @KendallFrey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7KSfjv4Oq0&feature=youtu.be 😃 😃
Just saying :P
yup.
@Arrow I don't understand that fetish. Why does no one thank their mechanic for their service?
i thank my mechanic.
@Luggage Randomly on the street?
though, for specific service, not being a mechanic in general
22:56
Maybe ill never get there
Ya it was random, I did not work for her. I think she was trying to hit on me but it just came out weird.
I took her fain of interest for software for real interest. So I started talking about cobolt
@Tobiq There's still nothing sticking together
It doesn't look like there's any attractive force whatsoever
van der Waals forces can also describe a gas
Well yeah, but it's less significant
what I'm saying is that the parameters can be such that the attraction is not strong enough
oh, and another thing: separation of matter into clumps in a liquid happens at a much larger length scale
if you zoom in on water you just see particles zooming all over the place
23:03
@AndrasDeak But look at the undisturbed area. There's no movement and there should be.
you mean cobol?
@BenFortune just finished s2
@KendallFrey it seems to me that the particles are at rest, possibly in the minimum of the potential (assuming that one exists). In a liquid at finite temperature you have an average kinetic energy proportional to T
anyway, I don't want to physics up the room even more:D
@AndrasDeak They're not at a minimum potential, because they're not touching
qualitative physics is so much easier
they can't touch because there's repulsion on the short scale
there's short-range repulsion + long-range attraction
23:06
also, it's forbidden for particles to touch and there is always a chaperone present.
But even the ones farther away aren't attracted
they might lick though
@KendallFrey it is unlikely that the initial state is the energy minimum...
@Tobiq It still looks more like a pool ball than water simulation. It doesn't seem as if there is any attraction force between them, that would overcome the bounce force
I have to agree
hyper-mega-pool
23:12
When you think of water, you don't tend to have water particles snapping randomly out of the 'water-body' on collision with another particles.
@Luggage was my dream as a kid to always go into those huge ones
@KamilSolecki Oh no?
if you play pool right, the molecules stay in the pool
im figuring it out rn
@KendallFrey they might pop out because of other forces, but I have not heard of water particles bounce off water at 180 degrees.
And it is a case here.
What other force would cause a water molecule to escape the surface, if not collisions with other molecules?
23:15
Uh, external ones.
a desire for freedom.
Such as?
umm...evaporation is a thing
but that's beside the point here, I believe
Almost all the time, evaporation is caused by particle collisions
well, to the extent that some particles tend to be faster than others because they collide with others in a way that leaves them with more energy
23:17
@KendallFrey any force you imagine, as long as it's greater then the attraction force of other particles
Or combo of forces
That can be including the bounciness
For example?
We are talking about reality here, right?
is this really a meta-metadiscussion of the original problem?
But again, my point was that the ttraction forces should be greater here then the bounciness forces.
what's a bounciness force?
a force that causes bouncing
23:19
In short, the particles should stick together more than they bounce away is what I'm tryng to say.
That's called a liquid
They're held together by the van der Waals force
And that's what is not present in his example which is supposed to be a simulation of one
pretty much, yeah
Happy that we arrived to the consensus.
Crap, there was supposed to be a pretty sky view today, but it decided to storm.
How am I supposed to smoke cigarettes if I can't stare at the sky
uh, in the rain and the dark, like they were meant for?
23:28
at work, in the office, like it was 1950
1980s here
mustve been dreadful if you werent a smoker
everyone was, even if they didn't want to be
my dad tells the story of his boss who used to have 3 smokes on the go in various ashtrays
just like everyone has multiple monitors these days
because they didnt have the cigarettes that went out
23:34
@hsimah yeah, those ones keep going out, it's awful
lol it's a safety thing. people fall asleep with a lit cigarette and start a fire.
well, that's what happens when you don't take the speed from the doctor
lol
How do people manage to get their cigarettes go off while smoking though
23:37
can i have your doctor's phone number?
@KamilSolecki Ever been drinking, smoking, and gesticulating?
I don't know, those seem like puddles of water. gyazo.com/cedeb5925e545443b4a231ec3bbfde88
if you leave them without smoking they eventually die
Eventually one of em has got to go and you either spill your drink, your smoke goes out, or you accidentally slap some short person in the face.
Well obviously. Just never seemed to be a problem to me. I might have had one go out on me maybe only just a few times
user5738123
23:38
hi guys
user5738123
finally crawled my way back here
@KamilSolecki yeah it takes a while
@ssube due to my excessive gesticulation manners, I've spilled things way too many times.
@Luggage whats that thing at the bottom holding it?
got me. a 'stand' of some sort, i think
user5738123
23:50
so is javascript gona get a revision?
user5738123
who is in charge of updating it?
it gets one every year, now.
and tc39 is in charge
@RahulDesai it's an incense burner thing. it catches the ash that falls from the stick. i loathe the stinky stuff but my gf loves it.
2
Q: Javascript Performance: Subtraction operation within decrementing loop slowing the code by more than 100%

Syed Huzaifa HassanI was going through Eloquent JavaScript (again) and came across exercise "Chess Board" of Chapter 2. I had my one decent version of solution written back in the day when I was first time reading it, and another version of solution provided at the Elequent Javascript website. I'm one of the newbie...

@SyedHuzaifaHassan Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. Pleasedon'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.
23:56
@hsimah cool
anyone that can tell me why the modulus of -ve number is slower than positive number as it affect performance more than 100%. if positive modulus is evaluated 5000 time and modulus of positive value takes ~600 ms than -ve modulus will take ~1500 ms

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