« first day (2517 days earlier)      last day (2660 days later) » 

13:00
@Neoares entire thing shouldn't be mixing array and object
I am trying to set selected to true of only first record of my tree and also selected porperty to true for first record of text property
This is my code :
[ name: null ...
function setNodes(node)
    {
        nodes.forEach(function (node,index) {
            node.selected = false;
            node.text.forEach(function (text) {
            });
            if (node.nodes) {
                setNodes(node.nodes,node);
            }
        });
    }
syntax error
13:01
=>
but here i am not getting how to manage index and set selected to true of only first record
actually the first one should be {
@Learning so we're just ignoring the fact that the code won't run because of syntax errors?
i will correct syntactical error
@Learning since your tree variable should be an object (with { } ), you don't have "first" element
13:02
You want an object instead of array ...
But can you guys guide me to manage index
objects have no index
Suppose records are like this :
Node-1
   Node-1-1
      Node-1-1-1
So i want to set selected to true of only Node-1
But problem is what index i should pass for Node-1-1
I am not getting that
your question doesn't make much sense
take a look at this ^
13:09
ok thanks :)
Hey guys i have this data structure:
nice data structure
var tree = ^<[{"value: 100": 2}.["datetime(3)"]&;
How do I set the first name value to an emoji?
!!> var tree = ^<[{"value: 100": 2}.["datetime(3)"]&;
@Neoares "SyntaxError: expected expression, got '^'"
13:13
@CapricaSix what do you know?
regex ?
@Neoares so how do I set first name value?
I need the first porperty
/s
var tree = <🌳 />;
var 🌳 = {};
Oh wow a self-contained emoji markup language, exactly what I needed thanks @rlemon
13:18
emojix
new, from facebook
ok so all that shit was a joke
didn't get it
well, with emojis you can store variables using less bytes
🌳 is shorter than "clover"
Sorry, that's why I threw in the "/s" cause I felt bad. But yeah that Learning guy came in here and showed a data structure that was completely wrong, then kept asking nonsense when it came to what he wanted to do. He backed off when you linked Objects and Arrays MDN, which I thought was funny
That's a tree
@jAndy no, hls.js is very fast in Chrome
Did you do a marijuana?
13:20
woah no drugs here buddo
hls.js just unwraps mpeg-ts container format files and puts them in something video can understand. It's even faster than native hls video playback in Safari @jAndy
@BenjaminGruenbaum hmm wondering then. Yes its "ok" but as I said, compared to Firefox, a different league. At least for my setup here
satan cheers when you smoke grass
did someone say drugs?
┬┴┬┴─ ΝœΚ– Ν‘°) β”œβ”¬β”΄β”¬β”΄
13:21
@jAndy are you sure that's hls.js's fault and not Chrome's?
Looks like we need another brick in the wall @rlemon
@BenjaminGruenbaum no.. not at all. But I'm just using the latest version, 60.0.3112.90
@jAndy "slow" as in "playback is slow" or as in "loading is slow"
fps
Can someone tell me if this code makes sense: if(v.showPrice == undefined || v.showPrice)
13:22
I'm literally playing 4 1080p videos using clappr (which uses hls.js) right now and the mbp is doing fine
@BenjaminGruenbaum hey hey now, programs and libraries don't cause performance drains, bad programmers do
@Vap0r hahah
@Vap0r that sentence has no meaning
Firefox seems very superior when it comes to css3 and 3d rendering to chrome either, so I thought, maybe the MediaSource is another thing
@Paran0a no it doesn't
13:23
@BenjaminGruenbaum guns don't kill people, people do
Jesus cries when we argue.
> Are you sure that's hls.js's fault
^ don't blame the program
@jAndy oh, you mean MediaSource in general? I don't know, honestly I never had any performance issues with the MediaSource API and video playback. I can ask around the people who have been here longer
@rlemon ayyyy
13:23
#allprogramsarebeautiful
@rlemon I'm refractoring someones code and I'm breaking my neck trying to figure why you would write something like that , it always returns true , right?
but I don't know right how how hls.js "renders" the ts files, must be using some form of MediaSource no?
@jAndy if it's an hls.js bug I'd be happy to fix it for you
@Vap0r Guns don't have people killed, people have people killed, because people are the baaaad guys remember?
@rlemon @Paran0a well what if you need to check if showPrice is undefined or true?
13:24
@jAndy hls.js doesn't render anything, that's the thing - .ts is mpeg-ts - it's a container format that contains the video and metadata. What hls.js does is open that container and pass the video to Chrome in a way it understands.
It doesn't actually do video processing, it does video container processing :D
@Paran0a it's saying if( a == (undefined || a) ) which is saying if( a == a )
By the way (no joke) we're doing an hls-js party at IBC in Amsterdam in a week and a half
aight
All the hls.js people will be there
@rlemon orly? Why not interpreted as ( a == undefined ) || a?
13:25
The text from the invite: Hey everyone! In town for IBC? Come join Peer5 and the HLS.JS community for an afternoon of drinks and conversation to unwind from the show. Monday 18 September join us at our booth in the RAI (Hall 3 Booth B56) at 4:00. Please register for the event here:
@rlemon gotcha!
@Vap0r but I still say that emojis are a more optimum way to declare variables
cc @bitten ^ * 3
we only need emoji-compatible IDLEs
So if you happen to be in IBC or in Amsterdam let us know - you can literally ask any hls.js question you come up with there
13:26
@Neoares you would be correct. Also the type of person who can seriously advocate for emoji variables scares me
Irreverent Bowel Control?
^ that's when you don't have respect for shit
@Vap0r because both sides of == are expressions.
|| isn't a logical operator though?
it is?
confirmed, it is
That's what I thought
13:30
@rlemon I don't think that's the correct operator precedence
then correct me
Don't write confusing code, doing || for default variables is silly since you now have... default variables
@KendallFrey ?
(of course, you can have a variable called 'undefined' since it's not a literal - so there's that)
!!> const a = 1; console.log(a == 2 || a, a == (2 || a));
@KendallFrey "undefined" Logged: true,true
oh bad example
13:31
lol
You need to use undefined, otherwise it's not falsey or interesting
!!> var a = 1; console.log(a == undefined || a, a == (undefined || a));
@BenjaminGruenbaum "undefined" Logged: 1,true
@KendallFrey "undefined" Logged: 1,false
how about this ^?
There, that shows the precedence
13:32
well alright then.
who uses true instead of !0 ?
As for the original code, I think there's still something interesting about it, though probably unintended
I'll let my compiler do that dirty work.
had to look at mdn ...
13:33
I think it returns true if the value is undefined, the original value otherwise
foo == bar || lorum = > foo == bar is executed, then out || lorum
@rlemon but then you're not a real gamer
err ... bad wording
golf is only fun if there is booze involved
Hahah so whats the conclusion , is the code unecessary?
redundant*
13:35
@rlemon I disagree so hard
unless you mean the car
never played beer golf ? :o
He means the sport
@Paran0a Depends what it's intended to do. I don't think it's purely redundant
@Neoares everyone
If you use !0 and I find out and you work for me, your services will no longer be required after that
@Paran0a so that code might make sense
13:35
you don't have to be fancy. Readability is more important
code golf is better with alcohol,
funny pant golf is better with alcohol,
german golf is not to be driven while consuming or after consuming alcohol, arrive alive.
I don't want such people if they use excessive fancy "hacks"
@BenjaminGruenbaum what about emojis?
if babel or uglify or w/e wants to turn true/false into !0/!1, go for it
I'll write readable code (rather, try)
plot twist: I don't use !0 or !1
I use babel
13:39
I like using -~[]
but only for obfuscation
-~0 also works
and then I got thrown out of the grocery store for tossing it at a pile of pork bellies.
@rlemon nails
@Neoares screws
13:46
i sometimes do that on purpose
@Neoares what about them?
@BenjaminGruenbaum if I was using emojis as variable names
not always, but sometimes
when necessary
@Neoares are you doing this in my real code base or in your open source library/ when doing demos?
If you're doing it in a very specific area then that's fine IMO
> If you use !0 and I find out and you work for me, your services will no longer be required after that
based on that
so I don't know, it's your company
what do we do?
Anyone know if it is possible to allow webpack-dev-server to set up some sort of alias to a specific domain? Kind of like setting up a record in /etc/hosts` for you
13:49
No body likes working with a human obfuscater.
that's not webpack's job, really..
Talking about obfuscation, I recently received the following in a merge request: foo.map( Function.call, number => -Number( number ) - 1 ) foo being an Array
> using emojis as variable names When necessary
// this needs refactoring 😝
And the same MR also had this beauty: Array.apply( null, { length: 10 } )
customer.mood = πŸ€”
customer object needs to be also an emoji
13:54
creditRating = 😭
return <🌳>
  <βΈ™>
    <🍎 />
  </βΈ™>
  <βΈ™>
    <🍏 />
  </βΈ™>
  <βΈ™>
    <🍎 />
  </βΈ™>
</🌳>
react-farm.js
now thats some sexy code markup
@Paran0a ---
Thank you :D
🐫
@BenjaminGruenbaum Did you just told me to angrily fuck myself?
> This book intends to be a little guide about how to be the Erlang medic in a time of war.
@SterlingArcher Jesus christ, do you not season anything either?

« first day (2517 days earlier)      last day (2660 days later) »