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13:01
is it possible to set a variables value when passing it as a parameter? Instead of just setting the value of the refrence if that makes sense - jsfiddle.net/v592k47x/1
when i click the div, it just sets the variable i passed and not the global variable
13:25
@RachelDockter Try wrapping the variable in object. Let me show
yap, you cannot pass variables by reference
@Luke 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.
oh sweet that works, i guess its bad but its better than having 10 of the same functions for different variables
thanks :D
13:31
JS is neither pass-by-reference or -by-pointer, but it mostly acts like -by-reference for objects.
@ssube mostly? Or always? Example please?
435
A: Does Javascript pass by reference?

AlnitakPrimitives are passed by value, Objects are passed by "copy of a reference". Specifically, when you pass an object (or array) you are (invisibly) passing a reference to that object, and it is possible to modify the contents of that object, but if you attempt to overwrite the reference it will no...

oh that. yep lol, the parameters itself are always pass by value. Shallow copy for array/objects, right?
@ShaU hi doctor
@RahulJain no copies at all
13:35
@ssube uh! ok ok
@RahulJain pass by reference can't be a copy by definition
@ShrekOverflow yea but I don't rememeber what I said
vOv
Hi Ssube
@ssube no, I meant the object's properties are passed by reference but not the object itself.
13:38
You said
something's got not chill
@ShrekOverflow these pranksters :P
@RahulJain what does that mean? Objects are passed, not individual properties.
If that were the case, you'd pass a property descriptor (or many) rather than the object itself.
JS does not do pass-by-reference at all, but it does have reference types. What this means is you cannot pass a reference to a variable (pass by reference), but you can pass a reference to the object that variable contains (pass a reference). The function can change the object, but not the variable.
@ssube never mind, will read on it to get my basics clear lol
@RahulJain talk about a prank
13:40
Good morning citizens
u know how adding event listener of 'click' is the same as element.onclick
is it the same with touchstart, or is that the same in both cases
onclick != addEventListener ...
anyone uses atom?
14:00
!!welcome RahulJain
@RahulJain 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.
!!ban towc
@ssube That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: fail
@ssube towc added to mindjail.
stop re-welcoming people all the time
14:03
I am so amazed by the C17.
I tried browserify and atom editor shows output code like this
@RahulJain close and restart?
its reading it in a bad encoding vOv
@ShrekOverflow Tried that already
or you have really weird characters in your code
does it work in a browser?
No. It is opening correctly in sublime
14:04
why are you opening output from browserify anywa?
that is a weird browserify output then
3 bad characters sounds like a bad encoding, 4 is a binary file
I was just checking lol. atom adding spaces after every character. I would just move back to sublime or vscode I guess
@KarelG output is good on command line and sublime, only atom is doing this shit
you could try clean atom settings
but all paths lead to not-atom, so... cut to the chase
if you have ST .. why do you have Atom ?
having two editors is weird. Make a choice bruh
14:11
I used to use ST. But my whole team has moved to atom so I just wanted to try
@rlemon @Loktar @FlorianMargaine gotta get down
you don't have to move to atom because others did ...
having more than one editor doesn't bother me, I move between machines enough
I use ST, a colleague here uses Atom. Another ST. Another emacs. ect
the vscode sync plugin is pretty nice for when that's available
14:12
yay I got a Good Question silver badge
Good morning fuckboys
@SterlingArcher 😱
It's a crisp, cold, but beautiful morning in texas 😀 and I'm in a great mood
Hey.... shut up.
I have 6 more of those if that's not good enough for you :P
14:16
just saw your highest voted question
the voted answer is not so correct.
@KarelG mine or Ken?
I know that the implementation of the array has been changed before 🤔
kendall's
haha suck it kendall
!!afk human smoke generator
ah. Benjamin already commented on that
Worth mentioning this answer is no longer correct. Modern engines do not store Arrays (or objects with indexed integer keys) as hashtables (but like well... arrays like in C) unless they're sparse. To get you started here is a 'classical' benchmark illustrating thisBenjamin Gruenbaum Oct 29 '13 at 19:13
@SterlingArcher your question is however an odd one. How does one come at console.log`1` ...
is it true that if statements are inefficient?
14:19
@KarelG it was a topic in the JS chat that wasn't really answered in depth, so I posted it (gave credit to catgocat)
Thought it would make a neat knowledgebase
turned into my best question :X
> BACKTICK ALL THE FUCKING THINGS :D
lol
yeah i think that was the lil homie that stalked @rlemon?
holy shit my top voted answers
this world is full of stupid people
@corvid who said that? It depends of what you're doing with it
> A console application does not automatically add a reference to System.Windows.Forms.dll.

Right-click your project in Solution Explorer and select Add reference... and then find System.Windows.Forms and add it.
how the fuck does this get 100 votes
14:22
right
my first arqade answer was even better
25
A: Why is everything in minecraft opaque red and blue?

Kendall FreyTurn off the 3D Anaglyph option in the Options > Video Settings screen.

I mean, my top answer is literally an MDN quote sooooo I feel you b
30
A: How does eval() treat a string object differently from a primitive string value?

Sterling ArcherFrom the MDN: String primitives and String objects also give different results when using eval. Primitives passed to eval are treated as source code; String objects are treated as all other objects are, by returning the object. For example: s1 = "2 + 2"; // creates a string primi...

You've never dealt with someone who turned on fucking 3d glasses mode and wondered why it looked funny
lol
i wasn't kidding about the smoke generator though, they're taking me to the remote site to vape into the optic fire detectors to set them off lol
I'm useful!
My highest voted answer is telling someone to install dev tools for ruby
!!afk cereal killin'
14:26
:(
why are people so stupid
@Cereal Mine's telling people to rtfm basicaly
@Cereal im jk lol
None of my good answers have any votes
lol
0
A: Clickable grid instead of editable

CerealYou're looking for the ENTRY-REASON special property on GRID elements. https://supportline.microfocus.com/documentation/acucorpproducts/docs/v6_online_doc/gtman2/gt2546.htm ENTRY-REASON (alphanumeric) This property records the user's action that caused the grid to shift to entry mode....

#obscureknowledge
!!afk booty booty booty booty rockin everywhere
@KarelG my professor in college, I think he basically said that if a processor has 24 "steps", an if statement must pass through all steps before another command can start
Why is jon skeet a genius
@KendallFrey i.imgur.com/5OyTJBq.png we have the same number of famous questions
:D
also happy friday
@rlemon re: Geordi's technobabble
I think I'm getting sick
14:28
After watching him side-by-side scotty he really has a way to technobabble very eloquently
@KendallFrey 90% of the people are stupid towards you. So there is your chance.
@ssube quite mellow and chill but you might like it
@corvid how does he handle a conditional flow then?
on machine level, a flag is set if a condition is determined. Based on the given flag, a jump is done or not
the optimization is more in how the condition is evaluated. if (today == friday && doCheckStation) is slower than using if (doCheckStation && today == friday)
but that is just more a nitpicking point and 99% the time not worth of the effort
@KendallFrey TIL. Really. I am curious how Jon figured that out.
He specializes in dates and times. He wrote NodaTime.
@Gareth: Nope, but checking the details of Shanghai time zone transitions at that period was my first port of call. And I've been working on time zone transitions for Noda Time recently, so the possibility of ambiguity is pretty much at the forefront of my thoughts anyway... — Jon Skeet Jul 27 '11 at 8:35
@KendallFrey Damn, he's almost at a million
14:42
Bah
@KamilSolecki I love trance, so chill isn't a problem. Slow can be, but so far it sounds good.
@ShrekOverflow The problem was that I was running browserify in Windows Powershell. Tried in simple cmd prompt and worked fine
@KarelG I think this is the subject of the highest scoring SO post ever
19958
Q: Why is it faster to process a sorted array than an unsorted array?

GManNickGHere is a piece of C++ code that seems very peculiar. For some strange reason, sorting the data miraculously makes the code almost six times faster. #include <algorithm> #include <ctime> #include <iostream> int main() { // Generate data const unsigned arraySize = 32768; int data[arr...

In computer architecture, a branch predictor is a digital circuit that tries to guess which way a branch (e.g. an if-then-else structure) will go before this is known definitively. The purpose of the branch predictor is to improve the flow in the instruction pipeline. Branch predictors play a critical role in achieving high effective performance in many modern pipelined microprocessor architectures such as x86. Two-way branching is usually implemented with a conditional jump instruction. A conditional jump can either be "not taken" and continue execution with the first branch of code which follows...
@RahulJain yeah PS has given me a ton of problems with node in general
I wonder why
@KendallFrey i do not have to click it to know it is about the branch predictor :P
14:45
@ssube wdyt of Powershell ?
@RahulJain I personally just use the GNUWin32Tools to get bash like utilities in windows cmd
bash is life
powershell is cool on the backend, the syntax is nasty tho
cmder is great
Hi, that's the first time I use SO chat so I dont know if I should do something before posting on it ^^
@Miaow 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.
@BenFortune looks like crap tbh
14:46
I've been using wsl for everything lately
that's all mostly irrelevant because bash is still life, so
cmder with wsl is fucking 10/10
@ShrekOverflow nope
@ShrekOverflow So does your face
cmder and wsl is my daily env
14:46
Looks are subjective
I prefer Hyper on windows
I mostly just shell out from it, but running tmux locally is the best
I have cmder/wsl/zsh
@BenFortune WSL is very neat, I agree.
plus WSL works with my yubikey ssh keys, vmware did not
14:47
@BenFortune you can
I set it up for @oboecat
Rubymine supports wsl now, so you can set it up to run in windows, but use WSL for actually running programs
It's just.. unbelievably convenient
Since windows doesn't support fork
vscode will debug straight into WSL
but a million libraries use it
14:48
I say WSL is great, something broke recently where I can't install any NPM packages
Also build tools
@BenFortune permissions?
@BenFortune did you install the right node version ?
no and yes
just pointed in the morning that the version from apt get is very outdated
14:49
I always install using the bash script
@ssube btw I am setting up the GPU Virt PassThrough on a laptop I have which has Dedicated GPU :D and an Integrated GPU
nodesource or whatever repo it is
thanks for sharing it :)
@ShrekOverflow the passthrough stuff? Let me know how it goes.
getting it with curl?
14:49
@ssube sure!
@Loktar neat, you can make lithophanes (not curved, but w/e) in s3d
Is there a flow equivalent to Partial (typescript)?
my desktop has been a bit unstable recently and I think I might be able to untowc it by switching to linux, ironically enough
@ssube wow, you use yubikey on the regular?
 npm install -g gulp-cli
npm ERR! path /home/ben/.npm-global/lib/node_modules/gulp-cli/node_modules/matchdep/node_modules/resolve
npm ERR! code ENOENT
npm ERR! errno -2
npm ERR! syscall rename
npm ERR! enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, rename '/home/ben/.npm-global/lib/node_modules/gulp-cli/node_modules/matchdep/node_modules/resolve' -> '/home/ben/.npm-global/lib/node_modules/gulp-cli/node_modules/matchdep/node_modules/.resolve.DELETE'
npm ERR! enoent This is related to npm not being able to find a file.
14:51
Job requirement?
being able to disable the Vega while I'm not using it would be great for heat
@Zirak whats wrong with that?
@Zirak yes and yes, but also for personal ssh
14:51
@ShrekOverflow It's not work, just relatively obscure
erm, not work, wrong
sorry I just woke up
Ok :P FWIW I use it too
it's a requirement at work for keys with prod access
I'm trying to get it working with blackbox locally for storing secrets in git
we've been using git-crypt, but that's ugly and the problem is in WSL anyway
Linux laptops would be so much fun had the Scaling madness was not an issue
I have an NFC one, too, so my phone has my pass database/git repo and I can swipe the yubi to unlock it
14:53
 where npm
/usr/bin/npm
/mnt/c/Program Files/nodejs/npm
hmm
They are probably fighting
2FA hipsters in here with their obscure authentication tools
One will be a windows executable though, or a batch script
and the windows one probably touched
your WSL's fs
@BenFortune WSL will happily run those :D
14:54
@ssube It does?
mind running ls -l /home/ben/.npm-global/lib/node_modules/
holy shit
@BenFortune from that thread it looks like some editors are locking (or trying not to lock but wsl is failing) files npm uses
yep, and there's a cool blog post about how
@BenFortune just don't edit anything in the linux fs from windows tools and it'll be all good
14:55
try closing everything and running again?
@ShrekOverflow They all have user permissions, ben ben
@BenFortune this is kinda nuclear option but
if you've ever touched the directory from the windows side, it will be broken
uninstall npm, nuke the .npm-global
I did that a few times
14:56
then re-install npm
@Zirak normally, an editor should not lock such files
@ssube Which directory?
any of them
@BenFortune all of them
For eg, if you open vscode on windows and edit a file in the linux fs
it'll be rekt
@ssube But they're in /home/, windows can't see those
14:57
@KarelG That's what one of the comments described: github.com/Microsoft/WSL/issues/2097#issuecomment-309211007
which is literally the first thing I did upon installing WSL
I would say that they want to have a foul-proof node/npm plugin. A simple approach is to ... lock those files. Great right? 😀
@BenFortune yeah, they're in a directory under your userdata
lxsomething mount
they're just normal windows files with an overlay fs for permissions
I personally treat the linux fs on WSL as immutable to windows
Yeah, I've definitely crossed them over at some point
14:58
@BenFortune have you turned it off and on again?
I'm trying to squash some commits, but one of the commits contains untracked files, so it fails. Anyone know how to resolve that? Everything I've found is for pulling, not rebasing
@rlemon Yeah, closed all my editors and restarted, no luck
@BenFortune Nuke npm :P
I guess I could un-untrack them
re install it from linux side
14:59
@ShrekOverflow I still wanna use it in Windows

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