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user1596138
18:00
I identify as smell, which is clearly the 4th dimension according to movies
@ndugger god no, I have people for that
user1596138
God that sentence
I thought the 4th dimension was Time.
user1596138
No, haven't you seen a 4D movie?
user1596138
Smell is the 4th dimension.
18:00
Or is time the first dimension?
No. I can't even do 3D movies.
We have no way of comprehending what the 4th dimension is. We just claim it's time because that's all we can comprehend it to be
Time is a tool you can put on the wall
user1596138
I watch all my movies in 3D
user1596138
Tbh...
18:01
@ndugger you're wrong
you're a towc
2
we can totes comprehend what the 4th dimension is
user1596138
@towc he's crazier than you ay
it can actually get pretty intuitive
18:02
We are three dimensional beings, living in the 4th dimension. Time can fill the gap here, but there's no way we can say for sure
yes we can
Like a 2 dimensional being would have no way of comprehending what the 3rd dimension is
Einstein did 100 years ago
no we can't, you space nerd
user1596138
Dimension is just a word.
18:03
@ndugger Why not?
because I said so
user1596138
I do find the 4th dimension as time thing confusing
Oh yes of course Jong-un
user1596138
The way he phrases it
@ndugger wow dude whats ur email i want to send you a Nobel Peace Prize for "damn"
18:03
doesn't the flatland book explain why 2d can't recognize 3d? I think I read or heard lecture on it many years ago, basically what ndugger is saying
user1596138
A 2D being could ofc see time
They could only witness 2 dimensions of the 3rd dimension as it passed through their plane.
user1596138
Therefore, the 2D can realize 3D
@Jhoverit Not if time wasn't one of the dimensions
Nothing about it would say "3 dimensions" to them, except for that fact that it appeared and disappeard
user1596138
18:04
Yeah, just the way he's phrased it
but how would they be able to know why it appeared and disappeared?
@ndugger Yeah but the guy got to enter 3D space
They could theorize, but they coduln't know for sure
one of the points of the book is to show us that actually 4D is fairly easily comprehensible, just like a 2D being can eventually get to understand what a 3D universe is like
they might not be at all used to it
but they can think about it and make accurate predictions
until it can get intuitive
18:05
some asian dude on youtube told me that there's 11 dimensions
there's infinitely many
no, only 11
he said so
but spacially, I think physics is saying 11 on this universe
@towc Actually this is right, in some sense
we live in the 7th
18:06
have no clue why
that's why it's called 7/11
all of them after 13 are off + 1 due to superstition, so no 13th dimension
ah, too true
@rlemon By that argument we're also in th 9th
no, 9/11 was an inside job.
7/11 was a part time job
and 7/11 was a part time job
fuck nick
wow kendall, steal more jokes please
@KamilSolecki That's brummie, not english
Croikey
18:08
@KendallFrey foc oughth
you wish you were scottish
nae laddie
u like dags?
I don't know what they are, can't judge yet
That's a very non-American attitude, we judge things that we know nothing about all the time! What are you, communist?
18:10
Well historically
my country (and family) was heavily abused by communists
your parents abused you by forcing you to learn latin
lol
YO WHAT'S UP?
NOT MUCH
18:12
CHILLIN', YOU?
WORKIN
high fives how you been?
!!giphy guy fieri
isnt the last jedi the best movie ever?!!! said noone ever :3
it was ok
it was alright
edgy
Okay, I must be losing my god damn mind.
18:15
I've already lost mine
{"Yemen" => 1, "United States" => 38, "United Kingdom" => 1, "Trinidad and Tobago" => 1, "Thailand" => 2, …} Have a simple map.
myMap.sort = function(a, b) {
  if (a[1] > b[1]) {
    return 1;
  }
  if (a[1] < b[1]) {
    return -1;
  }
  return 0;
};
Stupid simple sorting.
damn
why are you setting your function as a property on the map?
image was removed
y u do dis 2 me
I mean, I technically don't have to.
I could just store it in another map, yea.
18:17
@Trasiva it's not doing anything tho
The problem is that a and b are undefined.
why store the function in a map? Are you programming everything in maps?
@rlemon I assumed that was the joke...
@Trasiva you're setting obj.map = fn;
@ndugger No, I'm just tinkering with some ES6 stuff because work pissed me off.
18:18
nothing is sorting.
I'm calling myMap.sort() later
I think you need to brush up on maps
a and b are nothing
why would they be anything in that case?
[...map].sort(fn);
but then it isn't a map anymore
18:19
map.entries()
Oh fuck me
I see the problem I think
you could sort that too, but again it wouldn't be a map
new Map(myMap.entries().sort(...))
@ndugger you can't sort an iterator
@TravisWhite you know, that's what I thought, but that didn't work either
18:20
it's not an array
I had to use a tempState assignment
oh, is it an iterator?
entries returns an iterator, yes
@SterlingArcher doh, yeah I moved to immutablejs for deeply nested objects, glad you sorted it though
18:21
then new Map(Array.from(myMap.entries()).sort(...)) lol
move a ) and we're set
ohhhh
there
Why is it that for "template strings" I have to use a specific type of quotes?
because that's how it is
you can tell it's a template string because of the way it is
because how else would you determine it's a template string and not a regular string
18:22
They could just add template strings to everything and allow escaping of hte characters.
that would be silly.
that specific type of quote makes it the template string
and you can tag them
Why? It's what C++/c#/java/python do.
18:22
that would break strings for other applications
tagging random strings could lead to issues I imagine
because not all functions need ()
Or well they allow "templating" with .format()
welcome to developing for the web
@paul23 so?
@ndugger I suppose a part of specification should be the javascript version your script is expected to run on.
languages can differ, it's a thing
You can't change how established/stable syntaxes or objects work (in JS), because it will break half of the internet
@paul23 that's not how browsers work, though
nor should it be
@ndugger So make it that you can say "this requires a ES6 compatible engine, otherwise it won't work" and then browser can act upon that.
That's how java/dotnet works.
18:24
that's an awful suggestion
that's not how they work
lol
Don't give the client any options about their browser
that's just asking for trouble
In dotnet I specify the framework required with the application I write.
.NET has nothing to do with language syntax
and it builds targetting that, and has some checks in itself to determine if it needs you to update things
18:25
What customer wants to see software related shit on their website anyways
you're either ignorant or a troll
It's NOT giving me problem to make applications that way - since the client can do that perfectly well.
@SterlingArcher Browsers would "hide" that by automatically having multiple implementations of the javascript engine and picking the right one.
@paul23 ohh lordy no
> Client: How do I download this ES6 brooser
Me: It's just the latest browser sir
Client: Will I lose my IE6 toolbars?
Me: sir we no longer want your business
so you have to write the same code 10 different times?
18:26
Just like I can make a page xhtml/html 4/html5 and it's not giving any trouble since the browser selects the right engine based on the document header.
kick the troll
@paul23 no that's terrible, use a transpiler, not have a multi-version support engine that will bog down the browser trying to determine what shitty support IE has
I only see "oh no I don't like it" - I never ever see actual arguments why such a workflow is bad - with an actual case study.
compiling your neat little app in C++ is absolutely nothing like how developing for the web works
@paul23 you're the one making the claim
prove it would be better
18:27
Comparing the two is as moot as comparing red bull and orange juice
You don't need a case study to know manually supporting legacy browsers is a bad idea
because 'other languages do it' isn't proving it is better
@ndugger sir I think you just spiced up my vodka redbulls
damn
me too
Especially considering A) you're dealing with a minority of users and B) it's easy to just download an updated browser.
18:28
Also, I've never had a momosa, and it makes me sad
I will provide a case study on this @ndugger
mimosa* and they're delicious
@rlemon "It works for .net/java framework management".
I can't spell what I've never had
@paul23 is not a good argument
sekhs
18:28
beermosa is also good, but's just a fancy brass monkey though
@paul23 that's like saying you should put a V8 engine in a Fiat 500 because it works for a mustang
Where do I say support minority browsers - I say stop supporting outdated tools and slink down the toolset so that javascript becomes a leaner language. (Also for the love of god remove '==' implementation)
JavaScript is not .NET is not Java, why would it benefit from their framework practices
.NET is a framework, JS and Java are languages. You're not even comparing things that make sense
@paul23 your suggestion is just that, have multiple versions of the engines and let the browser pick? that's just going to keep people from writing updates or new code
And to "not break the net" we HAVE to put a header in those new javascript files - so browser can interpret them good enough.
18:30
stop sharing your bad ideas here
eventually things get removed, just not wide sweeping changes.
That sounds like hell to maintain from a V8 perspective
It sounds like hell to maintain from every perspective
The beauty of it is that if I fire up Win XP and hit up his site on IE6, it might work kind of well. (Which isn't a good thing)
Everything you want is done with transpiling
18:31
JS is not C#. You do not compile your application ahead of time using a specific compiler version. Your website needs to run on a vast array of browsers and browser versions. You desktop developers will never understand the pain.
@SterlingArcher V8 could then also say: "use this version, that is now feature complete and only gets bug fixes for the next 10 years, if you wish to support legacy based libraries - otherwise switch to modern libraries"
that's called IE6-8
@ndugger ok then look at python: python 3 did perfectly well away with everything from python 2.
@paul23 and what in .net do you think does that?
@paul23 do you understand how much effort that will take?
18:32
And it's not a problem at all.
@paul23 python doesn't run in the browser
and people just stay on the old version
so that's moot
you compile down to a target in those things as well
it makes things so much worse
18:32
your program just checks those targets, because your tooling makes it do so
Clearly you've never had a job writing for the web; Companies like their legacy browsers
you can do that with JS as well, but people hate you for it
You have to support both IE8 and the lastest Chrome
without writing 2 codebases
String.prototype.marquee ftw
We only support latest chrome
or at least that's all we care about
18:33
Companies still supporting IE8 are stupid
still supporting Windows 7 too at that point
@ndugger I am currently in a big fight with my boss over this; actually thinking of walking away and looking for once again a job.
We're not going to dumb down our deployments because some nutjob refuses to keep up
@Loktar it was just an example to show this guy that you need to support multiple versions of multiple browsers at most jobs
IE10 and < are way passed end of life
@paul23 and now a bunch of people are stuck with two versions of python because they are not fully compatible.
18:33
@paul23 that's a shitty mentality.
source: I have to have 2.7 and 3.x on my machine to run things
I hate python 3
adding a new version of every tool for no good reason
@rlemon can confirm, have 2.7 and 3.5 as well
@ndugger No people use python 3, python 2 doesn't exist anymore.
now you have pip, pip3, pip36
18:34
At SNC we have a project that requires both. It was a nightmire
yes it does
@Loktar Windows 7 is still crazy prevalent in a lot of sectors, for instance, I'd say we've only hit the half way point in terms of percentage of our customers who've moved from Windows 7.
@paul23 python 2 is very, very, VERY widely used
python 2.7 is used by a LOT of tools still in use
Python 2.7 is still defaulted on OSX
18:34
3 is almost unused by comparison
@paul23 so applications written using python 2 are just not used at all anymore?
wrong
I was about to say, I see python 2.7 used more than 3
@SterlingArcher and all linux distros
@hilli_micha I woudln't work anywhere that still supported IE8 personally
This dude is a troll, or he's just very young
18:34
alpine might have moved to 3.6 with edge
Python 2 is just as outdated as windows xp. - Are you saying we should keep supporting windows xp?
tons of people want JS to move in tons of different directions, if you really care about it you could try to get on the board or whoever it is that determines future ECMAScript versions, or if you was clever you could probably write a plugin similar to prettier that updates quotes/double quotes to the ` and cross your fingers, or not worry about it at all, only worry about what you can/want to change
python 2 is nowhere near as outdated as XP
@paul23 nobody is saying that we should, we're saying that you need to, because that's what the job requires
@paul23 if Python is so outdated why is Python 2.7.10 the default version on my literal brand new MBP?
18:35
XP is missing major security features, whole cipher suites
again, your precious .net programs don't do magic. the program itself is checking targets and telling you that you need to update. you can do that with JS as well. it'd be pretty easy. but it wouldn't make much sense because people would just move on
I agree with you on IE8, I haven't opened it in years, just speaking from experience regarding Win. 7
you support what your audience uses. simple as that.
You must be a new grad who just got his first adult programming job
python 2 is still maintained and isn't missing anything major
18:36
Because your attitude about this is all wrong
@SterlingArcher I have no idea - but the last update was made when windows xp was the thing.
I don't think python and windows is a fair comparison. It can be reasonable to throw away or update an OS since you want all the latest patches and still keep an old trusted programming language. languages don't change as fast
python 2.7 is more in line with windows 7 for era
@paul23 a basic google search says you're wrong
> Python 2.7.0 was released on July 3rd, 2010.
18:36
Still I am not saying to not support them directly: I'm saying that there should be a version so that one doesn't have all the extra baggage in javascript of past mistakes.
just because it's old, doesn't mean it's not good
he's only off by 10 years
(not that python is good)
@ndugger bash was released in 1989
:D
but no one uses it
yea, we all use powershell, now
18:37
@paul23 but that's not how the web works. Seriously. The ecosystem is entirely different from running desktop applications
@paul23 who determines what the extra baggage is?
@SterlingArcher what's up?
@TravisWhite @Luggage
People can pick and choose their browser and their version. You can't rely on everyone being on the bleeding-edge
Jesus
he's a pro at baggage
18:37
hahaha
@TravisWhite google's spy metrics
@davidism is Python 2.7 still supported
true
@rlemon I use it 😬
@ndugger Electron would like to have a word
18:38
Like, is there a reason it's still the default version on new macs, etc?
it's a common dependency for many python scripts
@Cereal electron is a different beast entirely
and has nothing to do with this conversation
Python 2.7 gets official support until 2020, although many things, scientific packages especially, are dropping support earlier.
@ssube so if it isn't mainstream then it is baggage? I don't know if that is exactly correct, maybe you remove something that breaks functionality that is otherwise impossible without that something?
@SterlingArcher 3 broke compatibility for ? and tons of libraries, like the OS installers, don't work
18:38
2.7 instead of 3, i mean
I'm in favor of being up-to-date. If I was making software in python, I'd prefer to target the lastest, but.. as a USER of python, 2.7 seems to be where it's at
@davidism would you say the legacy ecosystem is not comparable to the JS browser version ecosystem?
Most libraries now support 3, or have an equivalent library that supports 3. This has been true for years.
@TravisWhite When it is actively replaced and not mainstream it shouldn't keep using keywords. - Like how "===" mostly replaces "==" and "of" replace "in". Those things should have a clear window to phase out.
Legacy systems are still of course able to run on 2, but the recommendation is to upgrade if possible and to start new projects in 3.
of doesn't replace in, at all
18:40
@davidism thank you sir
and whereas I dislike ==, it doesn't at all get replaced by ===
Such as: "in es9 it will be deprecated, then 5 years after that it will be obsolate and in 10 years should be removed"
they do different things alltogether
Your honor, no further questions
@paul23 methods get deprecated all the time
JS can't change how established syntax works, because it would break half of the internet. If someone wrote "foo bar ${ baz }" years ago, and built their own templating system for that, it would suddenly break if you tried running it on a new browser if that was the decided upon templat string sytax (double quotes)
18:41
@SterlingArcher but not keywords
Your argument about versioning the JS version for browsers doesn't work
It's nonsense
It's not backwards compatible, nor is it future-proof
what keywords are we talking about, you've only talked about a comparison operator
@SterlingArcher for example "in"
in is still widely used
in is still a valid keyword, just not in loops
18:42
2 mins ago, by rlemon
of doesn't replace in, at all
perfectly safe with prototype-less objects
you're thinking of a very very limited use case
not everyone uses in to loop object properties
two different 'in' operators
if (x in myObject) -- I use this all the time
@paul23 sounds like you want to push your personal preferences onto the whole world while disregarding historic code
18:43
that's different than in loops, but even in loops.. of doesn't replace it
Now if you were talking about deprecating when maybe you'd have an arguement
just use a linter
Object.keys would
for (const x of Object.keys(myObject))
but that's moot
18:43
@ssube yes, but we have now "of" which is just a "better" version and clearly expected to replace it. - in should hence be relegated to not a keyword but rather a function so it won't fill the syntax.
but you have no idea what you're talking about so I'm over it
for (const x in myObject)
@paul23 no, of is for iterables
@paul23 of and in don't do the same thing at all
of handles a different type of objects in a different way
18:44
it's like I'm a ghost here
I saw it, bob
I'm here for you
@rlemon susper spoopy sir
paul is just a troll, or he's just plain dumb (not to be confused with plane dumb)
@rlemon you aren't that pale
I'm plane dumb
I have 0 flight experience
18:44
I'm train dumb
I'm dane plumb
I'm dumb on a 2D plane
some dumb but not plum dumb
can't fly for shit
@ndugger watch out Mr. Chooch there's kids on the track
18:45
planes, trains, and paul's shitty opinions
wow 2 grammys beautiful movie
@ndugger Yes, but is that second thing important enough to have a keyword?
@KendallFrey can you OD off of opinions?
2 thumbs up out of 10 would watch again
probably
18:45
@paul23 yes
@paul23 of? yes, very much so
I think he means in
and key in obj is important enough to keep it
oh, in? Yeah, still
now he wants to remove stuff he doesn't use himself.
@rlemon I think that's what an aneurysm is
18:46
If one would "redesign" it without any legacy code - would you still have both of and in as keywords?
!!s/ons/ods/
@Luggage @KendallFrey can you OD off of opiniods? (source)
checking for a key in an object has tons of usecases
OH MY DOG KENDALL I SPELLED IT RIGHT
damnit
18:46
without the overhead of calling a function
@rlemon Important enough that it requires a keyword, though?
@KendallFrey yes
okay, then why have array methods when .reduce will handle all cases.
Would (x of myobject.members()) be cleaner than (x in myobject)
18:46
does for need to be a keyword if we have forEach calls now? How about if? We can just short-circuit.
@paul23 they aren't the same thing
> Would apple be cleaner than orange
of !== in
@rlemon why reduce when you can for (var i = 0; ; ;)
@rlemon methods are cheap, language modifications are expensive
@ndugger One should indeed constantly be asking this - and if the result is "for is used in such a specific case and can be rewritten easily" it should indeed get removed from the language.
@SterlingArcher why for when you can while?
18:48
@KendallFrey so.. don't remove the operator then :P
what are you arguing here?
@paul23 having two ways to do something doesn't make one of them wrong
@rlemon Well don't remove it from a live language. But it wasn't worth putting in in the first place IMO
@ssube No but it might make a language more complex than necessary.
@paul23 there are entire committees dedicated to discussing ecmascript, web APIs, syntax, etc. You cannot change syntax or remove keywords without breaking the entire internet. You are extremely ignorant, and quite frankly, arrogant.
you seem to be convinced there's only a single good way to do things, which is very pythonic and equally wrong
18:49
@KendallFrey why while when you can manually edit indices
@paul23 but most of that is necessary
@KendallFrey you'd still need a way to check if a key exists in a plain object
@SterlingArcher what
without accessing it
18:49
@SterlingArcher it's all pointer math eventually
unless you wanna change how the language functions.
@rlemon make a method for it
So if I wanted to take my map and instead of sorting by name, wanted to sort by the value, is it going to be easier if I turn it into an object instead?
if there is no operator to check, how can I have a method without accessing the object? spread the keys and check those?
@Trasiva probably not
18:50
no, objects are unsorted
seems like a worse solution
@Trasiva objects can't guarentee order
You could use a set and convert it, sort it, and return it to a set maybe?
@rlemon Are you familiar with the concept of a standard library? :P
@SterlingArcher they do guarantee insertion order
@ssube so do I ;)
18:51
Let me rephrase, is it worth the effort.
yes, and adding in a silly function to a stdlib wouldn't be optimal imo over an operator
the only way to "sort" an object would be to insert the items in order
@rlemon imo it would
@Trasiva no, everytime I tried, there always ended up being a cleaner way
btw if anyone can link me to something where in is actually used and of is not good I'd love it.
18:51
I mean is it worth the effort to sort by the value of a map.
if( key in obj ) foo();
@paul23 for..in or key in obj?
@paul23 dude you've listerally been told 100 times
@KendallFrey Yes but why would you do that now that you have mappings?
> listerally
That was beautiful
18:52
in is for POJSOs, of is for collections
@paul23 Do what?
Get it? Because lists
lol jk it was a typo
@paul23 objects and maps are not simply interchangeable
@SterlingArcher You're not that clever.
i wish i was
18:52
for (key in obj) - why not use a mapping in the first place? - When do you use an object to later iterate over that.
that isn't what we said, in does more than one thing
@SterlingArcher well start practicing nauseous
@KendallFrey i refuse
@paul23 if (key in object) for (const value of object[ key ])
@rlemon Cause you misunderstood him
18:53
they do entirely different things
objects are not iterables like for/of uses
!!afk vape
IN AND OF DO DIFFERENT THINGS
please stop trolling us
@KendallFrey no, I spoke quickly.
and corrected myself.
I'm going to kill myself if you don;t stop
18:53
for/in is close to for/of Object.entries(foo).filter([k, v] => complexFilter(...))
HAMMERTIME!
@BenFortune I feel that explain shell . com should be explain command in shell
@Cereal You can get doors instead.
doors are the devil
this reminds me of the joke about fastest way to get the correct answer on the internet is to post a wrong answer... just stop responding
NO TRAVIS SOMEBODY IS WRONG ON THE INTERNET
!!RIOT
18:57
╯°□°)╯┻━┻
everything is wrong on the internet
!!xkcd someone is wrong on the internet
except kids falling off bikes, fuck, I could watch kids fall off bikes all day, I don't give a shit about your kids.
@rlemon r/nononono
18:57
Check mate, lefty
a wee more aggressive but it's not r/watchpeopledie at least
as long as the kids aren't seriously hurt, it is good character builder to have a good crash
@KendallFrey it's sad that less people get these solid references
some of my core memories are me crashing on my bike
18:58
:(
LetterKenny is a myth in America
nobody watches your weird canadian tv ok
I took out an entire mailbox on by bike. That shit hurt
Bicycle, not my motorcycle
@ssube And it's sad.
i took out an entire bike on my mailbox, that hurt shit
18:59
mailboxes are surprisingly sturdy
on a scale of 1 to TPB, is it a good show?
@TravisWhite yes. yes they are.
@TravisWhite femail boxes, otoh...
imo it's better than TPB
similar vein, more serious, more classy, ...?

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