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07:28
@HamedJavaheri eloquent javascript
@HamedJavaheri ecmascript? typescript? coffeescript? vanilla?
You familiar with other programming languages?
how to call angular js reload from browser console?
like angular.element(document.querySelector('.indiv-item')).scope()
@BasheerAhmedKharoti location.reload(); ?
@Neil that reloads the whole page but I just want rather the page/controller to be reloaded
ah just to refresh the page :)
@BasheerAhmedKharoti well refreshing the page would do it
I don't know if there is a smarter way
07:40
@Neil :p I don't want reload but refresh. Like SPA does.
08:03
o/
08:23
EcmaScript and TypeScript.
I'm web developer.But i want to learn javascript deeply.
Thanks a lot.
If there is someone skilled in AngularJS and Karma, I would really appreciate any suggestions on this stackoverflow.com/questions/48387216/….
@KarelG Thank you very much.
@HamedJavaheri It's a long road ahead. Steady as she goes. ;)
Omg how did I not know about !! operator
unexpected factorial
08:36
nobody expected the Spanish factorial
08:55
urgh, node's errors for unhandled promise rejections leave a lot to desire
@BenjaminGruenbaum any plans to implement traces for them?
I get that it could be hard and require some refactoring because they're asynchronous and all, so I'm not even judging
timer.js not good enough for you as a source?
@OliverSalzburg talking to me? I don't get it
@towc It would not have helped even if you did
also, @ssube, what's your opinion on using colors in log files? Just color the console.log but don't put them in the files because they may be harder to parse?
const {activePocket, configFields, menuItems, mode} = state;
return {activePocket, configFields, menuItems, mode};

is there anyway to do that, without having to repeat the gathered constants as below
using react if context helps.
09:01
also using new Date().toJSON() as the filename of the log
@Hybridwebdev Not using decomposition/composition
@OliverSalzburg damn, I didn't think so, i even tried it in a class, but alas it doesnt work as they are initialy undefined
@Hybridwebdev you mean return state?
or are you trying to clone them? return { ...state }
@towc What if he doesn't want to return them all
@towc Colors in logs are useless. They slow down console rendering and just need to be stripped away when logging to a file, which introduces additional problems you just don't want to deal with
09:03
no, i'm trying to pull them from the variable to the right and cast as variables...its in redux
reducer
Everybody likes their colored log output, but it's just not worth it and with increased log volume, other things become way more important and colors will become an issue rather than a feature
@OliverSalzburg so you think they shouldn't be there in files?
because parsing? size?
They make text searches through the file more complicated
09:06
oh, that's a really good point
Bunyan is quick, and has colour support
I could store the coloring/styling data in a separate file
That's why modules like chalk try to be smart about colors and leave them out if they notice stdout has been redirected
And the detection they use is known to be faulty, which results in no colors in the shell or colors in the log when you don't want them
Which is why you should just not do it IMHO
And if you're not using bunyan already, don't. Use pino :D
why dont people just log in xml
I mean sure its a bit more bloat, but ...the possibilities
@Hybridwebdev JSON is more javascripty
09:09
huh, there's no trivial way to strip colors/character styles away from files in bash
Because we don't need 300 lines for one log entry
ah yeah I guess json indeed would work
@Hybridwebdev That's what bunyan/pino do
that's really cool
Then you just need a tool to consume those logs. If you have a good one, let me know :D
09:10
woulda loved that the thousands of times ive had to scroll through thousands of lines of error log
@OliverSalzburg you could whip up a tool in like....30 minutes...write small json parsing app that reads data and pukes out markup...heck, use react for it... sprinkle with css and classes and roberts your fathers brother
I'm looking for a tool that has reasonable code search in a directory
something like OpenGrok but actually fast and local
@OliverSalzburg That's why the colours should be something the log viewer adds.
@Cerbrus as per my idea above :P
09:13
@Hybridwebdev A tool that scales well. Simple CLI tools come with bunyan. If you have hundreds of log streams with thousands of JSON objects per second, you need something else
^ (what cerbrus said)
@OliverSalzburg something easily managed in react
@Cerbrus That's legit
@towc just log to an SQL database
thank me later
That's why i've got a plugin for VS that colours the output mike-ward.net/vscoloroutput
09:14
@BartekBanachewicz ....not sure if trolling or not
I did that in high school for the first time and was immediately like "why doesn't everybody do that this way"
@Hybridwebdev just think about it for two coherent minutes
@Hybridwebdev Let me know when it's done ;)
because it's a terrible idea and redundant :)
I log application problems to a db too
@OliverSalzburg I already have too many side projects
09:15
network problems gets logged to file
@BartekBanachewicz isn't it slow and possibly unreliable and how does this solve the coloring problem?
ect..
although it is an interesting idea
@BartekBanachewicz Because having the additional complexity of an RDBS in a critical location like logging is something that some people consider to be a problem
@towc search analysis
09:15
and logging errors to a db is okay if it's small, but it's not scalable and something just as easily achieved with a file write....i mean it's read only data you dont even need to validate
not scalable ???
We log all our applications to a central DB and log files per app.
okay look at it this way...do you really want to eat up shit tonnes of memory storing data that can be just as easily managed via the native file system?
That, with a dashboard for the central logging db allows us to easily and quickly detect failures...
saving to a file costs memory too ...
09:17
ok @OliverSalzburg I compromised. The logger won't log too frequently (a bunch of stuff at startup, then about once every 10 minutes), so I allowed colors in console.log, and simply didn't write them in the log files
sounds fair?
and again its redundant...you're taking up memory/storage space when you can just save it to the file system and use storage instead of both and memory used for a write op is regained via trash collector
memory is cheap dude
@towc You'll make your own experiences and take away from it whatever happens :)
class Logger {
  constructor(trace) {
    this.trace = trace;
  }
  log(text, colors=['Reset']) {
    const output = `${new Date().toJSON()} ${this.trace.join(' -> ')}: ${text}`;
    console.log(`${colors.map((color) => colorMap[color]).join('')}${output}${colorMap.Reset}`);

    const fileOutput = `\n${output}`;
    if(logFileUsable) {
      fs.appendFile(logFilePath, fileOutput, (err) => {
        if(err) {
          logFileUsable = false;
          logger.error(`couldn't write text to log file`);
what is a 1TB drive on a server?
09:18
@OliverSalzburg yeah, cheers, thanks for helping out
and just because memory is cheap doesnt mean it should be abused
@Hybridwebdev So, you have 100 different web apps, on 100 different servers. Do you have 100 different RDP connections?
didn't even think about it compromising text search
Or just 1 (web) interface where you can access all the logs? :D
@Cerbrus 1 central location, just like the apps would use to interface with your backend it always comes down to 1 point of entry
09:20
I feel like I'm actually building something, it's great
@Hybridwebdev how would you comb through your log data ?
@Hybridwebdev 1 central location with log files?
each server has its own logs?
@KarelG it's json data...thousands of lines can be iterated in mere ms
with a db it is a simply search query
09:20
it's not a semi-delusional client's project, or a thing I'm doing just to learn
I also don't like having to conform to a schema when logging data. I want to log whatever I consider important at the time, and that is usually some random JS structure. I want that serialized to a JSON object which I can later query. I don't see how that would be possible in SQL in a way that wouldn't negate the benefits of using an RDBS in the first place
and it seems like a stable and useful thing
I do not need to dig up log errors from other servers I do not need
@KarelG okay, so you log references to files in the db and correlate via that
@Hybridwebdev JSON data needs to be parsed any way...
@Hybridwebdev please don't do that
09:21
so you are abusing memory now ...
Abusing memory to get references to files that may be moved, deleted or renamed
So these files can be parsed (in memory), so you can search
... Or just log to the DB in the first place
well when you put it that way lol
1) you are using log files stuffed with json data. I use log files for layer 4 or less related log problems (incl bash)
2) you need another means to store references to correlate to that
i see your point
Yay, we win :D
09:23
so just store everything in 1 massive file.... kidding
Well, In the end, a DB ends up being a massive file...
Or are they split up in sections?
@Zirak I know the feeling of working on something you think is innovative for days only to find out it was already done, and is much better than what you have...
Experienced that too. Last week lol
was fucking with java's way to handle image (for resizing, reducing color brightness ect)
until I googled for a minor problem with a .tiff file
it let me to a github repo with SPI extensions for lots of file extensions and does exactly what I was doing.
the repo name was just obscure :|
At this point you just flip tables and move on
@KarelG not surprising
"node.js" doesn't exactly screams for "JS runtime"
@FlorianMargaine speaking of that, I was well inspired not to try making a module from my regex template utility: there's something very similar in XRegExp
09:36
4 days of researching for plugins, libraries, eventually decided to work out at my own, did lots of googling, comprehending image metadata so that I can implementing a solution to just -----> bin.
was driving me nuts
😀
i just shut down the laptop and went home, accepting my defeat.
09:50
morning!
- says while throwing a bunch of sugar in a coffee
@Hybridwebdev it's way more scalable than logging to a file
@towc You mean less reliable than text writes to a file?
@Cerbrus depends on the particular DB
you should definitely have colors in the logs
makes them much more readable
but then, you should have a system to send structured logs to some sort of global log collectors, because grepping for logs is no fun
@BartekBanachewicz depends on the kind of system you have, I guess
at this point, why not both :P
as long as performance isn't a big issue
@Hybridwebdev it can't be "just as easily managed". Log data indexed by time can be processed vastly quicker.
@FlorianMargaine if only we had a system to store such structured logs in a way that makes it accessible later cc @towc
eh, tried to grep through a 3.4 TB log file once.
then realized that it is stupid
09:56
@BartekBanachewicz database can be a good idea or not
depends on the kind of logs, really
@KarelG eh, it is
but all the points pro-log-files missed it by a long margin ITT imho
there are valid cases where a DB isn't a good choice, but they definitely aren't scalability, accessibility or reliability
I'd argue performance and reliability, actually
although reliability is definitely dependent on your system and the state of the network
right, so you have multiple apps with multiple logs
09:58
unless all this time you meant an SQL db hosted on the same machine that runs the server
@towc why not
heck, could be SQLite for all I care. It's mostly about metadata
and easy aggregation from different sources
@BartekBanachewicz not any more reliable than writing to a file, but at least you don't have to worry about networking, sure
in this case reliable = single point of failure
ok I could have worded that whole thing better
@towc DBs have write corruption preventions. They have transactions and rollbacks. Flat files have none of such things
Sure, you could argue it's hard to corrupt a flat text file
you don't get the benefits of having the logs in a possibly safer place, just like in text files, which I'd have thought was one of the strong points of using a db
but your main point is simply that you can utilize the metadata and use sql to query/aggregate
and that, I don't have anything against
@towc yes, and both are immensely hard with just flat files
imagine being given a few terabyte-sized logs with sparse timestamps you have to correlate
or heck, even worse, hundreds of megabyte-sized logs for different time periods for different apps
10:02
yeah, I get your point
my logs are not getting over a MB in months anyway, but it's a good idea for the future/other projects
frankly when I implemented that in high school I was horrible at coding and it was in PHP
but even then it worked really well. Writing a custom (colorised! ;) ) log browsing iface was a breeze
maybe I did that because I thought about logging in terms of user actions (e.g. wiki page edits) and not stuff like raw app logs
but then again adding more finese logging tagged with an appropriate category was just a matter of a few simple filters on the log types.
Is your child texting about javascript frameworks? Know the signs: rofl - react offers fast learning brb - building redux boilerplate lmao - love mastering angular objects imo - instantiating eMber observables nvm - need vue mixins wtf - webpack's the fastest
inb4 could have used much much better associations
shut up, it's still somewhat funny
I think I've managed to solve the problem I had previously
In object > number, object is converted to a number first right
10:15
Depends on the mood of the interpreter
@KamilSolecki what's the issue?
@towc at iteration 2400 and still running
seems wonky imo
uhm, what image did you pick?
a narwal thru air image
it found it for the image I put in, in 850 iterations
10:24
i use that image for testing. Some local sites I have been testing have lots of such images :D
at 7000 now
huh, guess I was lucky
yeah.
put another image in and it's at 2000 now
gotcha check the stop condition
I got 240
the image-to-binary conversion is pretty primitive
10:27
there is not much js in his code
was disappointed
@towc no issue was just curious
But yeah it does
how did you check?
specs?
10k and counting
17k
his code uses BigInt
i am curious how many iterations it can hold to find a prime number
@towc Relational Comparison: if both values are not type String, ToNumber is called on both. This is the same as adding a + in front, which for null coerces to 0.
yay
10:36
anyone know perl and can figure out what the equivalent of this would be: unless scalar(@{ $art->painting->artists_names });
Equivalent in what?
in JS
Yeah that thing
I used it once
So unless is a reverse-if
I already hate it
10:39
yep
i hated it in ruby too.
uhm, I'm doing $ which nvm, and there's no stdout
but nvm works
unless I get into tmux, and then bash says it couldn't find it
just nvm
@towc Maybe it's an alias
hmm, could be
@OliverSalzburg Is that a reusable solution I created?
10:58
i have a promise chain that is breaking, I am recieving a type Promse.resolved
with a value that is the raw value that I want (an array in this situation)
how can I get the value from a promise
fileDataObj yield object
Promise {<resolved>: Array(2)}
__proto__:Promise
[[PromiseStatus]]:"resolved"[[PromiseValue]]:
Array(2)
0:Blob(3118) {name: "e028d5cd-d074-482d-9378-b9c52a74f494/MqSuLrQYrnwdanothergithubavatar.jpg", size: 3118, type: "image/jpeg"}
1:{fileName: "DiRZNpL2SCpSMqSuLrQYrnwdanothergithubavatar.jpg", description: "procedure description", type: "preview", location: "procedure", label: "label", …}
length:2
__proto__:Array(0)

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