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16:00
my last upvote on that answer was in february
timeline like history?
> Jun 28 '17 at 19:32 history edited Kevin B ... facepalm
ha!
user2620028
@rlemon haha that was the exact model i last used, somehow i still managed to fuck up cuts on it
how?
like not straight?
user2620028
16:01
yeah, i don't think i have ever managed to get a straight cut on anything i have ever done
did you use the fence?
user2620028
yes
!!s/en/or/
@SterlingArcher did you use the force? (source)
@HatterisMad how long of wood are we talking (for this project) ?
16:03
When using Promises, do y'all say 'fulfill' or 'resolve'?
I used to say 'resolve', but my understanding is a Promise can resolve as a rejection, right?
user2620028
@rlemon i don't think i have ever made anything smaller than 3-4 feet to a cut
hrm.
@sudosoul they're different things
@sudosoul fulfill and resolve means two different things
resolve = success
reject = failure
fulfill = resolve or reject
@HatterisMad maybe this one will be better.
16:04
For when you need to saw on the move
it's the jobsite crap. it comes off that stand
user2620028
@rlemon what is the difference
@HatterisMad I don't like the dewalt fences.
:P
@MadaraUchiha That's the opposite of how it should be in English :/
user2620028
ahh
16:05
the 'rail' they sit in feels cheap.
user2620028
yeah i had tons of trouble keeping the fence straight
user2620028
and it doesnt help that i had to basically hold the plywood on the damn table
are you cutting long? or
user2620028
cause it was way too large
ohh
ply
> It charges the blade with a current, and when something changes the current, like people or hotdogs, it emerg. shuts down the saw. Safety :)
that's dope
@KendallFrey Yeah well, and Referrer has a typo in it, and "Unauthorized" should have been "Unauthenticated"
Life ain't perfect.
16:06
yep
@HatterisMad maybe just a guide rail for a regular circular saw
and some saw horses
but you can make those
@MadaraUchiha from stackoverflow.com/questions/35398365/… - my understanding is resolve just means the promise was settled, or resolved to another promise, with no indication of success
user2620028
@rlemon i think i am not going to be making such large things anymore
@SterlingArcher so anything conductive will cause it to halt?
HAMMERTIME!
16:08
@Shmiddty honestly not sure, that was just an imgur comment
user2620028
largest projects i have planned are probably like 1.5' x 4' x 1'
HAMMERZEIT!
> What if it hits my prosthetic finger? I lost it in an unfortunate saw blade accident.
God dammit I love the internet
user1596138
user1596138
Lol Viking man was still a RO in Sandbox
user2620028
16:08
just have hotdogs as your prosthetic finger
my most used tools are: table saw, belt sander, orbital sander, planer, router table. but I mostly make smaller pieces of furniture. benches, coat racks, shelves, etc.
Salad Fingers but with Hotdogs
@sudosoul "resolved to another promise" is a success
"just have hotdogs as your prosthetic finger" ... my dog would love that
you can resolve to a value (which can be another promise) or reject with an error
16:09
!!giphy hotdog fingers
those aren't hotdogs
you wasted money on a table
wait sorry guys that's
16:10
@ssube but if it resolves to another promise that rejects... how is that success?
user1596138
user2620028
@rlemon yeah i plan on making shelves, and some speakers, maybe mame arcade machine in the long run, projector housing, my room mate did want me to make him a bed frame
@SterlingArcher that's looks highly unsafe
user2620028
so i guess i do have some large things that is on the possibly list
I must journey to the temple of JavaScript to seek the true answer
16:11
@sudosoul what do you mean? the first one resolved to a new promise, which then rejected. They both fulfilled, the first resolved.
you can have a chain of promises, an array of promises, any shape
true = 1
there's your answer big guy
@HatterisMad well you'll need something for the long cuts on the ply. a miter saw would probably be sufficient for anything else.
a router if you wanna get fancy
how do you guys feel about (a > b) - (a < b) for comparators?
are they always comparable primitives?
16:13
@Shmiddty That's clever coding
clever but not towcy
I'd much prefer an explicit 3-liner with if statements over that.
@ssube that would depend on the input
I dont find math equasions sentimental
it's 3 statements, predictable behavior (with predictable types), and pretty obvious after you read it once
16:14
@MadaraUchiha what about a 1 liner ternary?
if they are both strings, it works. if they are both numbers, it works
@sudosoul Better, but not much.
@Shmiddty yeah, as long as they're the same primitive type
our linter at work doesn't like nested ternaries
good
user2620028
16:14
@rlemon i do want to get fancy :O
@Shmiddty Your linter shouldn't like math operations on booleans either
a > b ? 1 : a < b ? -1 : 0 isn't that bad, really.
it's substantially worse
You're dead to me
I know that TypeScript would have told you "lol, nope bruh"
16:15
@MadaraUchiha why?
@MadaraUchiha mostly good for confusing the jr devs, and holding your status as 'elite'
My linter would go bonkers
user1596138
That's some nice abuse of type coercion
user1596138
I vote burn it.
16:15
@Shmiddty In most cases you know the type of whatever it is you're comparing
mmhmm
i only use ternary really in object property assignment
For numbers, just a - b should be fine (or b - a, I can never remember the order)
type coercion is fun
We're not allowed to use ternaries here
16:16
For strings, use a.localeCompare(b)
you only need the -1 return if you want good sorting
@MadaraUchiha does that properly interpret numbers?
Array.prototype.sort doesn't really need it
@Shmiddty Define "properly"
'10' > '2'
16:18
!!> '10'.localeCompare('2')
@MadaraUchiha -1
!!> ['10', '2', 'a', 'b'].sort((a, b) => a.localeCompare(b))
@MadaraUchiha "TypeError: a.toLocaleCompare is not a function"
@MadaraUchiha ["10","2","a","b"]
Guess not :D
!!> ['10', '2', 'a', 'b'].sort((a, b) => a - b)
@MadaraUchiha ["b","a","2","10"]
16:19
!!> ['10', '2', 'a', 'b'].sort((a, b) => (a > b) - (a < b))
@MadaraUchiha ["10","2","a","b"]
That one doesn't do well either though
!!> ['10', '2', 'a', 'b'].sort((a, b) => a.localeCompare(b, undefined, { numeric: true}))
@Shmiddty ["2","10","a","b"]
oh snap
user1596138
16:21
(a > b && 1) || (a < b && -1) || 0
user1596138
At least it's fuckin readable lmao
!!> ['10', '2', 'a', 'b', 'f10', 'f2'].sort((a, b) => a.localeCompare(b, undefined, { numeric: true}))
@Shmiddty ["2","10","a","b","f2","f10"]
replacing math with logic operators is, amazingly, less golfed and less clear
user1596138
Locigal operators are intuitive
16:23
@Shmiddty how many types do you need to sort? are they all strings?
everything's a string, some of the strings contain only numbers, some of the strings contain only letters, and some of the strings contain both
user1596138
Why don't you just .sign
user1596138
Math.sign(a - b)
user1596138
Lmao done
ah, not dealing with real numbers makes it much easier to compare
I thought you had a mix
user1596138
Oh this is strings??
@Zirak Intl needs polyfilled so hard tho
@ssube who doesn't support it right now?
What's a accurate HTTP status code for situation where user cannot play any more videos, as they have reached the max number of concurrent watchable video streams
it's pretty widely supported. We started using it at work and have gotten a handful of people without, all Safari iirc
16:26
401 vs 403?
user1596138
429
@sudosoul there's no standard response code for rate limiting
user1596138
Throttle
user1596138
Me
user1596138
Please
user1596138
16:26
Ah SO uses 409
user1596138
Not really same case anyway
my last company used 420 until somebody noticed
I like 409
Think Spotify/Netflix - max devices reached, "please stop playing on 1 device", etc
420: slow your roll
user1596138
I thoguht 429 was a thing
16:27
lol
429 is a real one, for rate over time
@MadaraUchiha You're a life-saver
user1596138
tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6585#section-4 Yeah there's definitely a standard rate limitting status code
you could use it for all-at-once as well
You think this scenario counts as rate limiting?
user1596138
16:28
Guess that's more about how many http requests you sent than how many of a given content you received tho...
user1596138
@sudosoul You didn't define it well enough to know that
@user1596138 yeah I said that wrong, before looking it up
we're accepting the request, processing it, but determining that you are exceeding the max number of streams
user1596138
> they have reached the max number of concurrent watchable video streams
I was thinking there was an all-at-once and no over time, it's the opposite
16:28
^
user1596138
Ahh
user1596138
Use a 200 and respond with {message: "conflict"} :facepalm:
I think 409 is most relevant here
is 430 taken? if 429 isn't quite right, ++
and lmao
16:29
custom status codes are pretty common ime
RFC is life
"420 Enhance Your Calm (Twitter)"
user1596138
user1596138
When one of your repos has a unpushed commit but you don't know what it is
16:31
@KendallFrey smh when people don't multiply the bottom units
bottom units?
what is the fundamental unit of bottom? a glute?
yeah, dollars and cents are different units
they didn't multiply the units
Oh yeah I know
not sure where the "bottom" refers to
the joke was that I would hate math
but yeah that's why dimensional analysis is important kids
16:34
I suck at math the most in this chat
and im proud of it
@ssube interesting, do you know which APIs were not supported, or were they buggy?
uh, Intl was just missing, I think
wut
it was version-specific, not sure if it was the default for an OS, an older device, something pinned
but yeah, that was the only problem, like 30 people using Safari
16:38
is there a way to require and instantiate a class in one line?
currently i do like this:
const Class1 = require('./class1');
const class1 = new Class1()
@sudosoul If there was, what would it look like?
module.exports = new Class1()
Try and guess
const Class1 = require('./class1')()
?
okay, that's good, but what's one thing that's in your first block, but not in the second?
something small, one word
16:41
new
nice. give it a try
const Class1 = new require('./class1')
?
all together now
const Class1 = new require('./class1')()
?
Who lives in a pineapple under the sea
16:42
lol
sponge bob run that
mihoy minoy
spange bub is best
number 1
@Shmiddty that's Smitty Werbenjagermanjensen
You filthy casual
HE WAS NUMBER 1
so const Class1 = new require('./class1')() is incorrect
Class constructor Class1 cannot be invoked without 'new'
i think its just const Class1 = require('./class1')()
16:47
Speaking of SpongeBob...

https://i.imgur.com/CtqvrcB.jpg
2
or wait, perhaps it is just
const Class1 = new require('./class1')
me thinkie that itie
or perhaps both are correct?
both are correct if you're not passing arguments to the constructor
require('foo')() does work if you're exporting the class
const Class1 = new require('./class1')
is how i shall do this from now on
and so it hath been decided
i.imgur.com/aDnUoF9.gifv @rlemon sneks are evolving
16:56
If you draw an image to a canvas, and set object-fit: 'contain', it scales the image to fit in the canvas.

Does anyone know how to get the new dimensions of the image? img.height/width and img.naturalWidth/naturalHeight both return the same
Trying to map window coordinates to the canvas, but the canvas is longer than the image after containing
Can't figure out how to get the height of the image to math it out
so
new Promise((resolve, reject)
is the correct way to write?
vs
new Promise((fulfill, reject)
@sudosoul It's not so much "correct" as "idiomatic"
But definitely use resolve
!!define idiomatic
@sudosoul "fulfil" in promise-land means to either resolve or reject, as in "not pending"
16:59
I usually write (res, rej) because that's enough to tell the difference
but you shouldn't be newing Promises often, so writing them out is also good

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