I have a habit of using let with promises because I know promises change.. I've actually never thought that consciously and always assumed it would either break something now or in a near feature revision.
actually .. EcmaScript did pretty well in the past 10 years, envolving the language to number #1. If it keeps doing that, I don't see any language challenging
I honestly think, the evolution of ES is unique (and exceptionally great) when it comes to asycronous programming. Concepts like promises are very old, but what ES evolved these things to in single-threaded environments, is really awesome
Why do people always want JS to be strongly-typed? It's one of its unique features. Does everyone just want all programming languages to gravitate towards the same thing?
the problem what JS has is, it became too popular. People trying to do everything with ES nowdays, from programming games, microchips .. anything. And there, type-safety plays an important role
@BenjaminGruenbaum well, what language really had the concept of promises for collecting and dealing with callbacks before? I can think of Huskell probably? And then the syntax sugars with async/await for dealing with such constructs is brilliant imo
which other language had this issues (single-threaded) and "needs to run in a browser"
@Feathercrown I didn't really mean it can't be done in JS, I was more referring to, that so many people and programmers came from other languages to JS. That lead to pseudo classes, the wish for type-safety and a whole lot other things
Of course it's easy, but in a large codebase those 'easy to handle' situations add up and you start missing the compile-time checks that other languages give you.
@jAndy How is that a bad thing though? I started with TypeScript when I was bad at JavaScript. After working with it for some years, I'm now comfortable in both. For me, the main benefit of TypeScript at this point is that you'll automatically get better documentation for users of your API.
I mean.. come one boys. If you dealing with dynamic objects and accessing stuff like oh.my.gosh.its.so.deep.johnny, you want to make sure the access paths are available and defined
We have a tutorial on doing that with ffmpeg if you'd like
I'll just say it like it is - from what I hear here the mp4 plugin is for very long-tail content (a lot of videos seen only a few times) which may or may not be very common in porn.
The more times you serve a video the worse mp4 will be - there is also a plugin to limit mp4 bandwidth on nginx
Though mp4 is a bad format for online video delivery IMO.
You know, the bright side of a faulty motherboard, last night was a great into on what plugs in where on a computer. That's actually the first time I've opened up a computer
I read somewhere that it's bad practice to use componentWillMount(), do you guys think so? The guy also said to always use componentDidlMount() instead because then you can manipulate your component.. I'm not sure that's really valid even if the component has state?
There are times that componentDidMount() is more correct. And maybe componentWillMount() is redundant, but it's not universally a 'bad practice' to use componentWillMount(). Unless they deprecated it.
I put my ajax requests in the constructor with .setState after the containing promise returns. It could as easily be done through a reducer, so you're not limited to componentWillMount() for making server calls at the start. Of course, I'm very new to react/redux
Are you sure componentWillMount is deprecated? Also it works well with fetch requests through redux actions, but I switched to did mount because of a similar article to the one just posted.
I've only ever heard "don't use setState in the constructor because that forces a re-render". Well, I have to re-render because I can't guarantee when the async function returns. So what's the problem?
Also, if you stick to react's lifecycle events you'll more easily handle future needs. upgrading react, server-side rendering, using a new library, etc
Wrt 3rd point, Is it talking about typing of http response that we receive from back end? for example
Purpose of `interface` keyword: . Type-checking based on the shape that values have - One of TypeScript’s core principles . Powerful way of defining contracts within your code . Powerful way of defining contracts with code outside of your project
So my lootbox came last night and it was a Frodo toy, a Thanos t-shirt, and a map of Hyrule
That's a solid lootbox
Counter point: let's shut down every queue review, flagging system, etc, for a month so that people are forced to acknowledge the tedious sewer work many people put in every day. — Sterling Archer52 secs ago