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user1596138
19:00
@Alesana what path are you using exactly
user1596138
Path(s)
path.resolve(__dirname, './dist')
user1596138
Then I don't know :/
:/ it's frustrating, I don't know why it's even looking at JS files
/((.)=)?\?(=(.))?(?=.*?((\2=|\4=)(.))|((.)(=\2|=\4)))/$>$1$7$9$3//$<
almost there
19:03
72 and I'm done
I guess uncss can only check the CSS against existing HTML files, but not against HTML files that webpack is in the process of creating?
@forresthopkinsa That's an interesting remake of Britney Spears' hit
That's silly, I can test it against template files but I plan on having a lot of template files that I won't be using. I guess I will just run it twice
/((.)=)?\?(=(.))?(?=.*?((\1|\4=)(.)|(.)(=\2|\3)))/$>$1$7$8$3//$<
there we go
> (.)|(.) kenpls
19:16
64
woop
@ndugger problem? :D
@KendallFrey Nice
i wonder what happens once it runs out of input
i don't remember
In Anarchy, it's okay if it terminates with an error
spins forever, I'd guess
Is dense as REBEL is, it's not that great for golfing, since string parsing tends to fill it out
@KendallFrey that is unnice to newcomers
I'm escalating this issue to twitter
19:26
Well, on the plus side, it's only 64 characters so you have plenty left for a tweet :)
For responsive layouts using media queries, do you consider device pixel ratio with hardware pixels to compute css pixel width & height of a font-size or block elements?
something like vwport width in css pixel = m hardware pixel width * (1 css px / 2 hardware px), if dpr = 2.
before setting width: in css pixels for any element
Oops is this question for CSS? sorry..
Ahh webpack gets confusing
19:43
@copy you dog!
72
I don't even
It turned out quite elegant
Same structure
The print can be shorter
1 message moved to Trash can
@rolu Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
The assignment too
I'm trying to test this method is Jasmine but I keep getting an error that says:
`TypeError: Cannot read property 'subscribe' of undefined.` Any suggestions?

process() {
    return Rx.Observable.from([a, b, c, d])
      .bufferCount(2)
      .concatMap(data => Rx.Observable.of(data).delay(this.DELAY))
      .mergeMap((d) => this.send(d));
  }
And I'm not using it
20:08
6
Q: Close fitting trisuit - How to alleviate nipple burn from chest hair?

User632716So this is actually not trolling, serious question. I have also looked at what-can-i-do-for-sore-nipples and is-it-harmful-not-to-wear-an-underwear-while-running as well as a couple of questions that suggest bodyglide etc, I use bodyglide elsewhere, but i don't feel this is the answer in my ca...

@copy 76
still using it
...=a|c was the change
Interesting
I have much fewer ?:s than you
@rolu I don't see any subscrition there, where is the process method being used?
@J.Pichardo it's called in another method
Well, can you share that code?
20:24
1 message moved to Trash can
@rolu Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
@J.Pichardo

post() {
   if (this.data.length > n) {
     this.process()
        .subscribe(resp => { ... }, err => { ...});
  }
}
Are you mocking that object or function somewhere?
@copy oh I think I see it, one sec
hmm maybe not
1 message moved to Trash can
@rolu Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
@J.Pichardo

    it'll be something like this:

    it('process data', () => {
        let foo = new Foo();
        foo.process().subscribe(resp => {
           // should log [a, b] and then [c, d]

        })
    });
20:30
Well I'm no particularly sure why is process returning undefined, maybe you should consider asking a question
@copy 74
20:45
you're not using it... hmmm
Berlin is great!
Ich bin ein Berliner
Had a very nice meeting today with bmeurer hashseed littledan and mayalekova about what we can do better for promises in Node.js - was really fun.
Hi guys, I have this line in HTML
<ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right id ="Editbtn" style="display:none">
but when I do this in JS, it is not working:
document.getElementById('Editbtn').style.display = 'block';
"not working"?
20:52
It is not showing that ul block
JS should change it from none to block
Are you sure it isn't showing it?
well, what you've posted has some syntax errors
yes, I am sure .. If I move id ="Editbtn" from <ul> and move it to top <div> it works fine
or, rather, are you sure it actually dislays anything when it is shown
yes, I can see then when I move id to div
20:54
then your problem is likely the missing double quote.
ahh I just noticed .. let me fix it
probably copy paste
<ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right" id ="Editbtn" style="display:none">
that did not fix it
yeah, so, remove style="..."
does it look like you intend
I need that to hide and show this on certain pages
i'm aware
it's a debugging step
test the end result without the code you think isn't working
to ensure the end result actually works
same issue when I remove it
21:06
are there other elements with id="Editbtn"?
if... you remove the display:none, and still can't see it,
then the code you have may not be the only problem
Let me post whole DIV
So, I have two main <ul> items. First one is labelled Tools with id "Tools" and second one is labelled Edit with id "Editbtn"
@Neoares: 1: don’t ping me, I’m on vacation! 😃 2: I normally don’t ask for an explanation, but 2 dvs on a factually correct, upvoted answer made me curious.
I would like JS to hide and show these two based on which page I am. I can do same thing with Div
Works fine here: jsfiddle.net/g063yb3a
using your html and code
21:11
hmmm
huh .. found the issue. My js code to display it was under this function
indow.onload = function(){
w*
I moved it outside and now its working
guessing you are overriding that function somewhere
it can only be set once using that signature
always use addEventListener
ok, i will look into it
@KevinB whataboutit?
21:24
weird. i saw your ping, but no message
had to reload to see it
 
1 hour later…
22:47
I'm not very experienced with Javascript but I'm confused about using objects
I see on the Mozilla documents it shows you how to use a property of the object in another property
var o = {
  prop: 37,
  f: function() {
    return this.prop;
  }
};
But why can't I just use this.prop not in a function?
var o = {
  prop: 37,
  f: this.prop
};
Like that?
@Alesana Because that would refer to the this of whatever is running this, not o itself
this is a finicky concept in JS
Hmm, that's odd
23:03
it's not really. this always refers a context. There are only three types of context in JS. Global, Function and Eval. None of these describe an object itself
I suppose that makes sense. I'm even having a hard time doing the above. I would want to be able to do console.log(o.f); and have it log 37, but it's logging the function and not what the function returns
you need to invoke the function. Normally you do that by attaching () at the end
you should really go read/watch some basic tutorials
@Alesana Look into getter/setter functions if you want a computed property
Yeah I do need to read some tutorials. I want to get more into using node/express/(angular/react), but for now I'm mostly with PHP
@KendallFrey I was looking at that, but there isn't going to be any changing from what is originally in the file. I am basically using a js file as a JSON file (using module.export = {}), so I can have some variables site-wide in webpack.
I don't know if that makes sense
Why are you duplicating data, anyway?
I can't imagine there's a reason to have the same value in multiple properties
23:16
Just to make it easier. For example, I have metaVariables.title which will be put in the <title> tag. Then I have pageVariables.title, which will be in a <h1>Tag. I will, by default, have the pageVariables.title set to metaVariables.title, but there are some instances where I will want to have them differ.
Trying to streamline website creation through webpack
Actually I looked into getter/setters and I guess that's exactly what I need :P
I was thinking of getters/setters in PHP, like defined functions to later get or set properties of an object
var o = {
  prop: 37,
  get f() {
    return this.prop;
  }
};
Is this bad practice, calling it using the parent object using the name directly from a getter?
var o = {
    prop:22,
    q: {
        get f() {
          return o.prop;
        }
    }
};
23:34
@Alesana I'd prefer this. It's not foolproof, but that's just because of how JS works
Hmm okay I wish there were a cleaner-looking way to set a property
Is there a way to merge the two un-even indexed array without looping?



var a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
var b = new Array(12).fill(0) // [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]

// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
i was just wondering if theres a lazy es6 implementation already
:)
[ ...a, ...b ] will do
oh maybe not, you want to overwrite missing fields I guess
23:45
the expected result should be the same length from var b
a has 6 elements while b has 12. I was wondering if theres a function that fills the gaps for var a
I don't think there is any function in vanilla which does that out of the box
user1596138
user1596138
@rlemon I finished my wood project. 4 days late after I broke and glued it.. I know you can't find where tho

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