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15:00
Is there a way to use strict mode for all scripts on the page maybe for debugging purposes?
@William maybe if you globally strict-mode on the first script, it will apply everywhere
That isn't what the docs say but worth a try
I still don't quite understand what you want @AppleOrange. You want a new component inside your DOM or a dialog? The stackblitz you provided does exactly what it is supposed to do
user1596138
user1596138
So fucked up lol
15:11
posted on August 10, 2018 by CommitStrip

I'm just going to use customevents everywhere to get around the boundary between type="module" and type="text/javascript"
user1596138
Ban commit strip, so weak day after day
yeah
15:27
anyone know if it's possible in Chrome or Firefox debugger to break whenever an undefined property is accessed?
consider typescript, if you want that level of rigidity in your code
@rosslh wrap the script in try catch
is the non developers tool solution
undefined properties can be accessed without errors being thrown
I wonder if github.com/paulirish/break-on-access works on undefined properties
sorry on phone thought it said variable
in that case use a proxy
annoying but should work.
15:30
@William proxying every single thing? Can you do that programmatically?
I mean, ofc you can, by changing how JS behaves, or transpiling your JS, but urgh
nope, it fails on undefined properties
@rosslh You want this
accessing an undefined prop isn't an exception tho
accessing a property of an undefined variable is
True, but if it causes problems, you can backtrack
user1596138
@rosslh Then no, there's no way to do that
15:33
You can also do this
I want to make basically a view model class in JS
Depends what you mean by access
So I want it so that property accessing will produce "prettified" values while still allowing me to serialize it without
For example:
user1596138
You mean if you define an object like

var obj = {a: true};
// now you do
obj.b;
// you expect to break here?
user1596138
15:35
Not going to happen universally, doesn't make sense
yeah that's what I want :/
proxy might be the ticket
user1596138
Why
user1596138
It's normal for properties to be undefined in different cases
@rosslh proxy I believe should work but on phone
there age cases it won't work though
@rosslh You want TypeScript
15:38
@LadyBird there was a massive API change that changed the casing of many properties. I want to make sure I haven't missed anything
@MadaraUchiha inherited the codebase unfortunately :)
user1596138
Much better ways lmao
user1596138
Like
user1596138
Find
@rosslh So did I, I introduced TypeScript on more than one existing project here.
Now it's our standard.
i caution transpiling anything in that case. Babel at least will be a standard soon
"standard" lol I guess
15:39
You don't even use Babel on most of our projects now. Even the JS parts are transpiled using TypeScript (with type-checking disabled)
@LadyBird yes I used find, I want to make sure I didn't miss anything so I don't push broken code
I used TypeScript back in my Angular days, I would not use it again
const patientData = {
  id: 1,
  dob: null,
  nextAppt: "2018-09-17T00:00:00"
};
const patient = new Patient(patientData);
console.log(patient.dob); // "N/A"
console.log(patient.nextAppt); // "9/17/2018"
console.log(JSON.stringify(patient)); // '{"id":1,"dob":null,"nextAppt":"2018-09-17T00:00:00"}'
@jake Why?
How do I achieve this?
15:40
Rember dart js
user1596138
@rosslh Right but this won't help you do that
I understand using getters, but I don't want the getters to be used when JS goes to serialize the data
@Vap0r Implement toJSON()
user1596138
There's going to be shit loads of code working just fine and accesing properties that are undefined
Or pass a callback to JSON.stringify()
@rosslh Again, TypeScript.
user1596138
15:41
Must be some weird code if you have to find all these random API properties scattered throughout the code.... I'd suggest centralizing that and there will be no issue.
@MadaraUchiha I like the toJSON solution. Didn't know that! So in the constructor I can assign a property: rawObject to the passed in patientData and in toJSON specify that I want that serialized rather than this
@MadaraUchiha I built out rich models that described the shape of our business objects, but it felt more like a weight. If I ever passed anything wrong, the TS error prevented me from picking the problem apart with a debugger.
user1596138
You're basically describing the issue as being the code is architected in a unmaintainable way.
To whom?
user1596138
Womb two
15:44
@MadaraUchiha do I have to choose between using a module or using a non-module? We have areas of our app that are "plain" JS, and areas that use modules. I want this Patient class to be implementable in both areas without having to define it in one file as class Patient and another as export class Patient
Is there a pattern which allows for this?
i have thought of constantly polling window if a value has been added
I could see something like patient.class.js having class Patient and then patient.module.js having import "./patient.class.js"; export default Patient;
9
Q: Detect when a new property is added to a Javascript object?

UICodesA simple example using a built-in javascript object: navigator.my_new_property = "some value"; //can we detect that this new property was added? I don't want to constantly poll the object to check for new properties. Is there some type of higher level setter for objects instead of explicitly st...

Does anyone think the above ^^ is a bad idea?
Or can anyone suggest better alternatives?
Which answer are you referring to?
15:47
Both. because proxying the window will be useless in your case, the answer is essentially... polling
@Vap0r How do you expose things out of stuff that isn't modules though?
Globally on window?
Yeah I suppose. We just don't have a much better solution
Of course there are better solutions
Even back then before CommonJS was a thing there were better solutions :D
Oh! Do you mean how do I do communication between modules and non-modules?
Because in that case we use CustomEvents
No, that's not what I meant
But that's slightly horrifying
I can visualize the flow with modules
You use some sort of transpiler and bundler to get a bundle file, which is then referenced by a <script src=""> tag that's generated by Webpack or whatever
What's your flow for the code without modules? Do you just plop it in a file and reference with <script src>? Do you just put it directly on the page?
15:51
Yeah the desire though is to not have transpilation.
And yes we have both inline JS and script src JS
Lots of inline JS in some of our older codebase
@Vap0r So what I would do is the revealing module pattern
Hello!
window.MyNamespace = window.MyNamespace || {};
window.MyNamespace.Something = (function() {
  var privateProp = 42;
  function privateMethod() {
    privateProp++;
  }
  function publicMethod() {
    privateMethod();
    return privateProp;
  }

  return {
    publicMethod: publicMethod,
  };
})();

window.MyNamespace.Something.publicMethod(); // outputs 43.
Marrtenw:inside DOM
@MadaraUchiha that doesn't allow me to use imports though?
I mean, it does.
15:57
@Vap0r Sure it does, but this is how you control scope in ye olde days of JS
This is approximately equivalent to
I can use classes too, if that helps your next example
var privateProps = 42;

function privateMethod() {
  privateProp++;
}

export function publicMethod() {
  privateMethod();
  return privateProp;
}

// other file

import { publicMethod } from './some/file';

publicMethod(); // outputs 43.
The magic here is that you return from the IIFE whatever you want to expose outside
Oh that's extremely clear. So I guess my only other question is how I should cross the module/non-module barrier?
The result of the IIFE is assigned to window.MyNamespace.Something (where MyNamespace is going to be something on the level of your company name, or the project's name), and Something is the name of the module
OH!
16:00
@Vap0r No, of course you shouldn't. You should strive to use a single moduling paradigm
You should work to remove those bits of code that expose stuff for other factors to use (and not just do a side effect, like DOM or whatnot) or that use other pieces of code from other places themselves (i.e. things that would normally import) and move them to modules
@MadaraUchiha agreed, but I convince my company you can mix the two because otherwise we would have never adopted any moduling paradigm and would still be using functional (not OO) JS
@Vap0r You can do the two, but you should also migrate the existing code bit by bit
It's also not that difficult to do, really.
And I am working to remove those bits of code. That's why I thought that the customevents for data pass-through wasn't a terrible idea
I basically have a global script type module:
        store.subscribe((state) => {
            document.dispatchEvent(new CustomEvent("state", {
                detail: {
                    state
                }
            }));
        });

        document.addEventListener("action", (event) => {
            store.dispatch(action.call(event.detail.action));
        });
@Vap0r What browser support do you guys require?
I know it's pretty basic, but the idea is that once we move completely over to modules I will be able to replace everywhere with a document.dispatchEvent with a store.subscribe and everywhere with a document.addEventListener("action" with the appropriate store.dispatch(ACTIONFUNC(payload))
We require Chrome
16:03
Hmm
Which is pretty beneficial or else all this would be pretty moot
It allows me to use web components and native import/exports so that's what I'm doing.
Wouldn't it work better if you just exposed store globally in some fashion?
@MadaraUchiha I did think about that, but I kind of wanted the changes that need to be made for full conversion to be mostly in the old codebase
If I exposed it globally then once we went to a full-on move-over then I'd have to add import store to all of my existing modules
Although I'm sure there are better ways to do what I'm doing considering my restrictions and tech stack, I do think that some of the decisions I've made are decent
16:06
@Vap0r I mean both
I would like a chrome extension that gives me filesystem read and write access anyone have any experience?
export const store = magicify();

window.__store = store;
Your modules use import { store } from './store'
OH
Your non-modules use window.__store
Wow it's so simple. For some reason I was thinking that I would have two copies of the store.
:+1: thanks
I'm still a little fuzzy about certain aspect of implementing my Patient class though
Even with the revealing modules pattern I would have to keep any export/imports in a different file than my class right?
Because if I have import/exports and tried to use Patient via <script src> it would throw an error
I know I could use what you just said for the export const store, but the window namespacing only works if a module has already imported it.
VS Code is an electron app right?
Yes
Do you know if they used react, vue, or something of the like on the GUI?
They use the Monaco Editor for the GUI microsoft.github.io/monaco-editor if that's what you mean
So if I wanted to use a class that can be imported but hasn't been yet in my non-module JS, I should use the patient.class.js & patient.module.js pattern I mentioned earlier, right?
@Vap0r Yes. Most likely.
Ok cool thanks
I'm thinking of making an electron app, but I don't want it to be sluggish if I also add vue into the mix.
@MadaraUchiha thanks for all your help btw
16:34
@Vap0r <3
16:59
1 message moved to Trash can
@Rick 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
1 message moved to Trash can
@Rick 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
I don't know why this is not working
function toList(arr, node = {}) {

  if (arr.length === 0) {
    node = { val: arr[0] ,next:null}
  return node
  }
  node = { val:arr[0] , next: {} }
  toList( arr.slice(1), node.next )

  return node
}
Anyone build an app that is both electron and not electron?
who is the electron expert if there is one?
electron wasn't a thing years ago prior to nodejs
electron is still a thing
lol really?
electron is really easy to work with what's the problem?
17:06
I want the app to be written ideally so it a chrome app, electron, and web app
figured someone did this
try to minimize duplicate code
someone built something that turns your web app into an electron app google search it
The devil is in the details. The menu bar needs to fallback but be native in electrom
Chrome apps use different apis
what do you mean by native?
like written in C++
i am just quoting the electronjs website I'm assuming it takes on the styling of the OS
That's if you want native windows controls if you just want it to be a web view you should be fine without doing all of that.
17:12
It's not that simple
if a menu goes of the screen you need native
true but you could also just scale your CSS so your menu scales correctly
It's just a chrome shell your app sits in
you can tweak it as you become more familiar with the environment and tooling
1 message moved to Trash can
@ggb667 Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
@CapricaSix You annoy me.
1 message moved to Trash can
@ggb667 Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
@ggb667 Select all code and press Ctrl+K
17:17
1 message moved to Trash can
@ggb667 Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
const app = require('../../server/server');
const {
  RESTResponse,
  Order
} = app.models;
ty.
:)
What does that do exactly?
17:19
const app = require('../../server/server');
const RESTResponse = app.models.RESTResponse;
const Order = app.models.Order;
So its just an assignment basically.
I've not seen that before.
it's called destructuring
Is there a name for that?
17:21
I'm writing an electron app
Ok
ty
it eliminates the need to constantly re-specify app.models and eliminates the need to repeat the property name
Also going to start learning react today
Hopefully it is fun
"fun"
learning is fun
so it should be
@KevinB you know why my recursive function does not work
17:23
just don't confuse the euphoria of learning something new with the something new being good :p
starred
Also you dont think react is good?
I think react is good
@Rick what is the purpose of node?
Does the B stand for Bacon
toList doesn't use it
I do like bacon, but no
damn
17:25
@KevinB to create a nested object {val:1 next:{val:2,next:null}}
i am recursively nesting it but it is not comming out right
is my base condtion correct
or is it getting lost on every iteration
what i mean is, you're never using the passed in node
@KevinB not always
you always create a new one
Anyone try samsung dex?
I think the idea is a good one.
i don't quite understand what you're trying to accomplish with the function, but that param not being used is a code smell
17:30
@ex080 Conceptually? Yeah it's a good idea. Reality? No. Just no.
@KevinB even when I make it a global and take it outside the function it does not help. just trying to create a nodelist {val:1,next:{val:2,next:{val:3,next:null}}}
@JBis I think you are right, but maybe in a couple years it will be perfected
@ex080 Screen size still poses an issue. Unless they transform to holographic tech I don't think it would work.
How do I make a js function return a value or a property?
@CapricaSix Why aren't you yelling at @Rick??????????????
17:33
@Vap0r Oh I thought it was compatible with HD monitors that support HDMI and same aspect ratio
// basically, how do I do
console.log(fooDate); // "05/17/1993"
console.log(fooData.value); // JS date version of "05/17/1993"
function toList(arr) {
  if (arr.length === 0) {
    return null
  }
  return {val: arr[0], next: toList(arr.slice(1))};
}
@KevinB you are the man!!
you were throwing away the result of toList( arr.slice(1), node.next )
what you had could have worked if you were modifying node, but it would have been complex
because you'd have to crawl it
on each iteration
and modify it rather than replace
Logically speaking, if you have a line chart, and you want to turn the data into a stacked area, would you just iterate the data, and .map((a,b) => a + previousDataSeries[b]);?
17:37
I see the mistake now. I was throwing it away on each iteration your are right thanks man dude :)
Or is there a more efficient way than reading the last manipulated data point?
!!afk
series = [{
    solar: [1, 2, 3],
    wind: [4, 5, 6],
    engine: [7, 8, 9],
}];
Essentially the data would have to end up like:
series = [{
    solar: [1, 2, 3],
    wind: [5, 7, 9],
    engine: [12, 15, 18],
}];
right?
Logically speaking you create a stacked area chart by modifying the way it's drawn, not the source data
17:44
What
How do I create nested getters and setters in JS?
Well I'm extending a class, and overriding two methods, one to combine all the max values so the axis extends, and the other is the line segments
The line segments are created one data series at a time, so the best I can do is pass in the entire series, or the last series data
Do you have any control about how the chart is rendered?
Because using anything other than an actual stacked graph will be a hack
@Vap0r Care to elaborate?
I do not, my only choice may be to hack the data
changing the base chart would effect every chart, and that's a no no
at least for now
Do you use a lib to render charts?
17:50
Nope
just canvas or d3 if it's an svg chart
I have found that ripping functions from D3 internals to work when you need one thing to render well.
How is it possible to not be using a library and not have any control over how it's rendered?
@KendallFrey I'm not allowed to modify the parent class
the what?
17:52
I guess I could override the render in this case
Are you manipulating SVGs directly with react?
@jake is that a d3 chart?
class Line extends Chart @KendallFrey
this particluar chart is a canvas chart
so why not class StackedArea extends Chart
17:57
That's a codepen example. Basically I'm trying to make view-friendly getters for my JSON data
Not StackedArea extends Line?
But properties that are objects themselves are much more difficult
An area chart seems distinct from a line chart
but maybe, if you want to reuse common functionality
I don't know how to set them
@SterlingArcher As always, I mistake the original question. For each datum, you need to take the set values and do datum / setTotal
17:58
It might be worth the effort to make a new chart type for this instead of hacking against the line chart
Because each point is a representation of the % of the total at that point in time
@jake it's not a percent based chart though, the axis is in a power unit
var patient = new Patient(data); for example, if I do patient.appointments it correctly returns the formatted object. But since that object has no getters or setters if I do patient.appointments.next = "WHATEVER"; it sets an appointment object on patient instead of on patient.data
log scale?
real time power
linear
17:59
@Vap0r Are you look for a Proxy? I don't really understand.
Maybe
let me research
Oh, 'area' implies % of total, if you have SVG superpowers, call a fill on the lines and make sure they render in the right order.
I assume this is what you meant?
That reminds me of how much I hate stacked area charts
Yeah, it makes it hard to read
Like, is red doing well in that?
Why do they always seem to put the biggest variable at the bottom
18:04
I'm old enough to remember this
Is that an old Civ game?
I was thinking, looks like Civ 1 or something
Civ 3
Also AoE2
I played V a bit
always preferred RTS to turn-based
free to play Star Craft 2 is pretty fun
RTS is nice, esp when it is based on rock-paper-scissors metas
18:12
I want to return a value, but allow the developer to access functions on the value return
function foo(value) {
  return {
    toString: function() {
		return `123${value}`
    },
	return value
  }
}
// so
console.log(foo(456)) // 456
console.log(`${foo(456)}`) // 123456
How do I do this?
woohoo
@Vap0r Do any of those work?
I would assume it would have to do with prototypes
object oriented approach? Constructor plus functions to call on object
What are the good sides of using an SPA?
@Vap0r Just remove line 6
@ShrekOverflow IMO, it all depends on your stack
18:21
IMO it is always 0
I have never needed to touch a router since my Angular days
@jake but then foo(456) doesn't evaluate to 456
@Vap0r Bc console log does not call to string, it prints a representation of the objet you are returning
I have to touch a router every once in a while since I use WiFi in my apartment
3
I want the representation to be the value
18:23
Basically how Number(123) in the console evaluates to 123, but it still has function properties
Typecast?
look out everyone we've got a Funny Boi in here
@jake here is a better explanation.
I want foo(456) + 1 to return 457
I want foo(456).toString() to return "123456"
@Vap0r How about:
18:29
valueOf?!?!?!?!
OMG how did I never know of this
I could literally kiss you.
I was just about to suggest it
@Vap0r that's not necessary
Yeah it's pretty much what you need
That's all I wanted, basically what toString does for string evaluation, but for any other valuation.
@forresthopkinsa how do you figure?
@Vap0r it's just a little extreme
Ok thanks. This was just one of those where I couldn't phrase the question right
MDN is a goldmine of knowledge
@forresthopkinsa I simplified my use-case so it was easily answerable
@SterlingArcher that question is a classic
@Vap0r okay? lol
18:32
Basically it has real applications where I'm using it.
@MadaraUchiha looks like a journey to bofa
dammit
You're talking to an Elder Memelord, punk.
You'll have to be more obscure than that.
2
So do we have to like suspend ourselves now for breaking the CoC?
2
Or you do me and I do you? How does this work
2
18:48
flagged :P jk lol

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