Thought: As electron apps get more and more common, do you think a lot of them will convert to PWAs instead? For something like Slack and Skype, I do not understand why a full Electron distribution is needed, esp when both of them can run just as websites.
@ShrekOverflow discord is an example of when to use electron. they're able to use native code to do better GPU acceleration of the UI, interface with games you're running, and use UDP for video/voice chat
What's a resource for learning a JavaScript details, like the ones in stupid tests that are essentially weird edge case implementations. Basically like a guide for Oracle Java certificate except for JS?
does anyone have a clue why eslint would want decorators after the export keyword(s) ?? and how I might go about disabling that if there is no technical reason for it?
@ShrekOverflow Electron apps aren't that bad. Also if it uses GPU acceleration it could have as many or more negatives than using just the CPU in cases where it would matter
what I want to know is why that limitation? is there going to be some technical issue with decorators existing above the exports in the future? if no, how can I disable that rule? it's a parse error, so I don't see anything but disabling eslint on those lines
(react redux question) If I dispatch an action to the store, is it then going to trigger render at all components that are connected to the store? - or is it only going to update the props?
@MadaraUchiha that might be, but I received like 10x Google feed notifs on vscode around the time ms bought out GitHub. I can only speak to my implicitly average experience when considering what happened to the community as a whole
speaking of which, I might have 3d printed the single most useful object I ever did the other day: I printed a button and sewed to my pants, who are now back into workable state.
yea, I never have to go looking for a part and wait for it to arrive. if it's not something that needs to be super strong or heat resistant, I just print it
so, I'm handing over a non-profit node project because I won't have time anymore, and someone who might be interested in taking over said they'd be more inclined to take over if I migrated to typescript. So I'm trying to do that. I'm using dynamic imports in various places, and I get this error message:
A dynamic import call in ES5/ES3 requires the 'Promise' constructor.
Make sure you have a declaration for the 'Promise' constructor or include 'ES2015' in your `--lib` option.
@forresthopkinsa If you're ever interested in working on an open source project with me I want to build a game engine on rust. I probably have about the same level of knowledge as you rn
like, say I have a controller with a bunch of inputs in it for the user to interact with, and I need to get that data all the way over to some other controller that's gonna display it
@forresthopkinsa It just seems like a nobrainer to have a memory safe game engine lol. If there are games on the jvm and even written in C out there. It would probably be cross platform by default too.
graphics are actually one of the least defining parts of a game engine. I know that could start arguments, but I mean some sort of GL support is all it really easy
you could probably even port something like three.js into a dev enviroment that just generates open gl or webgl code and then apply a few more methods that make your physics and other game engine aspects apply correctly and then compile that into code read by the game engine.
Well I previously accidentally only had node like 8.9 installed locally.
so I upgraded just now to 10.x and now it still runs on the old version
the package info is in package-lock.json though because of how I installed
so why isn't it updating to the newest version of node now that it's installed. Do I need to remove and rplace electron bc it's in node_modules already? npm install didn't do the job