In the JavaScript world people use those holiday chocolate calendar things to count the days until a new version of their favorite compiler will come out and can't sleep the night before because they want to be sure they can update at the very instant the release is dropped (and then proceed to complain that their favorite framework didn't update for the quirks of the new compiler in a timely manner). I wish I was completely joking.
javascript compilation generally refers to the process of bundling multiple scripts with various level of ecmascript awareness into one string that will work on browsers
This statement comes from a Joe Rogan show episode where he chats to Neil de Grasse Tyson. His statement is about the Gregorian calendar, and goes as follows:
"Point is, this was hard-earned, and the whole world uses this
calendar, it is the most accurate calendar ever devised."
I have li...
the physic calculations is tied to the framerates from your screen. IT was fine back then and would make the results of physic calculation in time before the screen refresh its frame
but now with faster screens (above 60 Hz), the engine sometimes goes nuts
@Neil I do not know the name, but it is a sorta higher step of stubborn. Like super stubborn. We have this thing in our language and add some animals/items to it. There is a "hard" and "stone hard" to express that it is very hard. (hard as rock)
I understand that we bind methods in the constructor for them to not lose the context if they are assigned to other variables like event handlers, like onclick={this.method} though I am interested in how that technically works. Will onclick={this.method} be implicitly called as onclick={this.method.bind(this)} then? I always care for such technicalities, lol.
Hmm, I have a question about project management for you more experienced people here: In our project there was this really annoying problem which broke everything. Over the course of this week I "rebuild" the project from scratch in a new repository. Now the changes are quite large in many areas of the code. What is the typical way to "merge" such a change? Throw away the old codebase and start using the new repository?Just delete the old files and replace them? Copy all changes manually changes as little as possible? Or some funky git command?
if the new repo provides the same functionality as the older one, then the answer is inevitable right?
if there are functionalities missing, you have to include it ofc
this can be done with a merge with(out) cherry-picking relevant commits (eg new commits made to the old repo). you can ensure that your repo has higher precedence.
Well it's mostly that right now we continu with the "new" codebase - However it's a rewrite that is a non trivial change from the old base. The old code still has features not implemented in the new one, and they'll be moved next week. I guess I'll just have to make the new code a branch of the old one, so that it can still be looked at side-by-side easily.
Since we lost overview of what component affected what part; I basically rewrote the application from a monolithic approach to a semi-micro services approach, in doing so I accidentally also fixed the bug. Now each component has to be re implemented, and I'm thus wondering if keeping the old git changelogs would even be relevant.
Hoping someone can help... How can I limit key-value pairs in an Object. I'm writing a cookie for every product viewed and then put that product into an Object. I want to display the last 5 products viewed, however at the moment the cookie will just keep capturing all the products viewed. Hope this makes sense?
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@goodguy the industry sucks, people have confirmation bias so fullstack developers will advocate that, FE devs will advocate that and BE devs will advocate that. None of us can predict the future but at present there is demand for backend, frontend and fullstack.
I recommend you try learning both and see what you're more passionate about.
Coding is creating, it's fun and awesome and fulfilling - see what part of coding brings out that "omg this is amazing" out of you and do that.
I was just having this conversation with my brother last night. You really just have to find what you enjoy doing most. If you're a coder who doesn't enjoy what you're doing - you're not going to learn much, you're not going to be very good at it, and your job is going to be miserable.
@Alesana I agree. I think it's a bit more subtle than that.
Because for something to be fun, most people have to feel improvement, working towards a goal and some level of competence but in order to develop those things they have to go through a lot of frustration.
That is, programming is hard and frustrating and we should stop (as an industry) saying differently. It's also very fun.
People need to develop a sense of self efficacy. If they don't have that they're a lot less likely to put work in.
I use this '$(input).click();' for when user click on a div input[type=file] trigger I want a function run after this (if I write codes in next line codes work faster then that)