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01:27
Say I wanted to match a string to be matched if it is surrounded by 2 underscores like in Markdown, so __hello__ would be matched, but then I also want to match _hello_ seperately, how do I do this?
@CrazyTim you do VB?
you're the only other person I know
01:51
!!>([_, match1, match2] = '__hello__'.match(/(_(_.*_)_)/), [match1, match2])
@david "SyntaxError: expected expression, got '<'"
@david ["__hello__","_hello_"]
there you go @JacobSchneider
user8871181
02:04
Longest conditional test I've written :D ..
user8871181
if (reservedFileNames.indexOf(fileAttemptingSave.substring(2, fileAttemptingSave.length-4)) > -1)
02:34
really?
i wrote one that beautify extended to 3 whole lines
@david thanks
what does the !!> mean?
!!> hello
@JacobSchneider "ReferenceError: hello is not defined"
oh
!!> alert ('hi')
@JacobSchneider "ReferenceError: alert is not defined"
is this executed server side?
02:52
how do I match _ but not __, that's my actual question, sorry.
i tried this: /(_|\*)(?<!\1)(?!\1).*\1/g but that doesn't seem to work
neither does this /(_|\*){1}.*\1/g
!!>'__double__ _single_ __d__ _s_'.match(/\b_[^_]*_\b/g)
@david ["_single_","_s_"]
@JacobSchneider like that?
Oh sweet thanks so much, i'll try that
qq, why the \b?
afraid this doesn't quite work
my regex was like this: /(_|\*)[^\1]*\1.*\1/g
I tried lookaheads and lookbehinds, but none work
03:10
give input and desired output
03:30
I don't like the idea of using regex for this
Unless it's something like (_{1})([^_]) I feel like you're kinda abusing regex a little
03:54
Okay
 
1 hour later…
05:19
Hi
Here's the question I wanna ask developers, especially those who are ninjas all over the world?
Have you ever experienced this situation where you join a company whose technology stack and architecture are complex which make you upset getting on board?
As for me, I prefer to participate in a brand new project and take control over the overall implementation concerns. Only in this way can I feel the deep inner heart freedom and happiness. Is this normal for a developer?
Looking to hearing from you
Come on. Lest's get interactive. Summon programming ninjas to answer my career development question.
05:38
i mean
i used to feel that way
now i'm indifferent
Oh really.
yeah, basically... i've been working for the same company for 10 years. over time i've replaced bits and pieces of the architecture as needed, i've had new projects that needed to be built, etc, but for the mots part it's all been on the same stack within the same system. At this point i rather just maintain what i already have built rather than continue to add more and more to it.
like, each "new" project i build... that's one more thing i need to maintain if it isn't also taking another project off my plate at the same time
Rob
Rob
@ZhengquanBai "I prefer to participate in a brand new project". That's basically what every developer wants. No one wants to work on legacy projects. However, that's where the work is. Most companies are very hesitant to re-write projects from scratch, and with good reason
Oh. I thought it was only me.
Rob
Rob
What you're wanting is a Greenfield project
And it's not uncommon for companies to use that as a selling point to potential candidates
06:20
@Neil idk what that venus thing is
@BadgerCat meow meow birthday, meow!
06:43
Meow is how an English speaker pretends himself to be a cat and speaks.
BTW, do Chinese cats speak the same way as American cats?
ha, that is an interesting question, but I think it doesn't. At least for dog barks, it is different from language to language.
Yes, each language has its own interpretation of what animals sounds like
In French a cat goes miaou
I think that he meant the way of how they meow to each other (if they do that ...)
I have read somewhere about "regional accents" (research was conducted with cows) which indicates some differences between vocalizations, based on country.
06:59
Has anyone built a threadpool here?
@Zirak I guess colleges are to blame for that, here is @oboecat's college trying to re-invent C++ in C with the worst Hack I have ever seen github.com/lazyvar/threadpool/blob/master/list.h#L15 (that's not her repo, but I found that by googling their approach).
@ShrekOverflow yep
Or you mean made from scratch?
@Neil Lets say made in C, that's like making it by scratching your face until your skin comes out but ignore that part.
No :) I trust the programmers who have gone before me and done this on my behalf
I was reviewing oboecat's
@ShrekOverflow Could you write your own operating system in C, sure.. would I? Hellllz no
It's been done to death, like every programmer who wants to reinvent the string
07:09
@ShrekOverflow The world's becoming a nicer place, huh?
@SomeGuy yeah, riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiggggggggghtttttttt?
@Neil It's for egucational purposes, I am reviewing @oboe's approach
lol wtf
> Tuition for the complete degree program is $15,000 ($1,500/course)
I know the ideal way would require some type of coroutines that aren't available in C
Hello folks!
Can someone clarify to me: when is `import React from “react"` needed at the beginning of my file?
I see some cases (on Codepen for example) where it is not required. But most of the time, react and react-dom should be imported first.

What is the point?
It should always be imported when you want to use any JSX in your file
Your JSX code like return <input /> gets translated to React.createElement('div', {})
(not real code, but it relies on React being in scope)
07:24
Thanks, @ShrekOverflow!
Is the import necessary even tough Babel is included already? (I read Babel is responsible for JSX transpilation)
Here for example: https://codepen.io/donfak/pen/LgMJxY
Why aren't the import (react & react-dom) necessary?
07:44
Hello Everyone
Where should I write Unit tests cases in Angular 5
Also where should I write e2e tests?
Looks like I need to write both the above type of scripts in .spec files
how can I manage both unit tests and e2e in same spec files?
08:05
Hello Everyone. Is it morally correct behavior if resigning from work after committing in for a week?
@ZhengquanBai My thoughts are it's only morally correct if you feel you've given adequate time to train a replacement and/or wrap up unfinished developments
Everything else is kind of leaving the company who hired you in the deep end without a floating device
Though that said, everyone has their reasons I suppose
@Neil What is without a floating device?
@ZhengquanBai your company after you've left it
Could you put it in its pure form?
I was making a metaphor
I mean they'd be in a difficult spot
08:17
I'm not a native English speaker. A floating device gives me a picture of a device floating on the water.
I can somewhat guess what you're trying to convey.
08:48
@Neil seems a bad metaphor
I would use "sinking ship"
oh... that does not fit
Is it normal for my redux reducers to end up being lots and lots of object.assigns
@Slendertron Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room rules. If you have a question, just post it, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help. If you want to report an abusive user or a problem in this room, visit our meta.
@KarelG only if the company wouldn't survive your leaving
@ZhengquanBai you are picturing the right thing
oh really
08:52
without a floating device means you're leaving them with nothing to keep them supported
if you're in water without a floating device, you're going to struggle a lot
Ah, I can totally understand now.
If nothing is floating on the water, I will have nothing to hold on to.
exactly
09:05
oh boy, I just went through my mails after attending a conference last 4 days and got this summary:
and it is friday... Gotcha ignore that :P
 
1 hour later…
10:28
RUN YOU FOOL!
GANFALD!
It's the slightly less accurate ganfald, the offwhite!
YOU WILL NOT PASS BY ME!
11:05
> A wizard is kinda on time, most of the time
What to do with such question ? stackoverflow.com/questions/53007417/…
closing it would feel like hitting a puppy...
hmm, how can I curl a specific domain on a local machine, running nginx with multiple sites?
> J.Doe
I wonder if it's his sock
we will see
John Doe is the common name you give in English when you don't want to give you real one. There are a lot of them on SO
11:33
anyone read the book Eloquent JavaScript?
Hi all, I have created a chat app using scoket.io nodejs and mongodb. I want to implement new feature where user can upload pdf or image in chat how can I implement it ? I have now idea from where to start ?
Oh dear, here we go
it's a pain, let me tell you that
but it looks really nice
@funjoker there are several parts: preparing the image (resizing), uploading, storing, displaying
first things first, you need a HTML <input type="file" accept="pdf"/>
then on the server side you need to store the image to a file
to a file ?
11:43
Do I need to create newSchema for upload ? My current schema of messages looks like this:
My solution is just to send it to imgur
{
  "type": "message",
  "client_timestamp": "2017-01-01T00:00:00Z",
  "message": "Hello! This is my encrypted message."
}
yes, in case the image is larger than the available heap size
Now new schema for file upload will be like this:
no, you can set the type to image and the message to a base64 buffer of the image and decode it when it arrives at the server
11:44
{
  "type": "message",
  "client_timestamp": "2017-01-01T00:00:00Z",
  "filename": "UploadedFile.jpg",
  "filesize": 1000000
}
you can do that, sure
and set the message property to the image contents
base64 ? It makes the file one third larger. Don't do that
On frontend I am using react so when user clicks on upload icon it should open browse files to upload it.
that's how I did it. crap, there's a more efficient
yes
What is efficient ?
11:45
react will help you
efficient means it works well without wasting too much energy / resources in the process
base64 is not efficient ? Then what should I use ?
IDK any better way
@DenysSéguret what's the best way to store image files?
Any package in nodejs available for file upload ? Or can file uploading be implemented from scratch without any package ?
11:47
@JacobSchneider binary
are we speaking of sending it (use a POST XmlHttpRequest & FormData) or of storing it ?
@Neil Binary??
@Neil okay
yeah.. why would you use base64 to store it?
seems quite unnecessary
11:49
I realise my mistake now, I got my projects mixed up. sorry, you're right binary is best
Sending files using binary ? Whats that ? Sorry for asking silly questions but I am beginner in nodejs
Should I get the file and post it to database like this -> github.com/sanath-kumar/socket-server/blob/…
@funjoker don't worry, we were all there
youtube.com/watch?v=srPXMt1Q0nY try this video, he's quite good
Nice link :)
that's how you send the file, and storing it is up to you
@funjoker no, that's not what I said
11:52
ok
Binary is best for storing image files. That isn't the same as sending image files
HI
sending should be done in binary too, though
Ok for images binary is best then for pdf files ?
11:53
binary just means to send the files as they are, without encoding them
so yes, binary
Oh ok understood the meaning of binary now :)
Any one know how to get the systeminformation using node js one system to another system
@Ben10 Your question might be unclear
as in, lots of 1s and 0s :)
11:54
so you transfer system info?
don't try to open a binary file in a text editor
ok
I have one more question do I need to create separate api endpoints ? one for sending messages and another just for upload ?
I don't think that's necessary
@DenysSéguret I need to identify the operating system currently running in node js its possible
@Ben10 The OS module takes care of that
@funjoker does your API check the type property when a message is recieved?
11:58
@Ben10 you do realize google is faster than a chat for simple easy to write questions ?
No it doesn't check if type is message or file ?
code:
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const Schema = mongoose.Schema;

// Create Schema
const MessageSchema = new Schema({
  type: {
    type: String,
    default: "message"
  },
  message: {
    type: String,
    required: true
  },
  date: {
    type: Date,
    default: Date.now
  }
});

module.exports = Message = mongoose.model('message', ItemSchema);
@DenysSéguret I try with OS Modules but it will return my os information only. when I try run on another machine that why i ask
@Ben10 didn't you ask to share the information? can't you send it? or what are you asking?
@funjoker may I see your socket.on function please? where the message is recieved
@JacobSchneider yes sure
1 message moved to Trash can
@Ben10 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
12:02
var express = require("express");
var app = express();
var os = require("os");
app.listen(8080);

app.get("/", function (req, res){



    res.end(os.hostname())
});
Code:
const express = require('express');
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const socket = require('socket.io');

const app = express();

const db = require('./config/keys').mongoURI;

mongoose.connect(db, {useNewUrlParser: true})
  .then(() => console.log('Mongodb connected...'))
  .catch( err => console.log(err));

const port = 5000;

let server = app.listen(5000, function(){
  console.log('server is running on port 5000')
});

let io =  socket(server);

io.on("connection", function(socket){
  console.log("Socket Connection Established with ID :"+ socket.id)
@JacobSchneider I try with above code it will return my os info
@Ben10 yes that should send back the server's OS info
@funjoker the chat variable contains the message and the timestamp?
@JacobSchneider but I try with another different machine same result came.. I am using mac and they using windows
@ben10 so you are trying to send the server's OS info or the client's? i'm sorry, but I don't fully understand what you're getting at
12:06
@JacobSchneider I need to capture respected os info through my url
@JacobSchneider I think there is something wrong let me fix that and then i will get back to you :)
@Ben10 In a HTTP connection, there are 2 computers at play, the server (where node.js runs) and the client (where you run the HTML). Who's OS info do you want to get?
@funjoker Okay
@JacobSchneider I need to capture the client OS info
are you using electron?
@Ben10 The best you can do without executing code in the browser is to look at the HTTP headers: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/User-Agent
12:08
or just a standart browser?
@JacobSchneider standard browser only
@Ben10 look at the express documentation: you can access the HTTP headers through the req argument of your function
11
A: Get CPU/GPU/memory information

Bas van DijkCurrently Chrome Canary supports returning the amount of CPU cores using: navigator.hardwareConcurrency This worked for me in Chrome Canary 37.

what kind of information are you looking for?
// React Question

Why isn't `import react from "react"` necessary on Codepen? 🤔
Like here for example: https://codepen.io/donfak/pen/wYEYNz
12:15
yeah, I was gonna say that this is frontend where the react library is imported via script tags that aren't visible in the source
@rlemon Doesn't mean when react in linked in the THML <head> the import isn't necessary in the js file?
Is that the 'rule'?
idk what you mean about rule, but they include React in the pen based on your imported resources.
there is no magic. it's like jsfiddles resource accordion.
there's basically some invisible code that is added by codepen. it's basically a script tag that's put into the iFrame's header : <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/react/16.4.2/umd/react.production.mi‌​n.js"></script>
@JacobSchneider I went through the file upload video by academind I want to ask when user clicks on upload icon api endpoint /uploads (POST req) should be used am I right ?
12:21
I don't quite understand. could you please rephrase your question?
I am saying on frontend side when user clicks on upload icon it should make a POST req to api endpoint let's say app.post('/uploads' , )
Am I right ?
yes?
@funjoker Yes, that's right
And there must be also a GET request which gets all the previous chat and file upload am I right ? Because if the user refreshes the page the previous chat and file upload should not disappear
Now once the file is uploaded and can be seen in chat application how can one download it ?
yep, but you can do that later
12:26
Ok download thing I will implement that later first I will implement upload file
that's the best thing to do
Thanks for sharing that video it is very helpful. In that video he is using multer
Ah okay
I haven't watched that one but I love his channel
@funjoker better work the way around ...
12:37
@KarelG don't disturb him, he's busy XD
@rlemon @JacobSchneider
Locally I am including react, react-dom and babel in my index.html <head>.
And I don't need to import the libraries in my js before using them: https://pasteboard.co/HKeJIqt.jpg


So: when is importing react and react-dom necessary then? 🤔
when you're not using a HTML view, so for example in a node environment
I mean, it isn't. many people just prefer to compile their code and use modules because they make life easier
13:05
What’s the difference between the following two lines of code?
let copy = {...obj};
let {...copy} = obj;
did you try them ?
the spread syntax behaves like usual here, the difference is only different at when assigning the result
trying it out should help you to comprehend it better. A tip: use a simple array as your obj
yes, I tried them ^^
And it's not clear ? the first one build an object while the second one destructures one
no, of course not
13:09
Do you know Object.assign ?
It might help if you see the left part of the assignment as a "pattern" (which is the term used in some other languages) which must match the right part
I can’t fully know the difference just by executing both patterns on a simple example
that was sufficient for me :P
look at the examples
Karel I find the pattern mathching proposal more interesting
yes, I can do my own research, I get it, but I came to this chat to get some useful information from you folks 😅 … or am I at the wrong place?
13:12
but it is similar
its Friday probably not the best day to be asking questions
not the worst either though
@ŠimeVidas sorry if we don't look helpful. Your question is legit and at the right place.
@ŠimeVidas sure, but what type of information are you after? they are the same syntax, doing different things to achieve the same goal. in that stupid simple example at least.
edge cases
in case it's not clear, both lines do pretty much the same thing (shallow copy of object)
13:15
@ŠimeVidas getters and setters make those effectively different
I think
they both call getters during, neither copy them.
what is being set here
let copy = {...obj};
yea, my mistake
they call the getters, but neither are copied (getters or setters)
it's still early. I'll blame that
@William what do you mean?
@ŠimeVidas well, let's start first with the basic thing: do you know what ... does?
ignore anything else. Just this : ...myVar
what does it do?
then I am going to explain what happens in those two lines
13:21
I think it depends on if it’s [...foo] or {...foo}, no?
@ŠimeVidas that is array vs object not relevant
You have quite a bit of rep
and I have class
that's what happens when you were active on SO 6 years ago, the rep just keeps on growing automatically ^^
so I can post later but I don't have the time to write it out but this second
the difference is spread vs rest
which is easy enough to explain, but I'm unaware of edge cases being introduced in your example
and if you just want explanation of spread vs rest, there are much more wordy documents for that online.
I must admit, I’m not able to explain ...foo off the top of my head
take foo and return its properties, something like that
13:26
// var foo is an iterable (eg ['1','2','3'])
const lel = {...foo}
= construct an object with `...foo`. And doing `...foo` spreads the array. In this situation, it iterates through foo. So you get an iterator that has index as key and the element as value (so 0 => '1' , 1 => '2' ect ) that is used in the construct
--> so you get a { 0 => '1' , 1 => '2' ect  }

end result: lel is an object whcih is {'0': '1' , '1': '2', ect}
(object keys are always string, hence the quotes there at the end)
if you have the following on the 2nd
obj = {
    get fullName() {
        return this.first + " " + this.last;
    },

    set fullName(name) {
        var names = name.split(" ");
        this.first = names[0];
        this.last = names[1];
    }
}
setters will be called possibly
ah, iterator, yes. I wanted to say “sequence of properties,” couldn’t find the right term.
is it a viable play to use phantomjs for creating static "segments" or landing pages of your fully dynamically rendered website?
why would you need to use phantom for that?
Wait people still use phantomjs
13:30
sounds like... convenient?
I am not even sure what you are saying
ah, server side rendering, the one thing I will probably never implement on my website
Isn't phantomjs like actually dead
problem in my case is, webcrawlers and bots are not very capable of receiving and rendering websocket transmissioned HTML/JSON data
I think, pupeteer is where it's at (could be wrong)
13:31
But some other people are still fixing bugs iirc
The lead maintainer stepped down after chrome headless
// var foo is an object {a: 'he', b: 'waka', c: 'yeye', d: 'baaz'} // left out quotes at key

doing let {a, b, ...remainder} = foo gives

a = the first element in the object: that is a => 'he', so you get he
b = the second element in the object: that is b => 'waka', so you get waka
...remainder = everthing else: c: 'yeye', d: 'baaz'

result: you have three variables, a, b and remainder. a gives you 'he', b gives you 'waka' and remainder gives you an object with the remaining elements
didn't the author of phantomjs stated that they will re-start the development?
phatom is still on the GitHub front page so I hop it isn't dead
there is a condition at that though: the names must be same as that in the object
13:32
He thinks it's pointless because of headless chrome
@ŠimeVidas do you understand it now? :o
however.. I thought about rendering a highly dynamically rendered webpage server-sided to conveniently have a static version for bots and crawlers
Damn... I use phantomjs in miaou
@KarelG yup, that's how that works. But … I want to be able to say, “To shallow-copy an object you can use either of these two lines.” I came to this chat to confirm that this is true.
@DenysSéguret what are you using it for
13:36
@ŠimeVidas better to use Object.assign for that job. It is a "clean" approach imo
for bots, I think the best option is to use a fully-automated prerendering service
@ŠimeVidas like?
sorry, no experience there, but there must be a few good options (not sure if paid)
@jAndy I have a !!webshot command which takes a picture of a site
Some find it convenient to fast see a site preview without resorting to a vpn when they're blocked by their company's proxy
so Zirak could spam the entirety of youporn in your chat?
13:39
@jAndy this only takes pictures, not videos
and all of miaou has rate guards, so even all the preview images would be hard to inject
In any case this wouldn't be a problem for me... more for imgur where the images are stored
@ŠimeVidas I think this approach there is the exact some thing I have in mind, just... worse. Rendering it client-sided to write it back to the server seems odd, since you can just do it on your own there (phantom)
and they want money for it? gtfo
react it.
keeping ssr in mind, shouldn't be too bad to have both generated for you
The home page of playboy looks weird. Do people go to this site to look at men with ties ?
@jAndy But you need to render in a browser to get the full generated HTML, no?
tmk headless chrome will run your JS
13:43
phantom is a browser (engine)
that's my guess too
browsers and bots are doing "okay" to run js these days (even if it has to be babeled at all times, because even google runs a stone-age version of v8 for crawling)
the real problem arises when exchanging render data with the server, especially over sockets
(Express.js server:) app.use(require('prerender-node')); detects bots based on User-Agent string and then starts up a headless browser, which fetches the request’s URL, renders the page, and then sends the generated HTML to the bot … would be my guess
I get the idea, but I still think that doing all the "static rendering" stuff should not happen dynamically, but statically on your server, once in a while
but googlebot indexes twice, once w/o JS and once with JS, so if you need indexing ASAP, you need server-side rendering
13:47
with that said, googlebot is good at indexing dynamic content now
so this is probably overkill
in my experience, its not
not with websockets or dynamically exchanged data/client rendering
have you tested it against your site yet?
yes of course
I mean I'm using the search console for testing, the whole "render as google" thing
Hi guys someone use ng boostrap^
?
13:52
!!dontask
in C#, Jul 3 at 19:41, by Kendall Frey
Don't ask if you're allowed to ask a question. Don't ask if anyone's available or knows how to use what you're using. Don't say you're going to post a question. Just ask your question.
Can you ask about asking about a question?
you just did
guys I need to obtain this result
with ng bootstra
true, but that doesn't make it necessarily correct
Also, interesting question mentioned in C# room
in C#, 6 hours ago, by Default
@Neil
Multiple choice question:
If you choose an answer to this question at random what is the chance you will be correct?
A 25% B 50% C 0% D 25%
in angular 6 is there a way to tell the router what module to load on specific route?

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