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03:44
I'm trying to return an array but it just returns its length. Full code here: jsfiddle.net/svac139w.
@JamesRay 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.
04:07
Nevermind, fixed it.
 
3 hours later…
06:45
@paul23 You should be able to use Number though, I think.
test('no permission iOS', async () => {
  const alertSpy = jest.spyOn(WebService, '_showErrorAlert');

  Platform.OS = "ios";

  alertSpy.mockImplementation(() => console.log("alertSpy was called!"));

  const currentPositionMock = jest.spyOn(global.navigator.geolocation, 'getCurrentPosition');
  currentPositionMock.mockImplementation((success, failure) => {
    failure({code: constants.GEOLOCATION_PERMISSIONS_MISSING});
  });

  expect(WebService._getLocation())
    .rejects.toThrow(Error);

  expect(alertSpy).toBeCalled();
I must be missing something again... I got this test case.
The line "alertSpy was called!" is logged.
The test still fails on "expect(alertSpy).toBeCalled()". Any clue why?
anyone here use MVC?
07:08
I was missing an await ._.
hey guys
anyone here using MVC?
 
3 hours later…
09:59
Embed console on jsfiddle. It worked well.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39130610/how-to-get-console-inside-jsfiddle
https://jsfiddle.net/lyu0001/gvzsr2aj/21/
 
1 hour later…
11:11
how to do asynch method calling
11:31
I think you accidentally typed that here instead of the Google search bar.
how to clean blood from carpet
oops, my bad.. ignore that
 
2 hours later…
14:02
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<title>Trigger Peripherals</title>
<script src="D:\Users\balaji.p\Desktop\trigger_comply\jquery.min.js"></script>
<body>
<h1>Trigger Peripherals</h1>
<p><button id="trigger-mouse">Hola Serpent</button></p>
<script>
$("#trigger-mouse").click(function(){
	console.log("Complied");
	window.close();
});
function complyTrigger(){
	$("#trigger-mouse").trigger( "click" );
}
complyTrigger();
</script>
</body>
</html>
The window.close(); is not working in IE
@CommonMan is that a pop-up window you opened?
if not, then the browser might not let you do that
it's not a pop up window
@Neil
Oh wow! @Neil my friend you are here today... nice... you were here yesterday as well... hope you doing good.
\o :)
It's a normal .html file
yeah, you can't ask the browser to close if it isn't a pop-up
At least in IE it isn't possible
14:05
well... the script is working good with chrome
just not working with IE
it's browser-specific
if you can believe that
how do i close a window in IE now
you don't really
or you open a pop-up window
and then you can close that
a pop up window like an alert?
or a dialog box
like a window
you can make it so that an a tag will open a window
or you can write javascript which does that
14:18
Neil got another friend today it seems
@Dexception not really. The BOM thing is to indicate which order the bytestream should be read in
My wording was not correct
 
1 hour later…
15:44
Am I crazy for really wishing javascript had a single "batteries included" standard for exceptions? So that there exist quite a fine grained "type" system of errors by which we can filter exceptions. (And libraries would just extend this system, attaching to the already existing supertypes).
Another good interview question. What will be the output of

> [1,4,5,1,3,1,2,1,11].sort()
While "many competing standards" is of course a not nice, especially in error handling due to the "bubbling up of inner libraries" having a standard that allows some filtering is nice.
Exceptions are when implementation details become visible, and it's then that the "many small libraries patched together" becomes a problem.
@ShrekOverflow are all interview questions answered by "yes this is a trickery point of javascript, so always use the more explicit version to not startle future developers"?
@ShrekOverflow all the 1's, then 11, then the rest in order.
Also: I feel "knowing" those idiosyncrasies of any language doesn't make you a better programmer as a whole. So learning that is a waste (and you'd just test if someone has lengthy experience with the language, not his capability as programmer or ability to learn new things).
I'm not going to explain the sarcasm
15:51
I disagree. learning it isn't a waste. every 'gotcha' you encounter wastes your time
knowing the common ones is very beneficial.
that said, js' sort is pretty annoying
because you'd expect it to sort numbers properly
not knowing them is a big indicator that you haven't worked in the language long enough
and sorting is something that you should encounter if you have programmed long enough
@ShrekOverflow it's silly that it defaults to strings? or that it doesn't try to figure out what the contents of the array are?
that it converts everything to string without warning :P
15:52
Indeed, but a programmer's worth should be gauged by how easily he adapts to new technologies and languages, not his "dictionary knowledge of a single language".
not without warning. it's documented and in the spec.
python's sort for example will handle it just right
I'd expect a browser warning :P
why?
it's not wrong.
well linter warning
so put it in your rules.
15:53
yeah
@rlemon Least astonishment, I haven't used many other languages that try to convert sequences before sorting.
@rlemon I do understand why it converts everything to string
how many other languages implicitly coerce types?
@ShrekOverflow I always define the function myself. I even added a rule to prevent .sort() in codereview
and that's the recommended approach
\o/
15:55
Wait reimplementing sort on js level?
no, telling it the sort fn you want.
arr.sort( ( a , b ) => ... );
that's not really reimplementing. it's controlling the sort fn
reimplementing would be like writing my own function bubbleSort
I am glad that I only have to write one character. Thank you rlemon.
it's a good finger workout for me
:)
15:58
that is only useful if you are fingering someone... o wait. that is what you are doing
3
i.sstatic.net/76NfU.png const boring job :p
I'd still question why it tries to coerce here, since inequality operators work just fine on the numbers. (From the type system I expect it to only convert to string when it can't compare two elements by the current type).
I would argue that is a whole hell of a lot worse.
arr.sort() <- I know, no matter what, it will sort by strings. I don't have to go checking how I populate arr.
it's very very clear
arr.sort(fn) <- now I just need to pay attention to fn to see what's happening
at no point do I have to worry about arr
js allows many different "types" within an array.
so does python
>>> a = [1, 4, 4, 2, 4, 11, 2, 3, 4]
>>> a.sort()
>>> a
[1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 11]
>>> a = ["1", "4", "4", "2", "4", "11", "2", "3", "4"]
>>> a.sort()
>>> a
['1', '11', '2', '2', '3', '4', '4', '4', '4']
16:01
and this isn't python
if you want to have .sort() working without problems, then it is logically seen "smart" to coerce everything to string
if we're just going to say one language does A and one does B that will be a big discussion resulting in nothing
@rlemon So? You can't learn from another language?
you can. but complaining JS is wrong because Python does X is not valid.
it's a different language with its own spec.
The complaint I have about these things is that it's contrary to anyone would think - before reading the language specs.
16:03
> contrary to anyone would think
that's a long walk.
contrary to you. that's fine. contrary to everyone? big claim
Languages should, just like code, aim to be as clear as possible. Where you can understand the language as much as possible without reading the details.
you cannot understand the language if you aren't aware of its specs.
your argument is not valid.
I agree with you. and in this case you have variable sorting or you have a single way and know it wont change unless you tell it too
to me, that is WAY more clear
different languages for different purposes and different specs
I know every time I call sort() what will happen if I don't pass it a fn
then you know, we start talking about mixed arrays, or arrays that contain more than strings and numbers.
and shit is going to get even messier.
16:06
@rlemon While everyone is something I can't claim, I do wager that if you ask the question "how would you sort array [1, 2, 1, 10, 5, 3, 11]" to any random number of people the far, far majority would sort them numerically. Similarly if you ask how to sort ['1', '2', '1', '10', '5', '3', '11'] the majority would state lexographically. (though it's actually funny, from my experience people tend to error more to always numerical side when they' not experienced programmers)
if you ask with no context, then yea I'd also assume that.
but those are simple examples that allude to an answer because they ALL are the same type
JS does implicit type coersion all over the place. it doesn't just choke. it tries to convert things. so we get mixed arrays and try to sort them and all hell breaks loose
I'd prefer a single default and the encouragement to write my own sort control.
that to me is the clearest solution
So from the point of someone learning a language, or even programming in many languages at once: it creates an extra hinderness you have to keep in mind when programming in javascript. It's not "as expected", and you have to look up the specs each time you start again.
rlemon, tbf I rather prefer that when calling .sort() (so without arguments), that it does not do something with the array.
so that the developer is being encouraged to write the fn at his own.
idk how I feel about implementing that at the lang level, but I do encourage everyone writes their own sort fn
just like using === and providing a radix for parseInt
Just Do It ™️
Oh don't get me started on the unclean & verbose of using a comparator function instead of "key" function, where key is expected to return a primitive that js can sort directly (thus a string). Oh and also, why are there no map/sort/reduce/etc for other iterables than arrays (maps, sets).
Really having to write something like: newSet = new Set(Array.from(oldSet).filter(filterfun)) and setleft = new Set([...Array.from(setleft), ...Array.from(setright)]); is just an offense to the programmer having to write that code
16:19
therefore I added that rule in the jenkins CI tool I have been using lately
@rlemon Wait is there some unexpected behaviour with parseInt? - Other than defaulting to decimal system?
people forget it takes two args, and it wasn't standardized for base 10 until recently.
so it was unknown
(almost everyone defaulted to base 10)
[1,2,3].map(parseInt)
used to be a common pitfall.
(and probably still is)
Yup, fell into that yesterday (actually in chat here). But now I'm interested to know if there are/were any commonly used implementations that did not default to base 10.
I think depending on what you fed it you could force it to 8 or 2
Actually I could expect it to try to determine the base from the string if no base is given, but other than that I wouldn't see any use.
Actually it still does that:
!!> parseInt('0x12')
16:25
@paul23 18
17:02
Any ideas how to retrieve the internal value of an object?
For example:

new String("test").[[PrimitiveValue]]
Ah I think I found it - valueOf()
That's not any "internal" value, it converts the object to a primitive value.
17:21
well if they're looking at the object as just a wrapper around the actual value, then the terminology makes sense
const PreloadConnect = connect(mapStateToProps, {
/* Actions here */
})(Preload);
In this example, what's the name given to (Preload)?
for instance, mapStateToProps is a parameter, (Preload) is...?
Got it, it's a IIFE parameter (immediately invoked function) medium.com/@vvkchandra/…
17:49
Do you think programming a Web Game in React would leave a better impression in the portfolio when applying for a web dev job, or would it be better to code some website or messenger? Because in the web dev job, this is what I will be doing, while on the other hand, creating a game is a rather advanced technique.
Because I want to apply right after finishing the first project :b
I think it would be nice if you had a game with yourself as character
@Strict I think the quality of the code, regardless of the project, will be the main concern.
make whatever you want to make, because then you'll have at least a shred of passion behind it
 
1 hour later…
19:04
@Strict in my current job, part of my interview was code reviewing stuff I've made, and I used my game engine as an example and it tipped the scales in my favor
19:31
lol, "so what have you made?"

ohh well I have the pizza site, the meme site, the other pizza site, and the site that might give you porn.
user1596138
lul
user1596138
How do you show code when you worked on enterprise applications
user1596138
"Believe me, it's in there"
user1596138
"And its gud"
user1596138
I guess I never asked anyone for past work during an interview anyway
user1596138
19:33
We just gave them things to solve in front of us etc
user1596138
Hey @ShrekOverflow do you guys still have remote openings? I'm definitely serious this time haha
user1596138
I would FB you but I never know which profile is the right one
19:53
@rlemon BUT LOOK AT THIS CODE QUALITY
no, it doesn't have that either.
20:29
!!stat
@KevinB That dude sucks
!!magic
(∩ ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)⊃━☆゚. * ・ 。 ᵀᴴᴱ ᴳᴬᴹᴱ
<script>
    let sectionFlags = {
        objective: true; // '} expected'
        coursework: true;
        education: true;
        technicalSkills:true;
    }
    function toggleSection(id){
        sectionFlags[id] { //'} expected'
        if(sectionFlags[id]){
            $('#' + id.css('display','block'));
        }
        else {
            'none'; //'} expected'
        }
      }
    }
    let resume;
    function displayObjective() {
        $('#objective').html(htmlFrag);
  }
function displayFromJson() {
well that's a mess
20:39
What is <script src ='resume.html'></script> // 'JSX expressions must have one parent element'
like, why would that throw a jsx error, wtf is going on there
wtf is going on there
-2
Q: JQuery Syntax Errors in .js file, are my Script tags wrong?

TwoHatCat<script> let sectionFlags = { objective: true; // '} expected' coursework: true; education: true; technicalSkills:true; } function toggleSection(id){ sectionFlags[id] { //'} expected' if(sectionFlags[id]){ $('#' + id.css('dis...

        if(sectionFlags[id]){
            $('#' + id.css('display','block'));
        }
        else {
            'none'; //'} expected'
        }
this did give me a nice chuckle tho
code soup
yeah, wtf is none
it's the other option to block
holy hell
lol
$('#' + id.css('display','block'));
wtf
yea
it's $('#' + id).toggle(selectionFlags[id])
but not
20:49
lmao
it looks so.. discombobulated that i think it's possible it was even worse beforehand, and passed through some kind of tool that tried to "fix" it
that's possible.
I was trying to figure out how one would get such code soup
I'm reminded of that one factorio screenshot. rlemon knows the one.
the faked one?
the more you looked the worse it got
I can picture the code originally being $('#' + id.css('display', if (sectionFlags[id]) { 'block'} else {'none'}))
which is closer to being.. correct than what they have now
"correct"
as a ternary there would still be bad
-2
Q: Get body text from external url CORS ready

dutchsocietyIm trying to work with Ajax to scrape information from another url which just print some data from iquidus explorer (blockchain). Found a lot of solutions however im receiving CORS error over and over again. What I want to achieve; Get info from: http://chain.cspn.io/api/getblockcount http://...

Is copying node_modules into a Docker container a bad idea? We'd really prefer to do it that way, but the Phantom JS fails in the Docker container (assuming because it's a different OS in the container.)

I'm guessing there will be more problems of a similar nature down the road if we do it that way?
20:58
I don't see an issue.
if it works it works.
different OS might not make it work due to gyp (if that's used)
LOL
i don't have time to code :) — Hicham_Info 12 secs ago
@rlemon Yeah I do see gyp in there. Damn.
I mean. might still work?
doesn't hurt to try does it
Well, I know it's not working. PhantomJS takes a shit when I'm running Karma.
21:16
0
Q: What's the difference between these Vue and manually generated html css elements?

ShoejepSo I was trying to make a keypad component in Vue with numbers from 0 - 9 in a grid, then with 0 and clear at the bottom, as shown below. 1 | 2 | 3 4 | 5 | 6 7 | 8 | 9 0 | Clear I can do the 3x3 grid in Vue using a nested v-for but I found when I do the 0 and Clear row manually, something a...

that title tho
21:32
-2
Q: Why do I get this error in Node.js for my online game?

Archie BaerI have made an online multiplayer game where the backend is nodejs, and sometimes when people test it, they spam bullets or use a script to create lots of players, I get an error. I have limits for this, so there can only be 500 bullets and 20 players in the game, and they all disappear eventuall...

const openingText = 'We\'re happy to hear your project is underway. '
 + <br /> +   'You can review this business to tell others about your experience.';
Because null (the value stored in self._handle) doesn't have a write property that points to a function. — Kevin B 12 mins ago
@KevinB how do you do that?
Because null (the value stored in self._handle) doesn't have a write property that points to a function. — Kevin B 11 mins ago
how do i do what
lol, adding a > actually disabled the thing. nvm
21:45
!!woosh
I was just about to highlight that indeed, I often forget that it's good to teach the things to people.
@KevinB pfffff
i thought you were asking me how to do what i stated in the comment
which.... didn't make any sense
considering it's not an action that can be done
Hmm can I check if a value is a callable or not?
21:52
like, check if it's a function?
$.isFunction(value)
After doing a roundtrip of "where should I put this documentation I need to understand better my codebase" I am thinking about finding a tool to extract docblocks from source code. I believe that is a relatively common thing, but have head of little js things for that. Have anyone done this, and would have a recommentation?
There seem to be esdoc esdoc.org/manual/feature.html
@paul23 how sure do you want to be?
easy check is to see is .name returns a string.
or you can just see if it's a function.
!!> typeof ( () => {} ) === 'function'
@rlemon true
or typeof .call === "function"
a little more literal version of callable
Hmm that also works with asynchronous functions? I'd like to see if - to get the result of something - I need to do await X or await X()
21:59
You don't await the function anyway, you await the result
async functions are just functions that return promises, from the caller's perspective
and the promise doesn't know how it's being resolved. nor does it care
(in b4 you might ask about knowing if it is awaited)
It sounds like you have a value, and you want to determine whether it is a promise or a function
check for a .then property
or
better yet
avoid the situation entirely and don't have a value that can be one or the other
Well actually it was just a fleeting thought while trying to jam flow type into the system, and that seems to often complain what passing a function as paramater, and the result of the passed function is a promise instead of a value - even though it is "void".
22:03
Then the problem seems to be with the function's type signature
No, it's saying... the object you are exporting isn't a function. because, well, it's an object. — Kevin B 1 min ago
While I could fix the library typedefs, I was hence wondering if I could overload the function's type based on if it's async or not.
am i correct there? i'm curious about his (or her) claim that trying with just function () gives the same error
Overloading based on return type is not possible
laughs in Haskell
22:11
So my first solution was to just union all types and then do the type checking manually in the function itself, and then add some generics to allow for this.
@paul23 When I was a child, I caught a fleeting glimpse out of the corner of my eye
I turned to look and it was overloaded return types
hmmmm. Considering whether I should start another project....
Committing to a doing a project is one of the most difficult parts.
@forresthopkinsa You mean you can do that in flow type?
22:28
hello
hi
Is there a pdf for javascript dom api that includes all objects' hierarchy and their attributes
like object.firstChild.nodeName
No but I'm sure someone has offlined mdn
hmm mdn okay
22:51
if you open the google chrome console, you can drill down the tree pretty easily
well I will try
@KevinB no tree displayed in console area
for example, type document.body
before pressing enter, type another .
you'll see all the stuff
You could also do console.dir(document) and get it in a different format
What version did node start supporting renamed destructuring assignment?
if I'm reading that right...
23:05
probably 4
if you include flags
okay, sounds good. Google needs to stop using versions as old as 6/8 lol
fine if they support it, but why is it the default? jeez
oh, and firebase... firebase the max version is 8
amazon does stuff like that too
they won't update to a new version until they're confident it is stable
which is different from node saying it's stable
but you're free to install your own version
depends on which product you use
23:10
I also assume they're not jumping to upgrade unless there is performance or security concerns. and they probably already have their own workarounds for those in place.. so the upgrade would have to be substantial. (theory)
@KevinB still doesn't work !
works for me
:shrug:
lol
console gives me like this even with consile.dir(document) ->
@rlemon hmmm, I just remember getting an error on firebase functions, but can't remember what. I forced it to 8 from 6 and all was fine. Just inconvenient and adds more unknowns.
23:13
ohh this is for some API?
I wasn't reading.
that problem goes away if you use typescript or babel
I thought you were bitching that google itself was using old tech on their side.
if they're not offering new apis.. idk, that sucks. but what ya gonna do
Kevin clear now
-14
A: 2019 Stack Overflow Moderator Election Q&A - Question Collection

codeforesterThere is a reputed user who downvotes a lot, but never offers a reason, even after being asked. How do we address this bad behavior?

23:52
🚽

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