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00:39
can anyone know this problem?
0
Q: How to save data when there's add field in form on angular

PandaHTML <form nz-form [formGroup]="validateForm" (ngSubmit)="submitForm()"> <nz-form-item *ngFor="let control of controlArray; let i = index"> <nz-form-label *ngIf="i == 0" [nzFor]="control.controlInstance"> <span translate>SBU(s)</span> </nz-form-label> <nz-f...

 
2 hours later…
02:39
Ah damn too late in the night everyones gone
Hey is it possible to "sift" through all the variables in a webpage, and look for ones that are blobs? like url blobs?
I have a specific issue where Im trying to figure out how to save a blob from a website
uhh
for (let x in window) ...
but I've gotta say it sounds like you're doing something wrong
Probably
Im well known here for that. (Well ive been trying to improve off bad practice, so maybe... maybe not)
Sifting through a page's variables isnt really a hard part. Now I need to figure out, how can I detect if each variable is a "blob" object
Blobs dont have their own object type as far as I know
Oh wait.
Im retard. Forgot instanceof Blob was a thing
;3
why are you doing this
It was created as an experiment to get past "Blob security" lol. You know, when they generate blobs to hide direct URLs to data?
and chrome doesnt let you save blobs by default
wait wait wait
what do you mean "hiding direct urls"
02:54
even youtube uses blobs for videos
that's because you're not downloading it from a direct url
the video is being fetched in JS and loaded into the player dynamically
Hmm
I guess I didnt think about that
a "blob" is just a chunk of data
if you need to access that data you can generate an object url for it
for what it's worth, you can save a blob
pretty easily
just open the blob url
if your goal is to download a youtube video just use youtube-dl
they've already solved this problem
That never works though
If I directly open the blob url, it contains no data
youtube-dl? I use it in production code
Oh
02:58
Its not specifically for youtube
I was just mentioning it because I noticed that it used blobs a while back
How do you know it contains no data
One sec
When I open this blob url in youtube, it goes to HTTP File Not Found
I try NOT opening it in a newtab
if you get a 404 then the url has probably been revoked
no you should open it in a new tab
Oh I thought that would cause the data to go away... like "sessionStorage"
imagine you have a blob, right
big chunk of binary data
you have it in a variable
03:01
mhmm
the browser is holding that data in active memory because it's in a variable
if you declare that variable in a function and then the function returns
then the variable will get garbage collected and that RAM is released
but if you load that blob into an object url then JS can't possibly know if you're still using it
now it can't be garbage collected because JS has no idea if you're still using that string somewhere
so when you're finished using a blob, you have to release it manually
this is called revoking the object url
Well, is there a way to still access the data when that blob is revoked?
Thats what Im trying to do
Normally I wouldnt have to worry about this, but if in the case you wanted to use the blob saver on something like youtube or netflix (Both of which use blobs and video tags) it wouldnt work
This isnt a piracy project, just POC
function whatever() {
  const blob = new Blob(['bunch of data']);
  // blob is in memory
  return;
}
// blob is now garbage collected and the memory is freed

function two() {
  const blob = new Blob(['more data']);
  const url = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
  return;
}
// the 'blob' variable is garbage collected but the data is still in memory because of the object url
// this is a memory leak because now we have no way of revoking that url
one sec
@forresthopkinsa I wonder what would happen if I loaded a script before page load that rewrites the builtin "revokeUriObject" or whatnot, and just made it do nothing
Now thinking of it, I dont know if that would even do anything or not
That would introduce an incredible memory leak
03:12
Yeah it didnt work either way, eh was just curious
You wouldn't be able to use this on something like Netflix anyway
This doesn't solve the problem of DRM
Netflix uses Widevine which means it's not just a normal video
Well I know that, Im just trying to get around the concept of saving blobs, even if they are revoked or not
Okay let me give my last example
my new gpu supports 60+ fps recording at 1080p, so if I really wanted to do that to netflix I could.

But yeah, its just a blob experiment lol
after I finish up with blobs Im probably going to go back to working on my project from earlier
three() {
  const blob = new Blob(['even more data']);
  const url = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
  // now we free the object url
  URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
  return blob;
}
// at this point, the object url has been revoked, but the data is still in memory
// as long as the blob object is in scope
// it wasn't garbage collected because the function returned it

function run() {
  const data = three();
  // now our data is in memory
}
// and now it's not
so, even if the object url is revoked, if the original blob variable has not been garbage collected then it's in memory
that's the only way you could retrieve data after the object url was revoked
if the blob variable has been GC'd then you're SOL
03:17
I see what you mean. So if you manage to "save" that uri inside of that function before returning or outside of the function it SHOULD be possible?
Kinda looks like a let variable scope to me
no, saving the url won't help if the url still ends up getting revoked; it's only if you find a way to leak out the actual blob variable
ah shit one sec, I accidentally cut myself... ugh its one of those really bad spots, bleeding a lot lol
brb
Sorry about that... man Im just like my father, getting cuts and bruises while sitting in a chair ffs
impressive
03:19
Anyways, was just curious, if the blobs cant be retrieved in a normal practice scenario, I wont put tons of resources towards looking for it
besides its almost midnight where Im at, should probably sleep soon.
// no functions in this one, all global scope so it's a little clearer
let blob = new Blob(['...']);
// data is in memory
blob = null;
// data is unloaded
blob = new Blob(['new data']);
// in memory
let url = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
// still in memory
blob = null;
// still in memory because of the object url
URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
// finally unloaded

// one more example
blob = new Blob(['last time']);
// in memory
url = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
// in memory
URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
// Important: it's still in memory
okay sure
yeah but what do you do when the blob data is too large for memory
hmmm. Overall its interesting, but now that I really look at it, blobs arent a good choice for the experiment
Im gonna sleep
cya
Thats why we need a file api in js!
const disk = await navigator.requestDiskAccess(); // prompts for disk access in a specific folder + only aval on https

const file = await disk.createFile('foo.txt');
await file.writeData('Hello!')

const stream = await file.readFile('foo.txt');
const stream2 = await file.readFile('bar.txt'); // fails because browser can only access files it created
I think they've tried this a couple times
03:34
security issues?
I think so
but I mean, IDB can handle a lot
I think you can stream from an IDB row
i've never used IDB. Looks cool.
yeah it's very capable
Dexie makes it easy to use too
 
4 hours later…
07:23
can anyone help me fix this.
https://stackblitz.com/edit/angular-mcbdzg?file=src/app/app.component.ts
having trouble on undefined 'validate'
 
1 hour later…
08:24
If I edit the source code inside my node_module folder... do I need to npm install it again or should it automatically propagate into my app?
08:50
It should automatically propagate
In fact, npm installing might overwrite your changes
09:23
hi
any idea how to mock a private @input prop in an Angular component test?
Having a look online but not seeing an example
in essence, "mocking private something" is not a good approach
you have to stub with a custom class construct
10:07
yeah I found a pattern that mocks a host component
then you can pass these inputs via the template
47
A: Angular2 unit test with @Input()

Danny BullisIf you use TestBed.configureTestingModule to compile your test component, here's another approach. It's basically the same as the accepted answer, but may be more similar to how angular-cli generates the specs. FWIW. import { Component, CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA } from '@angular/core'; import { asy...

10:25
@KarelG whats your view on making the API endpoint var of a service public?
I thought its helpful to have that information visible when using the service
you cna use setters and getters for that
that allows you to have control on the access/modification
eg if it's an object/array, copy it when a getter is called
unless you allow it to be altered
ect
but direct access? no
public readonly?
its typescript
still getter
if it's an array, its content can be modified
hmm ok makes sense
oh really
unless you copy it
same for objects
Object.freeze can be used for taht
10:27
better change that then
but that's not "deep" freeze
ok I'll stick to getters
10:56
ok I'll stick to getters
haven't been using them tbh
 
1 hour later…
12:03
any one worked with druid database with node js
Hey guys is there a smart way to add methods to the canvas context without the use of prototype bad practice?
CanvasRenderingContext2D.prototype.contextFunction = (args) => {};
...I love the names of libraries: "druid". I'm sure there is some convoluted explanation for why that name was chosen and it only makes sense if you know the history of the project.
Wait a sec, well, you can already override builtin methods just for overriding them.

Couldnt it work the same way with a prototype?
@MisterSirCode what do you mean? You can use Object.defineProperty to make a safe(-er) addition to prototypes. Or you can probably clone it and extend it or something. I'm not sure what your hoal is.
|| MDN Object.defineProperty
Goal is to add some extra methods to the canvas context for simpler usage, because I like their features.
12:08
amidoingitright?
hes probably offline rn
the bot
|| alive
r u dead??
Yup hes dead I think
"yes, I am dead"
||welcome
Hes dead. dead as a doornail with no nail
12:10
Anyway, I guess you could just do myCanvas = Object.create(CanvasRenderingContext2D.prototype) and then add things to myCanvas.
i dont know history i am facing issue in timeseries query
Hmm. this is correct syntax, lemme try this out:
CanvasRenderingContext2D.contextFunction = () => {};
I literally just removed the prototype so its kinda like a method override
but that method doesnt exist, so maybe itll just create a new one
If a method is coming from the prototype and you add the same property on the instance, you'd be calling the instance property.
fyi if you alter the prototype, your action has an impact on other scripts - in the same global context - using the same object
what's wrong with just defining a function?
Well what I mean is:

I can make `const ctx = cvs.getContext("2d");` and then I can override `ctx.drawRect()` with javascript.

But im not altering the instance of CanvasRenderingContext2D. Im altering the `new Context = ctx` (Ignore that syntax, its a metaphor)
Yeah this sort of thing wouldnt work:
CanvasRenderingContext2D.contextFunction = () => {
 console.log("Does it work?");
};

const cvs = document.querySelector(".canvas"),
 ctx = cvs.getContext("2d");

function testContext() {
 ctx.contextFunction();
}

testContext();
See, karel, Im not trying to override 1 function (ctx.*insertNameHere*) Im trying to add a method to the actual Context API without prototypes
So that you can use it with ANY context.
and this also applies to any of the builtin APIs in javascript
12:17
do you mind to use class syntax?
Nope, not at all, can this be achieved that way?
yes. simply extend that CanvasRenderingContext2D but it has to be verified firstâ„¢
And how do I "verify" it?
see if the instance has actually the same properties as CanvasRenderingContext2D
thing is, there are many lock-ins in that interface
never tried that tbh, now tring it out
I mean I cant just do this lol:
class extends CanvasRenderingContext2D {
 contextFunction() {
  console.log("hello world");
 }
}
Thats not actually correct syntax, but you get the point
12:21
I foresee globalAlpha, a property on the context, being a problem. Not everything on the context is a method. globalAlpha may only apply to the "outer shell" and not affect the context at all.
How would that be an issue?
As long as Im not effecting the scope or overriding original methods, it shouldnt matter??

I just want to add NEW methods to it. I can do this super easily with prototypes, but prototypes suck
Theres literally no point to this, but I have like digital OCD, and if I cant get my custom canvas functions into the same organized "ctx." system, itll drive me nuts
The issue is that it won't affect it. :)
What if you want to change a property on the base object?
But IDK. Worth testing.
Well, I mean, if KarelG doesnt know of it, then I definitely aint got no idea.
getContext won't return a super class either. Hmm.
well getContext isnt the class
the class is CanvasRenderingContext2D (thats the full name of ctx)
12:27
No but the thing returned by the call is an instance of it.
Yes, thats the point I believe, inside of ctx.getContext, I bet its just a small logic that creates a new instance of CanvasRenderingContext2D
I say try out JS proxies on top of a context object. :)
but I really have no idea :P
eh you have changed ur name
Found it.. @KarelG Theres already MDN documentation of what Im trying to do. Its also using extend just like you mentioned.

The only issue is that this is extending the actual date class and renaming it, I dont want to rename it. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Classes/extends
12:30
@MisterSirCode Was thinking too far. Object.assign is sufficient
|| echo Sorry I died, but I'm back now!
Sorry I died, but I'm back now!
Never heard of it, lemme look it up real fast
Look who's up early
Jbis is always on call
12:32
Object.assign(
  canvas.getContext('2d'),
  {
    customFx: () => console.log('hello there'),
    anotherFx: (arg1) => console.log('arg1='+arg1),
  },
);
Damn 8am school zoom calls.
though I guess it's like 8 or 9 there
ah yeah
@SirCode ^
Ok thankyou
This is what I was looking for
@KarelG Uncaught ReferenceError: canvas is not defined
what's your canvas instance? -.-
12:34
Im not using any
Im doing this in a plain new project
Perhaps.... Ill try HTMLCanvasElement class object
how do you intend to use CanvasRenderingContext2D without a canvas?
o.O
you gotta put the effort in tay
I already have a canvas object in html
"canvas" object should reference the first canvas in html
so the reference error doesnt make sense
that's like asking an artist painter to draw something while there is no canvas on his easel
it might not be :P
https://codepen.io/SkylerSpark/pen/wvKqxMG There I pasted it into a codepen. same issue.

Im not referencing it before anything.
I also tried HTMLCanvasElement and it had the same error
12:38
<canvas class="canvas"></canvas>
if yo uwant to use var canvas directly, it has to be id
Oh I didnt know that..
Does the ID have to specifically be "canvas"
oh... it just works by having an id... thats makes no sense but Ill go along with it.
if there is a variable that did not got declared, the js tries to bind it to a html element with the same id as the variable name
12:39
but even it's in the standard, please do not use it
it's smelly
just getbyId / queryselector the canvas element
I thought that the "canvas" object itself was basically "document.querySelectorAll("canvas")[0];"
Alrighty
Well, I do have one question. What if I want it to effect ALL contexts
As if it was actually a part of the class
many people that have used canvas always have delcared const canvas = ...getcanvashtml...
just call that thing each time
make it a function
function getCustomRenderingContext(canvas) {
  return object.assign......
}
Ok, I mean thats better than nothing
Its still not as clean as a prototype, but its safer I guess
assuming I fuck up prototypal inheritance.
12:56
@KarelG since when? i didn't know about this
damn thats stupid
@JBis I KNOW, RIGHT! If I remember correctly, you can thank Microsoft for it. It's what IE did, which meant that many websites had code that used the "feature", which and then meant it had to be standardised behaviour.
mind you, this only occurs when you are doing a form of property access
it does not work if you pass it around or use as actual value
I think
thats even stupider
@KarelG all IDs (and names, I think?) are just directly added to window as references to the actual elements. So you should be able to call foo(myId) as long as you have an element with id="myId" and the identifier myId is not shadowed.
ah I stand correct, you cna pass it around
keh
using jbis' example
13:06
Yeah, essentially it's window.myId = document.getElementById("myId"). The browser just does it automatically.
function makeRed(el) {
  el.style.color = 'red';
}
makeRed(test);
would work
It gets stupid if you have a shared ID and a name. Or whatever the other attribute was that gets added to window. Might be form names, can't recall.
user11867329
Anyone use postfix?
What's postfix?
unless you reference i-- or RPN, I'm not aware of what you mean.
@OakDev yeah, PIA
user11867329
13:34
I need to make it work, but not on port 25
user11867329
since GCP blocks that port
13:46
are you looking to send mail with postfix or receive mail? SMTP (sending) occurs on port 25. You will not be able to get a server that opens port 25 without paying large bucks, and still its a bad idea to mange your own mail system. I would suggest using a gateway/forwarder. If you just need to send and not receive, using something like Mailgun. If you only need to receive a few emails still use Mailgun. If you want to use it like your personal email, I would use Gmail custom domain account.
posted on April 30, 2020 by Ruben Bridgewater

Notable Changes async_hooks: Merge run and exit methods (Andrey Pechkurov) #31950 Prevent sync methods of async storage exiting outer context (Stephen Belanger) #31950 vm: Add importModuleDynamically option to compileFunction (Gus Caplan) #32985 New core collaborators With this release, we welcome two new Node.js core collaborators: Juan José Arboleda @juanarbol #32906 Andrey Pechkurov

14:18
hello, need some basic help . let arr = ["one","two","three","four"] I want to the result ["three", "two","one", "four"] how can I do that
let arr = ["one","two","three","four"];
arr = ["three", "two","one", "four"];
^ lol
What's the pattern exactly? It's not alphabetical or based off length.
What is the logic for that order?
let arr = ["one", "two", "three", "four"];
const [a, b, c, d] = arr;
arr = [c, b, a, d];
destructuring, yum
@JBis 9 out of 10 doctors will not recommend eating destructuring.
When asked "Would you recommend eating destructuring" they all said "What?"
14:28
was this the 10th doctor?
The 10th doctor also said "What?" instead of recommending it.
I am looking without destructuring or spread. it's large file
I just show basic demo
Fun fact, that's why 9 out of 10 doctors tend to recommend something. It's actually 10 but marketing changes the message, because 10 out of 10 doctors doesn't sound as convincing.
@NIKHILCHANDRAROY What exactly is the goal? Like, the customer facing goal?
I am not so expert of js so
14:31
Also, they ask the doctors very generic questions "Would you recommend people brush their teeth?" to which the doctors say "yes, duh...", which then marketing rephrases as "Doctors recommend our product" because they sell toothpaste.
I need the demo short code
@NIKHILCHANDRAROY That's ok. What is the answer to this question: "As a stakeholder in this software, I need you to ______".

Right now it just looks like the goal is to rearrange an array in an indeterminate order.
I need arr.slice() or arr.splice() etc way to get the output
but I am unable
As a stakeholder in this software, I need to slice or splice an array and rearrange it in a random order?
Here's a random array shuffler:
https://jsfiddle.net/4ozst109/
@JeffreySweeney I don't need random
14:39
What is the pattern desired exactly?
Reverse the first three elements but leave the last where it is?
let arr = ["one", "two", "three", "four"] output will be ["three", "two","one", "four"]; or you can clone anything
Yes but why? Why rearrange in that specific order?
@JeffreySweeney I need the data to change there position in that way
Because?

The reason behind this order will determine the ideal solution.
If there is no reason, then the other examples are just as good as any.
like I have json file which is random data I need to decorate correctly
14:45
And what is "correct"?
I know this is annoying but it's important.
Why is "one", "two", "three", "four" random but "three", "two", "one", "four" is not?
I am looking the correct here
Ok. Then correct is just to set the array to ["three", "two", "one", "four"] or to destructure.

If correct is just what the output is by virtue of it being in that order then any way to get there is sufficient.
If it isn't, we can't help unless we know why it's incorrect.
I don't think to write it again and again
It has never been specified why ["three", "two", "one", "four"] is "correct". All we know is that it is correct. We just don't know why it is.

Parsing big files is not the reason why that specific order is correct. Nor is providing a demo because it isn't clear what this is demonstrating other than the ability to rearrange arrays in JS.
So just: y=[x[3], x[2], x[1], x[4]]
14:51
I am building a table and the data come from json file. but json file data is not decorate correctly like [d,b,e,b,a,e] etc and I need to change the some position so that table heading looks good
Ok, thanks.
So it's not the strings that are important. It's just that some columns need to be rearranged.

Yeah, I think destructuring would be fine. It's actually probably a lot quicker than any other solution.
This is another possible solution:
`const sortedArrayMaybe = array.slice(0, 3).reverse().concat(array[3])`
yes, its string
but my demo not string
Not a problem. Arrays can contain anything. The destructuring solutions as well as the one I just posted should work with anything.
15:20
Curious (may start a holy war): does anyone have any success or horror stories with Typescript?

Having had to use it for several months now I personally find it to be a hinderance and prefer alternative solutions.

The articles/talks I read online always seem to come off "Stockholm Syndrommy", and proponents assume that nay-sayers have never used TS or care about testing.
@JeffreySweeney I used to hate it. It's grown on me, however. I think I do get what you mean by the articles, since a couple of years ago, I was in the same boat - most of what I heard of TS sounded useless. Types? Sure, whatever - there are other tools for that, too. Features like classes, and destructuring? It's also in ES6+. So it seemed useless, overall.
But I think the selling point of it is the type system. It's weird, since it's the thing for TS (it's IN THE NAME!) and it's probably the most talked about feature...yet, it's also not very well "sold" to people.
Let me whip up a quick demo of my favourite feature to show you.
Hmm how "bad" is inline styles? For things like grid definitions?
Making new classes for one time only grids is getting silly
@VLAZ If you're not sold on why strong typing can be good you either not need it just yet or you're beyond all hope
@paul23 difficult to maintain, unless they are generated
@paul23 IMO, they're not as bad as we used to make them.

Utility-based CSS, even some inline styles for one-off things, is realistically A-Ok. TailwindCSS is the only CSS framework I've given any thought and it defines everything in the HTML.

The goal to separate presentation from content is noble but if you need to change HTML and CSS every time you want to tweak something anyway then it's NBD.

Still, keep it to a minimum.
i also think its ugly
15:35
Well I'm actually having more difficulty maintaining the current setup, since I'm getting confused between the 10s of slightly different grid "templates".
All for a single specific view.
i don't use any of those frameworks in react, i have a separate css file
About strong typing:
That's just it. I like strong typing. And there are lots of solutions for that (prop-types, strict linters, run-time proxies, etc).

I just am not sold on the way TS does it. I feel like I spend way too many hours getting TS to be happy when the real goal is just to ensure the type doesn't change...
@paul23 store them /grid-templates?
Yeah but since css must be flat, and code most certainly isn't - you can easily lose track of what grid belongs to which part of code.
How do you mean? Just use multiple css files, one for each. For each grid in HTML have a class like "gridname1". Then each css file is named after the class like "gridname1". All styles are .gridname1 .foo
15:38
@paul23 I said there are other tools for types. Tern.js was pretty good, for example and it didn't need a separate compilation step.
But then you can't reuse css (@jbis) between the javascript files.
@VLAZ that's quite a different question, comparing typescript to "just javascript" is about "do you wish to have types". But now you're comparing different type systems.
We were never comparing just JS though. :)
Well, maybe some of the features, yes.
Damni it, the link is still too big. I had to use a URL shortener. This goes to the TS playground.
Not needed a separate compilation step is hardly a reason now btw, babel can do it fast enough that it works for life coding. And if it doesn't require compilation it means it checks at runtime, which might or might not be desirable.
And it shows my favourite feature Opaque types. Not natively supported in TS but here is an implementation.
15:42
We used however flow in the past, and I liked how it used to be really "clever" in deducing types. And this cleverness made it feel less rigid than typescript 3 years ago.
@paul23 yes you can
just import it
Yeah but that leads again to name collisions which is the problem in the first place
The article calls them "flavouring" but the better known name is "opaque", so I renamed my implementation there. Basically opaque types aren't assignable between themselves - you can see in the demo that ProcessGUID is not the same as StateGUID even if both are literally just strings.
Interesting VLAZ.
Now typescript has made a lot of progress in regarding type manipulation (intersection etc) and can deduce much more.
But for us the big motivation to step towards typescript is just: momentum
15:44
It's not providing type safety at runtime but I find it works really well for stuff like IDs, so you don't accidentally use one where you need another.
having a type system that is well supported by the IDE's and well supported by the majority of the libraries (we use) is a pre.
not really understand the issue
In the end practicality trumps theoretic cleanliness
IMO popularity is a perk but itself not a justification.

VSCode, owned by MS, uses TS, which was developed in part by MS. Ok?
And Angular 1 was developed by Google :P
We use webstorm, and flow tends to blow up my work pc using 50 gb ram and counting :P. - Typescript is a bit more rigid but really works better for the ide.
15:47
Popularity is definitely important. If your library/tool isn't backed by a "big fish" or a big community, it's not worth using. Remember CoffeeScript? Yeah. If there is a wider community using it, then you'd have a lot less issues - some of them would be solved, you'd find solutions for others.
Also: having not to write type files for mobx makes everything faster.
@JBis say I have multiple views all with a maingrid, one has a 3 column layout, another 2 and another has a 2 but slightly different:
I currently maintain a system written in Vaadin. Heard of it? Didn't think so. Whenever I google some problem I find, like one or two people discussing each thing. If any. And I keep bumping in the same names. I'm almost convinced there are maybe a dozen Vaadin developers in the world.
main-grid: { display: grid; grid-template-rows: "1fr 1fr max-content"}
main-grid2: { display: grid; grid-template-rows: "1fr max-content"}
main-grid3: {display: grid; grid-template-rows: "1fr 1fr"}
Fair point. One of the reasons I dropped Plottable for this project... no documentation, and no love.
now have this tenfold
15:50
//view1.jsx
import './grid-template/grid1.css'
import './view1.css' // overrides anything that changes for this specific view

//view2.jsx
import './grid-template/grid1.css'
import './view2.css' // overrides anything that changes for this specific view
grid1.css only has things that are constant for all views. The specific css ones either add or override properties.
So if most grids have color: black then you put that in grid1.css, but view2 is special and uses green color, you put color: green in view2.css.
Hmm how is that compiled to the browser output when making a single file from it?
@paul23 If you are using a framework, it will handle it for you. If not, just add an extra class. <div class="grid1 view2grid">. Then in view2.css you prefix stuff with .view2grid.
yeah right now we're using sass.. But in the end it is the same: you just define a single css class with no reason ever to "decouple" it from the view.. As then it makes no more sense.
@paul23 now if you were using a MPA you wouldn't have this problem ;)
@paul23 "you just define a single css class with no reason ever to "decouple" it from the view"? what does this mean
15:55
So the main advantage of maintainability: you can update view & how the view looks separate doesn't work anymore. If you update the grid to suddenly have only a single row the whole view will often "crash".
the idea of maintainability is that you can quickly swap css styles without having to update the html/javascript.
so you are saying you want to be able to switch ./view1.css and ./view2.css without changing html classes?
But if you need (A) a framework to compile it, which is probably coupled with js and (B) updating it isn't free/save anyways since the view expect major constraints like always having x-column grids. What is the advantage of keeping the separate anyways??
i don't understand at all
35
A: How to make React CSS import component-scoped?

Brett DeWoodyIt sounds like CSS Modules, or many of the other CSS-in-JS packages, does what you want. Others include Emotion (my current favorite), Styled Components, or many of the packages here. A CSS Module is a CSS file in which all class names and animation names are scoped locally by default. All UR...

that solves the other issue
I'm saying that the "maintainablity" argument you gave is void since css <-> html-view are tightly coupled nowadays.
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