Hi, can anyone please help me understand why my question about starting Node.js apps from system scripts in Linux was downvoted? https://stackoverflow.com/questions/63420803/how-to-run-a-node-js-app-from-system-sleep-scripts-i-e-right-before-or-after-sy
user6718998
3:45 PM
Hi guys. I have a REALLY bothering question
user6718998
Why this: exports = () => name => logger.buildLogger(name)(); doesn't work in typescript ? I want to import the code in my javascript file like const logger = require('../common-logger')('some-name');
Does anybody know what import x = require("y") actually does?
For some weird reason, if you tell ReSharper to include something, it produces that line. And it works but I never realised you can mix them. Can't seem to find documentation for it, as well
I was under the impression that you cannot use import as an assignment. Or whatever that actually does. It's weird and not covered under the ES6 documentation on import.
This is in a TS project, by the way. Not sure if it uses a different altered version of import.
Welp...apparently I answered my own question, it is a TS specific thing. Not sure why I didn't check that documentation before.
@Hi- I love SO 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.
I need help in angular. Browser is showing Cannot GET / and terminal is showing ERROR in node_modules/angular2-jwt/angular2-jwt.d.ts:88:41 - error TS2314: Generic type 'ModuleWithProviders<T>' requires 1 type argument(s). 88 static forRoot(config: AuthConfig): ModuleWithProviders;
@Hi-IloveSO Abstract equality algorithm. "0" == 0" -> operands are string and number, convert the string to a number and do the comparison. Number("0") is 0 which is equal to 0. [] == 0 -> operands are object and number, convert the object to a primitive. For arrays that consists of calling toString() on them. A toString() itself calls .join(",") on the array. So an empty array results in an empty string. Now we're back to the previous case - comparing a string and a number.
Converting an empty string to a number produces 0, which is equal to 0. "0" == [] - operands are a string and an object, convert the object to a primitive. The same operation happens as before and you end up comparing a string that contains zero to an empty string, they aren't equal.