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16:00
@RoyiNamir no idea, it looks related to svg
ah no
Tue, 31 Mar 2009
it's just on his website <<
i dont think 2009 thought about svg
@RoyiNamir it is
but it's on his page only
in 2009 there was SVG ?
16:02
of course there was
SVG is old
older than HTML5
didnt know that
it was in FF2 or something
> The SVG specification is an open standard that has been under development by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) since 1999.
there should be an "I-knew-about-SVG-before-it-was-cool" badge
@RoyiNamir I don't need them :)
just run in the console
16:03
i mean explanations.....:-)
(function() {
    if (!("a" in window)) {
        var a = 1;
    }
    alert(a);
}());
not the same result <<
Hey guys. I have a code to print certain value to selected input on focus. Does anyone have an idea why it prints to focused and previous input if i use tab to switch between inputs?
16:05
he's just abusing global state and hoisting
doesnt expression function has access to global objects ?
but nobody uses global variables, or they're doing something wrong™
yes, through this
or through window
but that's not the issue there
the var a = 1 isn't hoisted to the global state in an IIFE, so 'a' in window returns false
so !('a' in window) returns true
IIFE ?
(IIFE = Immediately Invoked Function Expression)
oh. ok
16:08
the (function() {}()) thingy
it creates a new scope
yeah , as far as i know , it just creat a scope and send a variable which is known only to inside
like $ in jquery
but i send jQUERY
and not $
since it isn't the global scope anymore, the var declaration isn't hoisted to the global scope
@RoyiNamir no, it doesn't "send a variable"
the only point is to create a new scope usually
and then you can do stuff like this yeah:

(function( $ ) {
    // use $
}( jQuery ) );
I mean like (function ($) {})(jquery)
that's only relevant if you used jQuery.noConflict() before though
16:10
because if you haven't, $ is already available
but the $ is param in [function ($)]
I send him the jQuery object
there shouldnt be a problem
IMHO
but if $ is already a global object, you don't need it
I know , but If i do (function( $ ) {
// use $
}( jQuery ) ); , I DONT have to to noConflict()
IMHO
( function() {
    // use $
}());
also works :)
noconflict is for var j=jQuery.noConflict()
IMHO
first, jQuery.noConflict() is enough, it removes the $ variables, but keeps the jQuery one, so you don't need to save the returned value somewhere
@Abhishek hehe nice :)
i HATE google for discontinuing code search
how exactly am i supposed to search for e.g. Local<Boolean> now without finding tons of unrelated crap
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12229350/assigning-users-money
16:16
@Abhishek what is this ?
@RoyiNamir just some random code
@ThiefMaster use eclispse :P
it allows u to go and read the definition
ew - and I don't want to search in my own code
@Abhishek just run a single script though, it looks stupid with the echo there :<
random code which does what?
noh in the actual v8 src-code file
and @ThiefMaster just a sec
16:17
well I'm looking for code using it
Local<Boolean> res = Boolean::New(true); fails while Local<Number> res = Number::New(1337); works fine
welcome to v8!
so i wonder if there's some special handling for boolean objects
@ThiefMaster it works fine for me
are you using c++ or c ?
16:19
Hi Everybody!
@Abhishek where does this v8 is tunning ?
running
@RoyiNamir console
@Alnitak hello
nodeAudio::btest = Persistent<Boolean>::New(Boolean::New(true)); // works perfect
@Abhishek i did try to run the first example but it aint running . Am i missing something here /? developers.google.com/v8/get_started#hello
and your errors ?
error: conversion from ‘v8::Handle<v8::Boolean>’ to non-scalar type ‘v8::Local<v8::Boolean>’ requested
Boolean::New(true) works fine but I guess that could result in crashes due to the GC deleting the new boolean
@Abhishek I just pasted it
@ThiefMaster your error is in the line where you return it
nope, just checked again - it's the line before the return where it fails
Handle<Value> BoolTest(const Arguments& args) {
	HandleScope scope;
        Local<Boolean> res = Boolean::New(true);
	Handle<Value> argv[1];
		argv[0] = res;
	return scope.Close(argv);
};
try this :$
hmm
16:25
@RoyiNamir here is a quizz for you perfectionkills.com/javascript-quiz
same error, still in the Local<Boolean> res = Boolean::New(true); line (as expected)
@FlorianMargaine man leave this alone! try this one !! madebyknight.com/javascript-scope
im just doing it
ah I see
@RoyiNamir the one I just linked to is made by kangax, and is one of the hardest I came across
@Abhishek did you get your network question resolved?
16:26
@ThiefMaster what ?
@RoyiNamir this one is easy
@Alnitak solved 14 of em
@FlorianMargaine h easy but tricky
one returns a Handle<..> the other a Local<..>
16:27
yeah that we already know
ah, like i thought initially.. booleans are special
@RoyiNamir try this one, and if you get more than 3 good answers out of 14, gg :)
conversion from ‘v8::Handle<v8::Boolean>’ to non-scalar type ‘v8::Local<v8::Boolean>’ requested
but its funny how the same thing work on persistent :P
16:28
return scope.Close(Boolean::New(true));
works
nodeAudio::btest = Persistent<Boolean>::New(Boolean::New(true));
works!
@RoyiNamir bravo
@ThiefMaster its an ugly way to do so though
@FlorianMargaine h sorry , I didnt know this term [gg]
Good, good?
16:29
@ThiefMaster instead of that you can just create a global Persistent<Boolean> _true = Persistent<Boolean>::New(Boolean::New(true));
and re-use it
because all of this javascript object creation is incredibly slow !
and very exaustive [ profile it ]
@Amaan great game
hmm... i wonder if Boolean::New() actually creates a new object everytime or always returns the same one...
@FlorianMargaine Good quiz!
the latter would make sense checking the code
@ThiefMaster like String::New , it creates the new
// atleast what profiling says
@ThiefMaster Local<Boolean> res = Local<Boolean>::New(Boolean::New(true));
16:34
that's a nasty JS test...
even that fails
@Alnitak totally
this is incredibly crazy
completely useless though
I'm still working through it - results soon
16:35
Hey guys can anyone please help me with this jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/sQd8t/3/
The idea is when input is focused, the button click prints the random number inside. My problem is that whenever i just click the first input and after that the second input, the value just prints inside both, not just clicked one.
wait works :D
aha found it :D
@Alnitak got 8 wrong
I went kinda fast on the 4 last questions though <<
(they're all wrong)
4 wrong
1, 5, 9, 12
@FlorianMargaine 5 answers wrong
Should I be happy?
how many did you guess?
16:38
	Local<Boolean> res = Local<Boolean>::New(Boolean::New(true));
Guess as in weren't sure about?
is the way lol
I went through all of them
  var x = 1;
  if (function f(){}) {
    x += typeof f;
  }
  x;
What does that return for you guys?
I didn't guess any of them
@FlorianMargaine why this works like this ? var foo = {
bar: function() { return this.baz; },
baz: 1
};
(function(){
return typeof arguments[0]();
})(foo.bar);
Returns "1number" for me
@RoyiNamir because this is window there
16:40
what ?
@Amaan chrome returned 1undefined
because it's called in the function context
I'm running Chrome
Oh!
I had it running in a console where f was a number earlier
1undefined now
@FlorianMargaine the arguments[0] is the foo.bar
I dont understnad
Why is that though?
16:41
but arguments[0]() is called in a function context where this === window
Wouldn't hoisting make f be declared?
Oh, wait
@Amaan that's not a declaration, it's a function expression
Thanks!
16:43
I'm quite pleased with only getting 4 wrong :)
it's way better than the first time I saw that quiz
heh, same for me
first time I had like 2 good answers
WTF ? (1,2) == 2; // true
#5 I got wrong because I wasn't sure if the function name or parameter took precedence
@RoyiNamir the last is returned
#1 because I didn't assume that arguments is a plain object
16:46
Last one returns
@ThiefMaster , @FlorianMargaine check this out
@Alnitak heh, same, but I got it right :p
@FlorianMargaine what usages will (x,y,z) have ?
in JS
@Alnitak same :/ I thought it'd be arguments
its like coalesce ?
16:46
@Alnitak Never heard about it being an array with ES5 (6?)?
yeah, that was my first answer
@RoyiNamir none, but this might have: (var x = y, x)
@RoyiNamir: for(int i = 0; i < j; i++, j++)
@Amaan no, it's not an array, it just pretends to be one (i.e. it has numeric properties and a .length)
(ok, crappy example but demonstrates a use case)
16:47
@Amaan it's array like, but it's a special object
It's gonna become an array!
With ES5 or 6
yeah, but not in ES5
ES6 then maybe
ES5 is years old already
16:47
Wasn't sure where
Must be 6
ES6 is CS <<
CS?
Complete shit?
coffeescript
Close enough :p
complete shit too, yeah
:p
16:48
@FlorianMargaine pastebin.com/eJNCvKTW
Nah, kidding. I've never looked into CoffeeScript
bahahahhahaha
@FlorianMargaine (var x = 1, 2) is error
@Amaan the second version of CS might be good
What are they going to change?
16:49
@RoyiNamir

var x, y = 1;
( x = y, x );
@RoyiNamir you can't put a declaration (var ...) inside an expression
there will be the relation between the line number
of the js error and the CS code
return scope.Close(Boolean::New(true));
even with that its slower then the latter which uses persistent object
which is basically the only reason I'm not using it
@ThiefMaster i just profiled it , seems like the latter making more sense ain't whats happening :P
16:50
#9 I got wrong because I was blind and didn't spot that the use of f inside the if was no longer inside the NFE
@Alnitak I know I was just referring an example of code ( bad one)
I'm reading that right now
@FlorianMargaine see that ?
bahahahaha
for 100,000 iterations
v8_local: 683ms
v8_Pers: 187ms
@FlorianMargaine sorry I dont understand the second line
var x=1, y = 2;
( x = y, x );
16:51
it just shows what x is
@Abhishek hehe nice
@RoyiNamir that sets x to y, then returns x
(statement, return)
@RoyiNamir (a, b, ...) always evaluates to the final expression in the list
tweaked the code a little bit again but even just return Boolean::New(true);
@Nile that's not really a return - both parts are expressions
is 2x slower then using a persistent
16:53
@Alnitak but it actually runs the qhole sequence right?
whole
var x=1, y = 0,c=3;
( x = y, c );
3
(x = y) is an assignment that then returns the value
so is actually an expression
@RoyiNamir yes, it always executes each sub-expression, from left to right, and then the result of the entire comma-separated list is the result of the rightmost sub-expression
@Alnitak wow very powerful
var x=1, y = 0,c=3;
( x = y, c );
//prints 3
//x= prints 0
@Alnitak what usages does it have ( sorry for such stupid question)
@RoyiNamir I thought we went over this
not much, @RoyiNamir
Not much use
16:56
@RoyiNamir it has occasional use...
ThiefMaster showed an example
9 mins ago, by ThiefMaster
@RoyiNamir: for(int i = 0; i < j; i++, j++)
some of you probably saw the recursive range generator I wrote a few days ago?
@Alnitak Show those of us that didn't!
gotta find it again...
@ThiefMaster whenever u are back just ping me :D
I saw this sample but according to our discussion it returns the last one !!!
for(int i = 0; i < j; i++, j++)
i am still loling at that insane funny thing <3
@FlorianMargaine yeah, thanks - that one! :)
function y(n) { return 0 <=-- n ? y(n).concat(n) : [] }
i'm still here
I did a more efficient version that used the comma operator -
16:58
Damn you confusing people!
will need to try to recreate it...
You're using the fireworks operator!
Oh, that isn't very confusing
fireworks operator ?
@Alnitak yep, can't find it
It's @Zirak's joke
16:58
@RoyiNamir something we invented :D
<=--
I don't think I posted it
seen that benchmark mate ?
--> is supposed to be the "going to" operator
that doesnt makes sense now does it ?
16:59
Array.range = function x(m, n) { return m <=-- n ? x(m, n).concat(n) : [] }
@Alnitak ^
OK, here it is:
function f(n) { var z; return 0 <=-- n ? (z = f(n), z.push(n), z) : [] }

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