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4:48 AM
@LuisAverhoff that should be real easy to parse
 
 
4 hours later…
8:21 AM
posted on August 03, 2021 by Michaël Zasso

Notable Changes Updated npm to 7.20.3 (npm team) #39579 Reverted an ABI-breaking change from V8 9.2 that could impact some native modules (Michaël Zasso) #39624 Fixed a bug in error handling known to affect at least Webpack and Jest (Guy Bedford) #39593 Commits [6c769ccedf] - build: override python executable path on configure (legendecas) #39465 [cbf6a01c17] - crypto: fix generateKeyPair wi

 
8:59 AM
Hey gurus. In expressjs is it possible to add a header just before the reponse is streamed to the client? I want to add something like a timestamp (in the response headers) which would help me eventually calculate the total time it took to process a request...Is there a general problem or a pitfall with this kind of a requirement?
 
9:14 AM
You can add a custom header - these typically start with X. For example, you can add X-StartedAt : <some datetime> Not sure exactly how that's done in Express but I'd be extremely surprised if it's not possible. Check the API documentation.
 
@paul23 Huh, never actually occurred to me to do this. Nice.
 
I honestly wonder why that topic is added to mdn. It looks so ugly and the exactly like a non habit
you change the type of the class and thus it's public facing behaviour.
While doing something as simple as getting a value
 
Probably because same reason I never thought about it. I've almost never needed something like that. Maybe it would have been useful once or twice but I didn't think of removing the property and re-adding it. Showing it's possible opens up some further options in the future.
 
'sup
When my angular component needs to make a call to get init values for its elements, would I do that in the ngOnInit? Can I...block rendering (or something) until the web call finishes?
I guess when I go http.get(url).then(data => set(data)), ngOnInit would return before the call finishes?
 
10:41 AM
Hello
 
@AdityaKumar 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 have an question in mind ,

what approach should we use in case to use mysql with node.js

can anyone Please Help
 
Search npm for a mysql package I guess?
iDunno I'm not a nodejs dev I'm just being forced to do it :P
 
@VLAZ Thanks. I found something on the expressjs docs itself: response-time npm module.
And its a clever hack 😉
 
10:58 AM
@Squirrelkiller did you copy Wietlol?
 
No Actually ,i mean Raw query or any ORM ?
 
11:25 AM
can you not decide it at your own? both have their strengths and weakness. Reflect that against your project's goal and any potential new feature requests you could get in the future
 
there is two ORM i'm willing to use Type ORM and sequalize need your suggestion
 
! TypeORM or sequelize
Ugh...I keep forgetting the syntax for commands.
!! TypeORM or sequelize
 
sequelize
 
There you go.
 
@KarelG I did. Must be going insane.
 
11:43 AM
Should I tell him? 😛
 
So in AngularJS, two-way binding is just ng-model="objectOnScope.SomeProp. In Angular, do I do [(ngModel)]="componentProperty.SomeProp"?
@KarelG I'm sure he knows :D
 
I've seen that Angular question of yours but I cannot help on that
Angular is just bleh
 
And when I use that component as a downgraded directive in angularJS...how do I two-way bind the value to the angularJS view?
Angular is kinda nice
kinda
Until it turns out the angular position is actually angularjs
 
@Squirrelkiller yes you are correct use this way for Binding
[(ngModel)]="componentProperty.SomeProp"
 
So that is one half of the thing I got right already, thanks :D
 
11:48 AM
 
Right, now to figure out how to...declare the input/output in my component. Not sure how to provide a property that I can bind to from outside.
 
12:05 PM
@Squirrelkiller did you mean @input() output() or just wanna take input from COntrols ?
 
I wanna take input from an <input type="text"> and the page hosting the component should bind to a property of the component that directly gives it the text from the input.
 
1 message moved to Trash can
 
←
so you can do that this way

<input type="text" [(ngModel)]="yourProperty">

<button type="button" (click)="getResult()">

getResult(){
console.log(yourProperty);
}
 
12:22 PM
Yeah that is inside the component, but now I wanna go one step further out:
<MyTextComponent [(yourProperty)]="vm.SomeProp">
I'm trying to just do @Input() @Output() yourProperty and see what happens
 
12:52 PM
1 message moved to Trash can
1 message moved to Trash can
1 message moved to Trash can
1 message moved to Trash can
1 message moved to Trash can
 
... really?
@AdityaKumar, please read what Jamesbot is telling you. Format your code.
@JBis: That bot should keep a counter, and kick after 2-3 warnings within an hour o.O
 
Goodness gracious
never seen James spam that much at once
 
1:10 PM
Exactly... Imma move all those moves to the trash now though
11 messages moved to Trash can
 
1:46 PM
Anyone ever seen a count keep overriding itself. It counts up, then when it gets to the next day it replaces that value with the new one when it should instead be keeping both?
 
2:35 PM
CV: Needs debugging details
 
i mean
I dunno if i've seen that but it's a pretty easy scenario to recreate
 
There are a million and one reasons a variable could be getting overwritten
 
I have been debugging it. One sec providing info:

Here is the log of outsideThuCount & outsideFriCount in this working fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/BeerusDev/1dshjpm3/149/
 
whoops
drag and drop got me
 
See how the count for those two is adding up correctly
 
2:40 PM
Holy scripts tags
I hope you're gonna bundle that
 
I am when I am done with it all
But here is my actual application:
Thats whats displayed on search
And it counts through all 15 items but look it doesn't keep the count increasing it is just reading that one day and using the most recent
 
counts don't update themselves
so it should be easy to set a breakpoint at each point where the count is touched to determine why it's resetting
 
In the fiddle it is
Ok
 
3:02 PM
As it reaches each breakpoint under each case, the dayArray is updated depending on the case.
 
3:13 PM
When I log outsideMonCount outside of the switch, it should display (with the screenshotted example above): P: 2, TW: 0, TRV: 1, NR: 0, PTO: 0, H: 0. but instead shows this
{
    "P": 1,
    "TW": 0,
    "TRV": 0,
    "NR": 0,
    "PTO": 0,
    "H": 0
}
 
@BeerusDev Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. You have 25 seconds to edit and format your message properly before it will be removed. Please separate code blocks from your actual question. Put your question in 1 message and then your code in a 2nd and format it.
 
i suspect you are resetting the count somewhere
 
Can we talk about vuejs in here.
 
@Bapi 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.
 
Look in the top right of the room @Bapi
"Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, Angular, Vue, etc. Read this: javascriptroom.github.io/rules. Before asking inform yourself on the XY problem goo.gl/taIqf | Room meta discussions: github.com/JavaScriptRoom/culture."
Kevin, that is what I have been suspecting but nowhere in my code do I reset it.
The only thing that is different in my actual application as opposed to the fiddle was this:
    transformedResults.flatMap(t => t.Days).forEach((dayArray)

vs:

data.Days.forEach((dayArray) => {
 
3:27 PM
i mean
somewhere, you're creating the object
yes?
objects aren't magic
they don't reset themselves
 
@KevinB I have to disagree.
Only because of my avatar.
 
                    function updateOutsideCount(Day, Date, Days) {
                      var searchMon = moment($('#dpicker').val()).startOf('isoWeek');
                      var searchFri = moment($('#dpicker').val()).endOf('isoWeek');

                      var outsideMonCount = {P:0,TW:0,TRV:0,NR:0,PTO:0,H:0};
                      var outsideTueCount = {P:0,TW:0,TRV:0,NR:0,PTO:0,H:0};
                      var outsideWedCount = {P:0,TW:0,TRV:0,NR:0,PTO:0,H:0};
                      var outsideThuCount = {P:0,TW:0,TRV:0,NR:0,PTO:0,H:0};
It isn't getting reset anywhere
 
@BeerusDev ok fine, I am new.
I have a AddressInputs componet in vuejs. Which has a handful inputs for address form ( but it's not a form, it's a collection of inputs). Now I can inject that component in any form. Let's say I inject that component in a UserReg form. How do I send AddressInput data to UseReg from? I know about $emit. But what about v-model.
 
3:52 PM
@AdityaKumar objection
 
4:08 PM
!!quests or dungeon spam
 
spam
 
hmm.
i don't think the odds were equal there
 
4:29 PM
So after more debugging. My fiddle which actually works, goes through each dayArray. One row at a time, and adds the count (inside the closure). Once it gets through one row, the next is added on top of the previous count (as it should).
But on my actual application after it goes through the dayArray (first row) the count is getting reset but there is nothing visible triggering it to do so
 
@KevinB well, you need to do it now. I suggest posting some support numbers for wallets on SO.
 
5:13 PM
So...apparently, you can "make up" stuff when you destructure objects. I'm not convinced it's too useful but it's amusing, at least
||> const obj = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };
const x = { ...new Proxy(obj, { get() { return 4; } }) };
console.log(x);
 
@VLAZ undefined Logged: [ '{"a":4,"b":4,"c":4}' ] Took: 0ms
 
5:38 PM
it's more fun without the destructuring
||> const obj = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };
const x = new Proxy(obj, { get() { return 4; } });
console.log(x, x.a)
 
@KevinB undefined Logged: [ '{"a":4,"b":4,"c":4}', '4' ] Took: 1ms
 
hello?
hmm.. chrome gave me a different result
Proxy {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
4
so chrome is getting the value, without calling the getter i guess?
where as james isn't
 
const obj = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };
const x = new Proxy(obj, { get() { return 4; } });
console.log(JSON.stringify(x))
try that in chrome
 
Hmm...perhaps I've been lied to.
 
!!mdn HTMLFormElement.submit
 
Wait...it's just me being an idiot... I tried to shorten my example about spread AND FORGOT THE SPREAD!
||> const obj = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };
const x = { ...new Proxy(obj, { get() { return 4; } }) };
console.log(x)
 
@VLAZ undefined Logged: [ '{"a":4,"b":4,"c":4}' ] Took: 0ms
 
can you even trigger the submit handler manually
 
@KevinB the handler? Probably by triggering a submit event. But I've not tried it. Not sure if triggering a manual submit event will submit the form or just trigger the handler.
 
> The HTMLFormElement.requestSubmit() method is identical to activating a form's submit <button> and does not have these differences.
 
5:51 PM
ah, requestSubmit
i know submit 100% doesn't, i've taken advantage of that
 
I maybe crazy but could of sworn that .submit() did do submit event
 
old code alert:
72
A: intercept form submit with jQuery

Kevin BYou can't return out of a callback to an asynchronous method(such as ajax). Instead, prevent the submit all together, then submit it when you are ready. $("#methodForm").submit(function(e){ e.preventDefault(); var form = this; checkIndex('upload/segments.gen').done(function() { ...

 
@JBis Me too. Weird. I have some code at work that relies on the form being submitted programmatically, I think.
Or maybe it's just the validations. I know it sends some stuff with AJAX but runs the HTML5 + custom validators before that.
 
jQuery's .submit does call event handlers
 
@KevinB ah thats it
 
5:54 PM
Yeah...probably what that work code I have also does.
The only major library there is jQuery.
 
i'd fix it, but i don't want to bump it
 
Does every change lead to a bump? Or only if it's "significant"?
(as in over X amount of characters. I am not sure what X is)
 
any change
even just tag edits
 
p.s if anyone wants to figure out how to fix the proxy inconsistency thing github.com/jbis9051/JamesSOBot/blob/master/packages/plugins/src/…, im too lazy
tbh the entire james repo is a bit of a mess. Most of it was built when i had just started using ts.
|| echo but i work!
 
but
 
6:01 PM
sigh
 
What if I used a nested switch instead of the current way I am handling it o.O
 
I hate switches
they're basically non-reusable objects
 
switch(dayArray.Day) {
  case 'Monday':

  switch(dayArray.Status) {
    case 'P':
      outsideMonCount.P++;
      break;
    case 'TW':
      outsideMonCount.TW++;
      break;
      }
      }
 
whoa
lol
sec
 
6:14 PM
outsideMonCount[dayArray.Status]++;
additionally, if outsideMonCount was instead outside.Monday
you could remove the outer switch too
 
That is what I was using
And it works fine in my fiddle. But for some reason doesn't want to cooperate in my actual app(dynamic). I debugged just about everything in that whole entire function. In both applications. Something is causing it to overwrite in my dynamic one, but there is nothing visibly doing it
switch (dayArray.Day) {
                              case 'Monday':
                               console.log(dayArray.Status);
                               outsideMonCount[dayArray.Status]++;
                               console.log(outsideMonCount);
                                break;
                              case 'Tuesday':
                                console.log(dayArray.Status);
                                outsideTueCount[dayArray.Status]++;
                               console.log(outsideTueCount);
 
@KevinB I've never been able to put into words why I didn't like switches. This actually made it crystal clear.
 
Am I missing anything here: stackoverflow.com/a/68625678/400654
 
So you would rather use an else if as opposed to a switch?
 
@KevinB I don't think you are. You're correct in the comments.
@BeerusDev if/else or an object with properties that match your expected values
||> const days = { "mon": 1, "tue": 2};
days["mon"];
 
6:21 PM
@VLAZ 1 Logged: [ ] Took: 0ms
 
This is the same as using a switch over these values.
 
Hm.
 
@VLAZ yeah, i came to that conclusion thanks to a recent project
they had this massive switch that took hex values from a bluetooth message and decided based on the hex value how to populate an object
i replaced it with a pre-populated object
now i can re-use that object throughout the application
 
Makes sense. Switches have bothered me for a long time. And I did (ab)use them a lot in the past. After having to maintain the mess I realised they are just bad. Unless very simple and straight forward but then they are just replaceable by maps/objects.
There are few times here and there I'd use a switch but I still keep thinking it's easier to just have a map. But if it's something like 4 cases, I can't really be bothered.
 
i use it so infrequently that i need to look it up when i need it
 
6:32 PM
I was thinking anything over 5 is a bit much
I would do something along that, but my switch works perfectly fine in my static example. It's hard to tell if that is what is causing the count to reset in my dynamic example. it is so damn frustrating
 
I feel like i've been out of the DOM API world for too long
there's so much that i just didn't know about, heck even some stuff in base javascript, like flatMap, i had no idea that existed (and still don't quite know why i'd ever use it)
 
Time to plug you back in: document.append(Kevin B)
 
requestSubmit, never heard of till today, but that's another case of why would i ever use it :p
 
||> [1, 2].flatMap(x => [x, x])
 
@VLAZ [ 1, 1, 2, 2 ] Logged: [ ] Took: 21ms
 
6:34 PM
That's one example.
 
in the requestSubmit case, needing to rely on the dom api calling a function for me when i need to do is programatically is backwards
 
Also if you just want to extract the values for objects into a flat list
||> [{foo: [1, 2]}, {foo: [3, 4]}].flatMap(x => x.foo)
 
@VLAZ [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] Logged: [ ] Took: 0ms
 
i should just be able to call the handler myself
it's my handler
right, i get how flatMap works, it's just.. well, i don't work with data much
 
@KevinB Yeah, that's a bit annoying. If you attach stuff with addEventHandler you cannot really just invoke them. Unless you have a reference to the handler already. You cannot just go "run this handler as a function".
 
6:37 PM
i can't really see a use for it
but that's my point, if you're following proper... "practices" as much as i hate "best practices", you'll have the handler somewhere you can access
 
At least if you do el.onsubmit = handler you can later do el.onsubmit()
Useful since you can directly access it.
 
I tend to wrap functionality up into a a module, where each handler is a member, that then gets passed to the event binding
 
We had a project that re-used a bootstrap modal and it was such a pain. I didn't find a good solution - any time the modal was shown, you need to attach some handlers like OK should save the record. But since it's the same modal, next time you open it it should start "clean".
 
yeah, ours does that.
 
Trying to keep it so it dropped all of the "temporary" handlers only on close/hide/OK was a massive chore.
 
6:42 PM
openModal effectively handles a "stack" of modals
only one is allowed to be open at a time
if multiple are requested, they open in sequence
though... that never actually occurs... it was more of a future-proofing decision
so it cleans itself up before opening the next, each gets a clean slate to start with
jQuery makes that easy
.remove() cleans all handlers, and if all the data is in the handlers, that all gets cleaned up too
 
@KevinB yeah...that's also a problem. There are some handlers that need to stay. Like the one that closes the modal. There were also some that were generic here and there. And some were added on open. Those needed to be cleared on close.
Turns out, there is namespacing in jQuery. You can do .on("click:myNamespace", fn) and then you can clear all handlers with that namespace.
It still works like a click handler in the mean time.
 
yep
i've only ever used that with plugins
every event bound with the plugin gets namespaced, to avoid crappy code from screwing with the plugin
hmm... does it tho
unbinding all .click handlers would still unbind namespaced ones
 
Yes, it does.
 
:shrug:
 
Still super annoying as you have to make sure to use the same namespace everywhere. Those are attached from different places.
And in the end, it's something super simple. I never even thought about such a problem when I used Knockout. You have a template for a modal and each time you need to show it, you get a new pristine modal from scratch. Easy. You close it and it's disposed forever.
 
6:51 PM
i like switches when used properly
 
hmm
 
using an object i think is confusing
 
i'm curious
haha
diabolical laughter
 
This is actually driving me nuts. Why in the world is the count stopping after each row in this updateOutsideCount (dynamic). There is nothing telling it too do that, my switch statement is the exact same like I said except I do not use the flatMap() & transformedResults
 
Be careful. The diabolical laughter usually precedes trying to take over the world.
 
6:55 PM
can template literal tags accept two arguments
 
What do you mean?
||> const x = "hello", y = "world";
`${x} ${y}`
 
@VLAZ 'hello world' Logged: [ ] Took: 0ms
 
$`#foo`.on`${ns}:click`, fn
 
||> console.log`bla``bla2`
 
aka pass both ${ns}:click and fn into on
 
6:57 PM
@JBis 'TypeError: console.log(...) is not a function' Logged: [ '["bla"]' ] Took: 42ms
@JBis 'TypeError: console.log(...) is not a function' Logged: [ '["bla"]' ] Took: 0ms
 
my thought was just how unreadable could i make code using template literals
 
wait why is console.log not a function?
 
You're passing two template literals
So, console.log`bla` is used as the processor for the second `bla`
And that returns undefined
 
ah
 
Think of it as console.log("bla")("bla")
 
6:59 PM
yep, makes sense
 
my assumption is, no, i can't pass an extra param to a tagged template literal
 
what exactly is the point of Tagged templates?
i see very little benefit
 
tags only get the template literal as parameters. The template literal is chopped up into literal parts and template parts.
@JBis Honestly, I hardly find a usage, as well.
The most I've used them is to de-indent some template literal
 
The only cool usage I've seen was prepared SQL statements, you could do something like:
 
Because it was something like
const x = `hello
           world`
 
7:02 PM
sql`SELECT * FROM users WHERE email = ${email}`
 
right, but
all you're saving is ()
 
and it would prepare the statement and prevent a sql injection
@KevinB you can't do the same thing
sql(`SELECT * FROM users WHERE email = ${email}`) just passes the string
 
the value comes from the fact that sql can receive more than just the result of the template literal
 
It is. However, it still seems very niche. It's nice to be able to make prepared statements like that but you can also just have a sql("SELECT * FROM users WHERE email = {email}", {email}) and have a similar effect.
 
7:08 PM
if i understand it correctly, sql``foo${bar}``` is effectively sql(foo${bar}, bar)`
ignoring my formatting failure
 
no
the strings won't be passed properly
@VLAZ sure, the readme argues its helpful for large queries but i agree, extremely niche.
 
function foo (string, ...keys) {
  console.log(string, keys)
}

var [a, b, c] = [1,2,3];

foo`bar`;
foo`foo${a}`;
foo`foo${a}${b}`;
foo`foo${a+b}`;
interesting
 
||> function sql(){ console.log(arguments) }
const bar = '123'; sql`foo${bar}`; sql(`foo${bar}`, bar)
 
it's giving me the string... without the a, ab, a+b
 
@JBis undefined Logged: [ '{"0":["foo",""],"1":"123"}', '{"0":"foo123","1":"123"}' ] Took: 44ms
 
7:12 PM
see the diff ^
 
yea
but now i'm trying to understand...
why
what value does string in my case have at all, if teh string doesn't have the placeholders or the values concatenated to it
 
You get the values that go between the strings.
 
right, but the string has no... placeholders
you can't tell where the original template wanted them to go
 
You can but it's super annoying.
 
it's the same order
 
7:14 PM
You have to join the strings and keys alternating
 
^
 
Ah, i see
 
stings[0] + keys[0] + strings[1] + keys[1] and so on
 
strings is an array
that's cool
i can definitely do some awful things with that
 
do share
even the mdn example is pretty awful
 
7:16 PM
It really is...
I read it over three times on three different occasions and never actually got it.
I just ended up playing with those myself to get a hang of what actually happens.
 
unfortunately it doesn't fix my original problem
or does it...
 
@KevinB You don't know which value belongs to which label?
 
i got it
 
i've concluded template tags are cool to play with but functionally useless, not to mention very unreadable
 
@JBis Basically, yeah. I don't see a good enough application over making your own templates like that sql I did above. The template literals are useful - tags...not as much.
There are applications but, again, quite niche. Not sure it justifies adding tags to the language.
 
7:19 PM
TypeError: Object.defineProperty called on non-object
 
I suggest calling it on an object.
 
but it is
 
one other place i've seen it used github.com/sgtpep/csstag
but that looks even more useless. Equivalent to calling the function i think
 
$`#foo`.on`click${foo}`
that would... do $('#foo').on(["click"], foo)
 
@KevinB jesus
 
7:22 PM
and i was expecting it to coerce that array to just "click"
 
Re-write all of jQuery as a tagged template.
 
but what object is it complaining about
 
break on exceptions and track down?
 
it's line 4058 of jquery 3.4.1.slim
Object.defineProperty( owner, this.expando, {
guess i need to know what owner is
and follow it up
 
have fun!
:D
ah
i know why
 
7:25 PM
'#foo' is owner
 
$(['#foo', '']).on(["click", ""], foo)
 
oh, haha
i didn't consider what $#foo was doing
 
13 mins ago, by JamesBot
@JBis undefined Logged: [ '{"0":["foo",""],"1":"123"}', '{"0":"foo123","1":"123"}' ] Took: 44ms
 
an array in that position will not be coerced
because an array is a valid jquery collection target
 
but why in the world does it add an empty string at end of array
 
7:27 PM
where
it wasn't for me
strings being an array effectively ends what i was trying to do
 
const spread = f => (strings, ...keys) => f(...strings, ...keys)
Maybe that helps.
But I'm not sure what you're trying to do.
 
$("#foo"), without ()
is what i was aiming for
 
||> $ = (...args) => console.log(...args); //for testing
const process = f => (strings, ...keys) => f(strings[0]);
process($)`#foo`;
 
@VLAZ 'SyntaxError: Unexpected identifier' Logged: [ ] Took: 0ms
@VLAZ undefined Logged: [ '"#foo"' ] Took: 0ms
 
Weird but you know.
 
7:40 PM
hmm
nah
.on has the same issue
that's a rabbit hole
 
It is.
 
the first property of .on can be an object and therefore the array isn't being directly converted to a string
 
The whole tagged template processing just doesn't fit any regular functions.
 
would have to effectively monkeypatch every method of $.fn, which could be done recursively, but that goes against my original intent anyway
i didn't want to alter $
 
8:25 PM
if you have a brand new person trying to learn web, would you suggest they learn jquery?
 
to an extent
I think it's an important... tool to have in your back pocket in the event you need to work on something that uses it
but not as something you'd want to include on a new or existing project that doesn't already have it
 
hmm, i wonder if jquery is easy enough to learn on the fly (if you know js well)
 
for example... it's gonna be quite rare for someone who works in web dev to not at some point work on wordpress, and nearly everything there in some way involves jquery
i mean at the fundamental level
like, understanding the implicit iteration jquery does
 
@KevinB isn't that like 90% of jquery (compared to modern day DOM APIs)
 
yup
 
8:41 PM
|| mdn intro to js
 
!!mdn diabolical
 
An error occurred with the request.
 
> JavaScript is a cross-platform
Weird to think of an interpreted language as cross platform
Really it's the C++ interpreter thats cross platform
but now im just nitpicking
 
9:07 PM
posted on August 03, 2021 by Srinivas Sista

The Dev channel has been updated to 94.0.4595.0 for Windows and Linux and 94.0.4595.3 for Mac. A partial list of changes is available in the log. Interested in switching release channels? Find out how. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues. Srinivas Sista Google Chrome

 
 
2 hours later…
10:41 PM
What's with Sveltes resurgence?
Anyone ever use it here? Looks interesting.
 

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