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00:00
 
5 hours later…
04:34
Hello.
This is my first question.
Support me, please :)

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70932981/managing-browser-memory-on-browser-console-with-javascript
@YerkoBits 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.
 
1 hour later…
05:59
!!choose skelemage or leechclone
skelemage
06:31
@James You should put projects that you've have worked on or places you've worked. If an employer is looking for a frontend person who knows JS, of course showing experience with JS and frontend would be good. If they are looking for backend server admin, JS project wouldn't look bad but other things might look better.
@YerkoBits no
@SuperUberDuper also, generally you don't want to use .on* properties
|| mdn addevent listenr
what will happen first: the last website using jquery stops using jquery or the last bank stops using cobol and fortran?
06:59
@JBis I vote jQuery would go out first
it's a tough one
I think for a website to exist, somebody has to pay for its hosting. Chances are all the people who paid for jQuery websites will eventually die and thus stop paying. There is exception with corporate websites and templated ones like Wordpress, however, chances are they'd get a redesign at some point which will obviously use the much superior <Pick whatever BS word>.JS library of the day which prides itself on not needing jQuery.
While banks as institutions are not really into changing or replacing legacy systems. For good or bad.
07:45
Hello everyone I had a quick question but have no idea how its called so couldnt find a question. How could I convert this import in Javascript to typescript:

`const sdk = require('api')('@opensea/v1.0#1felivgkyk6vyw2');`

cause I know the require only would be:

`import * as sdk from 'api'`

but I dont know the last part
08:35
import api from 'api';
const sdk = api('@opensea/v1.0#1felivgkyk6vyw2');
@Mederic ^
09:00
@KevinB turns out the content needs to have a scroll bar for this event to fire
 
2 hours later…
10:34
Thanks a lot @VLAZ
 
2 hours later…
12:24
Hey guys, I was interested in opinion so wanted to ask here. I like JS. Now when I look at typescript to me it feels too much hassle sometimes to just get the types right. Is it really worth the hassle? Are the benefits it brings really worth bothering with trying to get its types right most of the time? I think it is overhyped.
yes its worth it
its not a bother, its lack of experience in ts
TS is so much easier to write and maintain...
I mean, major JS frameworks default to TS for good reason
Like this random question: stackoverflow.com/questions/70968723/…, which felt to me was too much hassle for ensuring just the types are correct
@GiorgiMoniava Do you really need complex generics in your code?
@VLAZ No me not, I don't use but, you might
12:39
That seems like a misuse of React, more than a limitation of TS
I find that the majority of my TS code uses rather simple types. And when I hit something I struggle with, it's actually better simplifying it. 1. It keeps me from trying to solve all of it with TS. 2. The code is simpler to read and maintain.
Not like more complex TS constructs are not worth it. They could be. However, a lot of the questions about TS I see which are "I've entangled my code with all of these weird types" don't actually need weird types.
Yea, I've never encountered a situation where this kind of complex typing was really necessary.
@Cerbrus Why is it misuse? Yeah don't get me wrong, I have been writing Javascript for long time now and I love the language and I never had problems with it because of its types. So when I see such questions with convoluted types, it makes me wonder whether it is really worth it
They're writing some kind of generic component whose parameters change depending on what you're passing to it... That's... Yikes
Those convoluted types are a result of bad design
It's not TS's fault that code is convoluted
Ok, thanks for sharing your opinion. Just me personally haven't yet been convinced that I need it. Mainly because I haven't experiences issues with JS.
12:50
I'd suggest you just give it a try for a project
13:36
I avoided TS after attempting it with small personal project and kept running into road blocks that I didn't have time to sort. That was a couple years ago. I started new project with TS a month or so ago and the benefits are obvious... any medium or larger sized repo will definitely be easier to maintain with TS
14:19
Someone gonna make a nicer-looking client for StackOverflow chat anytime, soon? 🤔
Not likely
 
1 hour later…
15:28
Typescript doesn't require a major change to your normal workflow, it instead adds the ability to introduce type safety. you don't have to actually use types in areas where you don't want to, but you'll probably find that you want to after using it.
15:41
I find TS really useful for prototyping stuff. I can just create the function declarations and see if they work together as I expect. Without having an implementation. Annotating all the types occasionally reveals that some part is under-designed and is missing something or the opposite - there are things that can be eliminated as unneeded. All without really writing the code for that.
It's not a full test of the API, of course, however I can do that in 5-10 minutes. As opposed to having to implement stuff then test them with some sort of real data.
It's useful for early research and planning. What you're left with is all the type annotations that you need to implement anyway.
16:06
but yea i agree that a lot of the confusion, or... "scary" questions/answers involving typing things on SO arise from poor design. functions and things that can hold any number of other things are just mistakes, the solution is to replace it, not make a type for it. there's a certain point where the DRY principal is taken way too far
16:25
> I tried, but there was an error.
16:55
I would think this is a common problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/70933468/…
Yet it doesn't seem to be?
am i missing someting? i don't see css defined in the second snippet
`${baseStyle}` seems redundant
it's just baseStyle
Hmm. what does css actually return?
all the examples i'm seeing show styled()() being called with an object, but that template string is gonna return a string
@KevinB that is so I could 'extend' it with extra style options.
It's basically a "copy" from here: emotion.sh/docs/composition
right, but those do css`${etc}`
However material UI removes the "css" tag and expects you to use the object based layout (or sx but that is a different thing altogether).
`${someObject}` produces a string
`${someString}` produces the same string as someString
!!mdn string template
tagged templates can return non strings
effectively, if styled(...)(X) is expecting an object for X, you probably just want styled(...)(baseStyle)
otherwise you're turning baseStyle into a string
assuming the css tag function is returning not a string
yeah but the ideas is I want to extend that basestyle like:
i guess that's another bit i'm missing
how is the second snippet more... extendable
from my PoV the first snippet with css before your style template would be... what you wanted to do in the second
styled(IconButton)(`${baseStyle} margin-right: 8px;`)
// or event better:
styled(IconButton)(({theme}) => `${baseStyle} margin-right: ${theme.spacing(1)}px;`)
that's still producing a string rather than an object
17:17
that basestyle is defined elsewhere in the application
and I wish to extend it locally with local styles
Actualy your hint at "it's just a normal string" solved it though :P
import {styled, css, Theme} from "@mui/material";
import IconButton from '@mui/material/IconButton';
import MenuIcon from '@mui/icons-material/Menu';
// import baseStyle from './baseStyle'

const baseStyle = `
  color: green;
`

const StyledMenuButton = styled(IconButton)(css`
  ${baseStyle}
  margin-left: 16px;
  max-height: 48px;
`);

export const SomeComponent() {
    return <IconButton>
       <MenuIcon />
    </IconButton>
}
yeah that ;P
had to add "css" prefix/styler to the actual use as well
you could also in theory make basaeStyle more of a function... that you can pass arguments to that alters the string that it returns
so you could have baseStyle Light or Dark, etc
hmm thinking of that indeed
Material ui has a mechanics already - that is that it can take a function instead of a string
which has as argument the style (which includes ligh/dark
light/dark was probably a bad example
that's not a per-instance case
more, highlight 1, highlight 2, etc
light vs dark is a bit more global
17:28
still this is the actual goal I wish to have:
const baseStyle = ({theme}: {theme: Theme}) => css`
margin-left: ${theme.spacing(2)};
max-height: 48px;
`;
const StyledMenuButton = styled(IconButton)(({theme}) => `${baseStyle} margin-right: ${theme.spacing(3)}`);
posted on February 03, 2022 by Harry Souders

Hi, everyone! We've released Chrome Beta 99 (99.0.4844.18) for iOS: it'll become available on App Store in next few days. You can see a partial list of the changes in the Git log. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. Harry Souders Google Chrome

or something like that - but that won't work due to interpolation not going "deep"
I've now resorted to this:
const baseStyle = ({theme}: {theme: Theme}) => css`
margin-left: ${theme.spacing(8)};
max-height: 48px;
`;
const StyledMenuButton = styled(IconButton)(({theme}) => css`${typeof baseStyle === 'string' ? baseStyle : baseStyle({theme})}
margin-right: ${theme.spacing(3)}`);
but that ${typeof baseStyle === 'string' ? baseStyle : baseStyle({theme})} is ugly
@SimonOrro 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.
18:23
Is there an equivalent of this chat for solidity and smart contracts?
It costs $500 USD to launch an ETH20 token and like.... I cant do that
Im trying to make a cryptocurrency every week
it seems react got rid of event pooling while i was gone
makes life easier
One of the features I hate the most in JS is with and I thank the gods every day that it's at least an obscure thing people don't try to mess around with too much. I also hate eval which is not that obscure and is misused all the time. Still my hatred towards with is stronger. I would have never imagined I'd see what I saw today. Somebody trying to replace with using eval.
And the entire reason they do that is to have...a more dynamic templated string. So you could use it as template("Hello ${foo}", {foo: "world"}) and get "Hello world" out of it.
I don't really see how js with is much different then use namespace in other langs
18:38
i don't understand why with or eval would be needed for that functionality
that's just standard find/replace
@JBis I dislike those, either, if it matters. However, the way with works is weird and it's convoluted and without any type safety makes the code harder to read and reason about with (user) { age = 42 } does what exactly?
@KevinB Yep, me neither. At most, I'd just use a library for it. You know - templating libraries which we have dozens of and they have extra bells and whistles if really needed. But a simple .replace() is also not that hard to implement, either.
Just to top it off, the user who asked this has 27k rep.
from answering?
why isn't with/eval in your "Pet peeves"
I've ran out of space in the bio...
I'm not even joking - I did try to add eval by expanding "Generating DOM content as a string of HTML." to something like "Generating source code using other code" (not sure how I phrased it exactly) and I couldn't save that.
18:54
heh
make an image with text, and insert it inline
loopholes
19:37
hey I guys is it possible to directly use d3 v3 in another js? Am trying to debug it in vscode
20:17
Javascript Lighthouse Hack? - TL;DR some guy was hired to improve Lighthouse results. Drops a lightly obfuscated script that tries to check if Lighthouse is running and trick it into thinking loading is done earlier.
The things companies pay for...
And apparently that script exists elsewhere, too. I assume once Google find about the scam, the scores of websites using the script will drop.
20:57
any typescripters see what I'm missing?
The following line throws: Type 'Element | null' is not assignable to type 'Element'.
Type 'null' is not assignable to type 'Element'.
{showLinkInput ? <LinkInput editor={editor} setShowLinkInput={setShowLinkInput} /> : null}
const [showLinkInput, setShowLinkInput] = useState<boolean>(false);
oh, that declaration was part of another component's children prop and that children prop type didn't expect false
> My Company Hired someone outside on up upwork for cheap to optimize for lighthouse score.
i have so many questions
21:13
@JBis I would guess it went like this. Outside developer goes "Hi, <company>, I can boost your Google rankings with 96.452%. I have portfolio". Some dumb sales pitch, basically. Company then hires them in order to get the sweet sweet Google ranking bucks. I mean, it's cheap, right? What's the worst that can happen? Maybe the rankings are only increased by 10%. Still a worthwhile investment. Well, according to the company.
21:49
wow
i would never have thought of cheating it that way
i'm not sure why people outside of tech have the idea that tech is something not complicated that you can just give to some random on upwork
you'd never hire an accountant to manage your books from up work
or a lawyer to write your contracts
posted on February 03, 2022 by Prudhvikumar Bommana

The Chrome team is excited to announce the promotion of Chrome 99 to the Beta channel for Windows, Linux to 99.0.4844.17 and 99.0.4844.15 for Mac. Chrome contains our usual under-the-hood performance and stability tweaks, but there are also some cool new features to explore - please head to the Chromium blog to learn more! A full list of changes in this build is available in the log. Inter

i mean
that depends on the importance of the task
if you want something done quick and dirty for cheap
can't have high quality
the things people will do to save money
how naive do you have to be to think you can get all 3?
oh lord
"What do you do for a living?"
"I guess mostly convince people to give me money."
22:00
someone walked by and asked me if i knew html5 the other day
A recruiter asked me once something like "I see you have put down experience with MVC in Java. Do you think you'd be working with MVC in PHP?"
"Yes."
Oops, that was supposed to be "Do you think you'd be able to work with MVC in PHP?"
imagine hiring someone from upwork to write code that will be handling 100k to millions of dollars
Well, you have a 50/50 shot. Either it works out or it doesn't.
22:07
some other dude charging $85/hour to make you a weebly site
posted on February 03, 2022 by Ben Mason

Hi everyone! We've just released Chrome Beta 99 (99.0.4844.16) for Android: it's now available on Google Play. Chrome Beta for Android UpdateYou can see a partial list of the changes in the Git log. For details on new features, check out the Chromium blog, and for details on web platform updates, check here. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug.

22:26
awesome
the amount of money wasted paying 3rd parties to build/maintain wordpress sites
22:47
weird. code dump jquery question getting multiple upvotes

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