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00:38
@matt hanks for again your thorough response looking into Blueprint. I'm gonna keep iterating in on the description, initialization, and examples. For the description - I'm realizing that I'm still trying to figure out the problem I'm trying to solve. I think once I have clarity on that I'll be able to write a clearer description that resonates with devs. For initialization I'm hoping that I can create a npm init script. But I'll def check out yeoman too.
And for the examples, I didn't realize you could run server code with stackblitz or codepen. I'll look at those. I'll keep working on a showcase example.
 
3 hours later…
03:24
This PSA brought to you by several would-be assassins who tried to wave me in front of speeding cars in the last month and who will have to try harder next time.
2
 
3 hours later…
05:55
life
        <!-- life -->

        <style>
              canvas {
                    position      : absolute;
                    left          : 0;
                    top           : 0;
                    width         : 100%;
                    height        : 100%;
                    background    : black;
              }
        </style>

        <canvas id=canvas></canvas>

        <script>

                var ctx         = canvas.getContext('2d');

                var width       = window.innerWidth;
@matt Please don't post unformatted code - use the up arrow to edit your post, then hit Ctrl + K to format the code in that post. 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.
For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like like gist.github.com, hastebin.com, pastie.org or a demo site like jsbin.com
 
7 hours later…
12:53
@Feeds this is how people drive in Florida
13:49
> OverflowAI is here! AI power for your Stack Overflow for Teams knowledge community. Learn more
Bans ChatGPT, creates OverflowAI
Makes sense
It's been announced for close to year now. And yes, the decision by the company has been, let's say, not exceptionally warmly embraced.
Especially since the company is trying to break its legs chasing the AI bandwagon. It went through two rounds of layoffs last year - one in May where it lost 10% of the staff (although, not evenly - engineering reportedly lost as much as 30%). Then in October SE laid off another 28% of its employees. And to top it off, the focus of the company had been pivoted hard into AI with a significant chunk of the remainder being put on AI projects.
BTW, the OverflowAI was in the middle of the strike last year which itself was in large part a result of the company trying to effectively and rather underhandedly neuter the AI ban. The announcement of "BTW, guys, we're also AI now!" on the backdrop of the strike was extremely poor.
 
1 hour later…
15:20
There's not a typescript chatroom?
Having errors using a npm module
Using a flat json config file for configuring something as complex as typescript is lazy
I've been using typescript for a year and a half now and have had preventable errors all due to having an unvalidated config file
yes the validator will tell if you if the property name and property value are correct or compatible but not more than that
and lazy in software is error prone
example, in my project the tsconfig works, i added an output directory option and started getting tons of unrelated errors. wait, that has nothing to do with the other. OR the errors were related but the way I had tsconfig configured that branch of error checking wasn't being run!
create a UI that creates the ts-config. then you have a baseline output that is created instead of the wildwest random ts configs that break on simple changes.
use the UI to add new options. as you do the same output is created across multiple environments so the errors can be reported and then fixed at the source
this isn't that hard
rant ended
Hey Guys I have this code review and wanted to see if anyone wanted to take a look at it
0
Q: Javascript converting HTML markup to Excel markup

JeffersonI have data in HTML format, and I would like to build a re-processor that will covert the data into Excel markup. I got it to work with the following code, but I'm a novice with JS so I assume it must be inefficient. I may need to add other html data like <b> <u> so maybe a function that takes in...

15:44
@Jefferson I don't use jquery but it looks fine. if you were using vanilla JS it might be slightly faster or slightly slower
- you got the html string
- ran regex on it to find the data
- replaced the html tags and
- exported to excel string
one thing is that if only is doing one data replace
I would need to do a while loop
<t xml:space="preserve">This is a Test Please </t> that a should have been formatted too
If it's valid html then i would create the html element from it and then select all the elements that you want to find
ok thanks
var div = create("div"); div.innerHTML = myData; var TElements = div.querySelectorAll("t")
then loop through your T elements
gotcha
15:55
do the same for your other elements you need to change. then use var myexcel = div.outerHTML;
*once you have the list of elements, try to change the node type or "tagName" or see if you can create new tagnames. this part might be tricky because the tagnames that exist in excel might not exist in html. if that doesn't work then export to custom tag names like "jeffs-tag-name-t" and then do a simple search and replace on that exported string
great thanks
 
2 hours later…
18:17
I have a frontend "search" function, however it is a large application and the search takes about 0.5-2 seconds to complete. It is annoying that the whole application is blocked when the search is fired. I prefer to work in a more modern way, where it find the search results asynchronous..
Does anyone know of a technique for that?
how does it work currently?

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