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19:00
when working with big teams on big projects, it has its place
I didn't say everybody or that I considered you average.
it's just...
How did beans become so over-used if the community understood OOP?
today I wrote like 500 lines of beautiful PHP OOP code
I could've written the same in 50 lines of beautiful js code
or even less of lisp
@ErikReppen How do you mean?
19:01
it's just that the classical OOP stuff makes it so verbose for nothing...
but well
properties in C# really cut down the SLOC
I have a huge number of lines which are just getters and setters...
Properties are very nice coming from Java. So much pointless code space gone.
@SeanO'Hollaren Exposing a property in full is the same regardless of whether it's accessed by a pair of methods or getter/setter constructs. When beans are used for everything you've murdered the central win you get from OOP.
Everything accesses everything and it's just the same ol' C-Spaghetti with namespaced methods.
what are beans?
Just Java classes with get/set methods for internal vars.
^typically all internal vars.
oh
just no encapsulation?
19:08
Well, technically, yes, but effectively no. That's the thing. People tend to not understand why the concept works. They just follow rules and figure they're okay.
Ah, so they're effectively eliminating proper use of scope by allowing everything to be basically directly accesssed?
@OctavianDamiean Any recommendations for JS compressors that integrate well with Sublime Text?
Yeah. The thing I don't get because I'm still a relative noob to both C# and Java is why we want objects with accessible properties for data structures. Can't dictionary-style collections serve that role?
@ErikReppen Hush, you're making sense. The Java folks don't like that.
Mostly right now I need to learn C# so I can clean up this mess when I get a chance. Call me crazy but I don't like programming processes that start with "now cut and paste all of these files and..."
Speaking of which does anybody have recommended reads on C#? The guy who made the mess appears to have no sense of craft but he did appear to know every single feature of C# that wasn't a first class function (which makes this pattern completely pointless).
19:19
@ErikReppen Probably an example of more functionality than best practices require. Not like it's the first programming language to allow programmers to do unholy things.
posted on March 05, 2013

Rawson.js, by Franz Buchinger, is a JavaScript renderer for RAW image files in the browser.  It uses an Emscripten port of the dcraw C library to JavaScript to render in a canvas element.  Rawson.js can also extract metadata from RAW images, as you can see in the demo. Thanks to the dcraw C library, Rawson.js enables viewing of RAW images from over 500 different cameras and many file types

I guess I haven't run into a whole lot of examples of unnecessarily accessible data members, but that's only counting custom code. The fact that you can access everything for built in objects and data types is a different thing.
@Loktar after today u probably will call me the craziest css-artist , or maybe a few days later lol
@SeanO'Hollaren Yeah, that's okay. I'm talking Enterprise-style apps where no internal var/property seems to go un-getSetMitized. But it would still make more sense to me if you treated classes as more architectural than as data structures.
@ErikReppen That seems to fall under the "If only everyone was better at their job" realm, though. C# could be blamed for giving them the ability to do it, but bastardizing OOP is their own doing.
19:26
Yeah, I wasn't really blaming the languages but I do think mandatory classes in Java tends to lead to a lack of appreciation for what they're supposed to represent and how they can actually make your life easier. Classes aren't technically mandatory in C# IIRC are they? Never seen .NET code without them though so I'm wondering if I'm wrong about that.
!!/choose "clean office" "clean pc" "clean code"
@rlemon clean pc
@AmaanCheval By compressing you mean minifying right?
well my pc does need a cleaning pretty bad
@OctavianDamiean Yeah
19:28
I've let myself get unorganized
I'm just about try this package called Clientside, which includes JSMin, JSBeautifier, and JSLint
@ErikReppen Not sure, but all the non-trivial C# code I've seen has utilized them pretty heavily. Just enterprise-ish experience, though.
@OctavianDamiean Cool, thanks
Is it just me or does this book cover fail hard?
I mean it's about Linux but has screenshots of Windows on it ...
At least that's how it looks like to me.
19:31
@OctavianDamiean that doesn't look like windows
By the end of this book you'll be able to UPDATE PACKAGES LIKE MAD.
That's not windoze, but Linux Essentials should maybe not be about using GUIs
@OctavianDamiean Mac OS is bastardized Linux under the hood isn't it?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Wait, you're right!
@ErikReppen both are bastardizing unix :P
19:31
Or is that Ubuntu? Been a while.
@BenjaminGruenbaum hah!
That's a default Gnome style.
Looks like one of the default Ubuntu themes to me. But definitely Gnome.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Unix bastardized Unix. That's half the reason there's Linux.
Remember that one time Ubuntu copied Windows to try and appeal to the masses?
19:32
@OctavianDamiean Nope, looks like Ubuntu from 9.04 or earlier with a non-default theme or earlier with a default theme. I'm sure I've used that though
good times.. good times.
@Loktar when?
I mean, I guess it's a little better than green text on black background "THIS IS CODE" representation, but that would probably be a little more appropriate for what you'd hopefully be doing by the end of the book.
@AmaanCheval Nope, that's a newer interface.
20 October 2004
19:33
@SeanO'Hollaren A lot of linux books appeal to a non-poweruser crowd
@Loktar Well, it succeeded.
But the skills... they're serious.
@OctavianDamiean yeah more so than any other flavor
how does one lose an SSD
seriously.
Oh, yay! This Clientside package is pretty cool
19:34
256gb Agility 4
@rlemon Hahaha
@BenjaminGruenbaum Still, it looks like they're going for the "blind them with cryptic text" approach if they're expecting someone completely new to linux to be picking this book up. They're just doing it inside a GUI.
@SeanO'Hollaren GUIs don't frighten newbies as much
If you show a terminal to someone young who has never written a line of code in their life they'll likely go "WTF?"
@SeanO'Hollaren That's a LPI preparation book.
probably due to their intuitiveness.
19:35
best was to learn linux? start using it, but never store anything crucial on that partition because you'll likely bork it a few times
Also, my sister is on Ubuntu, hasn't opened a command line in her life
As a relative Linux Noob, nothing is more frustrating than trying to get to the bottom of how to do something and then watching a forum post descend into squabbling about the proper use of Sudo.
2
@ErikReppen haha i know right?
Ask Ubuntu chat is awesome for answers on 'seemingly' simple stuff
19:36
@ErikReppen Following cryptic instructions that include copy-pasting code you have no idea about in your terminal probably
@ErikReppen Well, that's simple. Don't use it for invoking GUI actions. That's what gksudo is there for.
and the guys in there often have experience working with a number of distros so even if it isn't ubuntu you're good
@OctavianDamiean What's LPI?
sudo gedit &
!!/urban lpi
19:37
@SomeKittens [Net Admin](http://net-admin.urbanup.com/3585171) Short for [Network Administrator], a [Net Admin] in some cases is an under appreciated super-technician with experience in many fields that relate to maintenance/management/setup/configuration/*etc. of a computer network and its devices that may be within or on the outside (ex. Mobile users).

Their resume by themselves require a degree in acronyms do decipher and include extensive certifications like MCSA, MCSE, CCNA, CCNP, NETWORK+, A+,Linux+, LPI (multiple levels), **etc. (just to mention some of the more well known).
@SeanO'Hollaren lpi.org
@rlemon NO!
sudo yes
Linux is a nice idea, when stuff gets messy you need to be the kind of guy who likes getting dirty. Otherwise you need to know such a guy :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum True. Guess they were trying to strike a balance between "you don't know what this text even means" and "but it's not too scary."
gksudo gedit &
19:38
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah the unexplained command-line args is also annoying. I finally just bought the O'Reilly "In a Nutshell Book"
yea learning to read manpages sucks when you're not used to cli
Linux, the Opera of Desktop OS's
I'm just a part of an environment where everyone knows linux so whenever I have an issue I can't find an answer for I ask. If I wasn't I imagine it would be more frustrating
it seems what I do not know, is simple enough that people here do know it
That said, I'm 95% done with ever voluntarily using Windows as a platform for dev again. Especially after over a week of IIS config issues + bizarre directory authorization problems among other things.
19:40
I dislike using Windows when working because I hate cmd
@ErikReppen using Windows, and using IIS are two different things lol
IIS sucks
@Loktar Wouldn't you want to compare it more to Firefox?
@ErikReppen I never got that, just don't use IIS...
Recently installed Cygwin, but I haven't tried it
@AmaanCheval "but you can use powershell now"
19:40
@OctavianDamiean nah because Linux has only 1% of the market share.
@AmaanCheval just install git bash
Just use linux
@Loktar Not sure about that with android and all
seriously, don't bandaid windows.
19:40
@BenjaminGruenbaum git bash?
@BenjaminGruenbaum desktop OS's
@Loktar Oh, if you look at it from that perspective, yea.
use the environment you like
The usage share of operating systems is the percentage market share of the operating systems used in computers. Different categories of computers use a wide variety of operating systems, so the total usage share varies enormously from one category to another. In some categories, one family of operating systems dominates. For example, most desktop and laptop computers use Microsoft Windows and most supercomputers use Linux. In other categories, such as smartphones and servers, there is more diversity and competition. Information about operating system share is difficult to obtain, sinc...
I'm starting to swing the node-hammer for damn near every problem I want to solve in windows now. I don't even look for the proper shell/command-line way to do things anymore.
19:41
@AmaanCheval If you install git on windows it comes with a version of cygwin that acts like a normal linux terminal in most regards
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, cool!
what up homes
I actually installed Cygwin so I could use git from the CLI
*homies
Because I didn't want to get used to using cmd again
19:41
@AmaanCheval Oh lol, it comes bundled with the official git install
wow 11% of my industry is windows (embedded)
@ErikReppen I actually did some bash today when working on a node project, really basic stuff
I wouldn't have thought it so high
XPe is a fucking pita to work with
if anyone ever asks you too, run
Could someone help me trouble shoot a simple script? I'm having a really tough time with it, and I know its something stupid
@AmaanCheval Using cmd is a nightmare coming from unix. Powershell helps a bit, but that's only with syntax stuff. The functionality is still gone.
19:42
@AnthonyA Just ask
@SeanO'Hollaren thankyou! I have read up on powershell and it does look better but still crippled.
but I haven't used it because of my aversion to anything windows CLI
I am completely unashamed of swinging the Node Hammer at Windows file problems.
what sorts of things do you have to do with Windows files that are complex?
> I had to delete so many files shit was CRAZYZZZ!
@rlemon We've already talked about it, but you use bash or zsh in windows :/ I know a lot of people like powershell, I just don't want to learn how to use two shells and change all the time
@rlemon Yeah, it's nice to get things like ls and cd and navigating through the file structure in a unix type way.
19:44
here is my codepen codepen.io/anon/pen/Hnqea ---- Right now I have it checking for an open div with the class .content and hiding it if it is visible. However, I want to animate it in a slide out, not hide it --- but when I add the slide out function, the whole thing acts funny
@Loktar build scripts, testing, etc
@SeanO'Hollaren but with that said, I personally would rather just hop on a unix / linux environment
For example, when writing an extension, you'd like a script that takes the raw extension and produces a FF extension and a chrome extension
I mean @ErikReppen
@Loktar Well, write an app that auto-configures repeated settings in over 21 config files in our glorious .NET/Rails/Java trifecta for one.
19:45
@Loktar XPe... XP mother fucking e
@rlemon Oh, me too. Always.
Oh, @Loktar, since you recently moved to Sublime; get some build packages. Absolutely brilliant
@AnthonyA what's the problem?
@rlemon have never used it :P
It's like the .NET guys at my company were incapable of making any but the worst decisions. Our .NET stuff is multi-solution. Have to run multiple apps out of multiple VS windows to get things working.
19:46
OMG UPS IS FREAKING OUT
SHUT UP!
@copy How did you exam go?
Minify or JSHint with just a keyboard shortcut
@ErikReppen That sounds horrible
The problem is that I can't get a visible .content div to slide out instead of .hide()
@AmaanCheval nice, yeah I need to get some more packages
19:46
@AmaanCheval You don't need a keyboard shortcut for linting, just install the package sublimelinter (it's not nearly as good as what I get on windows, but we're not having that argument again)
so far I just have emmet
@BenjaminGruenbaum That does it automatically?
@AmaanCheval Yes
@BenjaminGruenbaum What do you get on Windows?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well, they actually want to clean up instead of continuing to make the mess worse in spite of constant app-fail so I took the job because I've never seen that happen before.
19:47
@BenjaminGruenbaum what do you mean? Im using ST2 on windows.
Right, so UDS day one is over. :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, wow, this looks even better
when I add a .toggle() slide animation, it stops working correctly
But basically to just view our site which I can't in dev right now, I have to run like 4-7 .NET solutions, Java out of Eclipse and start up Ruby at the CMD.
19:48
@rlemon Happened to mine this morning for some reason. I have no idea what's up with the thing. I want to throw it out but it's just a huge brick of lead.
Sim City servers can't handle the load
eff off always online DRM
2:30 AM wakeup call from UPS :(
@BenjaminGruenbaum Do those give you tools like grep?
@AmaanCheval Let's not go into how powerful VS and ReSharper again, it'll drive rlemon and OctavianDamiean crazy :P I get A LOT. It doesn't just integrate jshint much better, it has its own way of understanding my code. It grays unreachable execution paths, it refactors (extract method/module/constant etc), it runs node better, it has amazing suggestions etc.
Ah, cool
19:49
On the plus side, my machine at work has SSD and like 48 gigs of RAM.
VS is powerful.. but so goddanged heavy
What the hell?
Not to mention the most annoying thing about ST2 (which is fixed in ST3) is that it gets no context, can't go to declaration, find usages, etc
that is nice in VS.
I right click go to dec so much.
19:50
The code completion in ST (even in 3) is nowhere near, I really hope they get it better because VS is heavy and ST is nice and slim
Why isn't there a builtin way of creating objects classes and the like in JavaScript? Lots of people are creating their own tools for that
48 gigs is needed depending on what you do. I doubt a web dev needs it. Someone working at a graphics software company might, such as en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evertz_Technologies who makes cool stuff, but mostly C++ and assembly code.
@saadtaame Noone is creating their own tools for that, and it's extremely simple and easy
Oh don't tell me I didn't save my private GPG key ...
IDEs help enable and perpetuate bad code IMO. They shouldn't let you touch one in college until your fourth year.
19:50
@OctavianDamiean LMAO
@Incognito it won't shut up!
even when I unplug it
codepen.io/anon/pen/Hnqea --- is it something stupid ?
@rlemon disconnect the battery
Hold the power button
@ErikReppen I couldn't disagree more.
holding the power down for ten seconds seemed to work
19:51
user image
4
@Incognito lol
@BenjaminGruenbaum I didn't meant that as a broad "everybody" stroke but I definitely feel IDEs in the hands of the inept are a serious problem.
For code navigation, look at ST ctags plugins, guys
Yea, I'm basically fucked ...
@OctavianDamiean As expected
19:52
I'm sure it has some.
I would prefer to be literally fucked.
@copy I don't know how your expectation was.
I don't have a gpg key, never needed it
@Loktar i'm off work at 5pm ;)
@ErikReppen IDEs let you debug easily which is a biggie. They do code completion which is important if you're new to a language and don't remember all the commands. They can jump to source so you can see the language's source code if you're not sure how something works. They let you re-factor which means you can get decent code out even if you have not completely acquired all the good habits yet.
19:53
haha
@Loktar Same here but I'm metaphorically fucked ...
@OctavianDamiean Everything between 20 and 60 percent is possible
next time specify gender
@BenjaminGruenbaum How do you do it? It's repetitive work, you have to create a more straightforward interface for adding methods, extending objects, creating classes, etc... How do you do it if you don't create your own tool?
@saadtaame Give me an example?
19:54
alright well thanks anyways guys! have a good one!
Even Crockfold has a way of doing it
See his webpage
I started cleaning up my pc but then my psu freaked on me. I think it's a sign
@BenjaminGruenbaum But you can have debug tools without IDEs. It's the part where people are able to make sense out of complete crap that they're writing that I have a problem.
@saadtaame Who's crockford?
so.. how do I use sublinter?
19:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum Douglas Crockford?
@ErikReppen You can but it's more work than when it's a keyboard shortcut in the IDE
do I have to reload st2?
@AmaanCheval Stop answering my rhetorical questions :(
@Loktar It highlights any syntax errors when you save a file
@BenjaminGruenbaum crockford.com
19:55
ah nice
omg this conversation with Ben is so pointless, he will not agree to disagree

some people are more productive with IDEs
some people produce horrible code with IDEs and use them as crutches.

OMG LOOK PEOPLE SOMETHING SUBJECTIVE THAT WE CAN ARGUE ABOUT!
@BenjaminGruenbaum I was confused, so I answered :P
woah very nice
@saadtaame Is that guy chuck norris?
> missing semi colon line x
thats badass.
19:55
@Loktar Oh, yeah, it's pretty cool
@rlemon I totally agree to disagree, but I'll keep arguing my side
@BenjaminGruenbaum No way x) for how long have you been writing programs in js?
@Loktar Where does it say that?
I'm not saying yours is wrong and I didn't start this discussion, I'm just claiming my case
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well, I'm not saying you should work out of Notepad or anybody that has a clue shouldn't work with an IDE. But people should be trained without, IMO.
19:56
@saadtaame What?
omg I wish I could use vi and tape the obscure keyboard shortcut manpage to my cubicle wall! /seppuku
@ErikReppen agreed, if they taught code in school and how to use proper scripting editors like vim/emacs/nano/etc the world would be a better place
@AmaanCheval said it next to my lines that didnt have them
@ErikReppen Right, all I said is that I disagree :)
well it highlighted the end of it
19:57
@canon don't kid, I use vi and have the shortcut sheet pinned to my wall... :(
and then the bot left said what line
@saadtaame Oh, you mean JavaScript!
@BenjaminGruenbaum Take a couple of minutes and browse his page... It's interesting
@rlemon <3
@Loktar Oh. It only highlighted the line for me
19:57
@saadtaame Wow, he should write a book outlining what parts in JS are good and what parts are bad
Fair enough. Let's move on to something novel like whether relying on auto-semi-completion is okay.
seriously, it's a shitty cheat sheet but it was the best one I could find.
@Loktar The bot left?
ASI was never meant to be relied on. Eich agrees
@AmaanCheval no PSU was freaking out so the bot pc got moved to another psu, one sec i'll log him back in
The one thing I resent about Crockford the most is the perpetuation of the myth that JS is horribly broken in ways that don't involve Number.
19:58
yeah I had to click on the box
one sec ill ss it
@rlemon No, Loktar said "the box left said what line". That made no sense to me
@ErikReppen It's not, no-one thinks that :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum But this isn't an argument, it's just contradiction!
@ErikReppen JSHint - the programming tool that makes you write like Crockford, lol

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