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22:00
I'm lazy and usually go with $.ajax if you have jQuery. If not, you should be able to find a decent library-independent XHR function on MDN.
Something to do with the way the site processes (php vs javascript) - I think I initially was trying to solve a different problem, actually, while fumbling around for how to do this. I need to only pull parts of the XML to display the data on the page only if the user clicks. Using hidden divs wasn't acceptable because hidden divs still download the data. My worry with using libraries is that this is particular solution is for mobile- I'm trying to keep things small.
The only thing I could want from jQuery is the effing $.deffered
Coupling with $.when it's killing
What about $().animate?
Animate.animate(myElement)
Is there a substantial difference between XHR and what I'm doing now that would warrant a rework of my solution over just restructuring my XML to work around the but with simpleXML?
In terms of performance/security/etc.
22:03
@dievardump promises, promises...
@canon what?
@Kate if we're talking about a web browser app I'm not sure what you would likely be doing other than XHR for loading from server without reloading the page.
@kate Oh, you said mobile. Is this a phonegap/webview app?
you don't ask for performances when using phonegapp
22:11
Certainly not if you use it with jquery mobile, which IMO, is the real cause of its bad rep in performance.
Thaaat was weird, I got parse errors in FIrefox. Had to load in on IE.
@Erik -- So what I was saying-- Er, nu, it's straight PHP written in Notepad++. As mentioned, I'm totally new to the mobile. Is phonegap a mobile CMS? And yeah, I didn't think to use XHR 'cause I use the same XML file in the non-mobile PHP version of the page, I guess I just figured I'd reuse the parsing .php file for the mobile.
Okay so first question: Do you mean a web page built for a mobile browser or are you writing a native app that uses something like phonegap to let you use web technology without losing access to all the phone feature stuff like GPS, accelerometers, etc...
Ah, apologies, website for a mobile browser.
Okay, good. Then it's a browser problem and the mobile factor is more an issue of screen-size.
I suppose my real question is: should I invest the time to revamp this to be XHR instead of how I'm doing it with PhP, or just finish off how I'm doing because it's not a huge deal and just use XHR next time?
22:18
How are you currently doing it? XHR is JavaScript stuff for moving code back and forth from client to server. It doesn't parse or anything like that.
I'm loading in an XML file in PhP, saving it to an HTML input field (hidden) and then accessing that via JS to pick apart for the bits I need to use dynamically.
@OctavianDamiean You can use the sandbox to play with the bot, or the online demo
So it's possible your XML parser works fine. Have you tried outputting the stuff in the hidden input field directly to see if the attributes aren't getting lost on the client-side?
@Zirak I should better get a room in a cheap motel for me and the bot.
I checked the parsing data within the PHP before it's even encoded into JSON. SimpleXML's load is losing the attributes on grandchildren.
22:21
What's the best way to do observer in JS?
Okay and is this the same server-side functionality handling the mobile browser and regular browser version?
Yup!
Where does the server get the XML in the first place?
Just use an array for callbacks, or what?
Another spot in the server. The only difference is that when I pass the XML to the mobile Php/JS version, I'm passing the ENTIRE XML file. When I pass data in the PHP only version, I can just grab the year subarray.
22:22
@user973810 Why would you do that? Use custom events.
@user973810 Check jquery's trigger and bind methods.
That subarray has the attributes. THe whole XML one does not.
Or any other custom event library.
 App.user().organization().medias().where({tag:value})[0].accounts()
When I see my code, I wanna slap me in the face with a rotten trout
But I do not do it, because there is no $
So you can do events on any object, not just dom objects? I was so unaware of that.
22:24
@Kate what do you mean PHP/JS version? JS on the server or the client?
That's cool.
Thanks bros.
@Erik The PHP/JS version is the one where the PHP loads the XML and passes into the HTML for the JS to load and manage, for mobileside. Alternatively, the other ones bypasses JS completely and is straight PHP, but mobileside needs to be dynamic content in-page.
With JavaScript you can do whatever you want that is safe for the humanity
Yeah, you can DIY with the DOM API events too IIRC but that's a Dean Edwards post I need to finish reading.
Sounds like it would be better to do the way I learned in Java then.
22:26
Dangit, I need to remember to use @ErikReppen, not just @Erik.
@user973810 It's almost never better to do it the way anybody learned how to do it in Java.
^in JS I mean. Two completely different language philosophies.
No, custom events is the way to do it.
Observer is a pattern JS doesn't really need basically.
We'll see, bro.
LOL
We'll see, bro.
22:28
I've seen... Believe me I've seen Java devs write shit JS code. I wouldn't try to carry the JS assumptions/paradigm into the Java paradigm. Some patterns make sense anywhere. Others are workarounds for what a language can't do.
@Kate I don't understand why you have to do it differently and I wonder if maybe you're getting a file buffer instead of a string or something.
@user973810 You're talking to a former Java dev, I know that it is tempting but don't.
!!s/JS//
@dievardump No matching message (are you sure we're in the right room?)
@dievardump I've seen... Believe me I've seen Java devs write shit code. I wouldn't try to carry the JS assumptions/paradigm into the Java paradigm. Some patterns make sense anywhere. Others are workarounds for what a language can't do. (source)
oooooooooog
@user973810 Do it the Java way, that works out so well
22:30
where is the /g ?
@user973810 The Java way is always superior, don't listen to them, Java is awesome
@ErikReppen It parses as valid, though, so Iunno what's up. For now, 'cause I'm on a time constraint, I'mma just brute force a change to the XML, unless there's a compelling reason to switch to XHR other than it's status quo.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Trolls be trollin'
:D
@BenjaminGruenbaum I do not like when you do that. Just before going you troll.
!!/tell BenjaminGruenbaum aliens
22:32
@BenjaminGruenbaum i.imgur.com/PfAA1.jpg
@dievardump What do you mean? Java is an awesome language, very expressive. In Java programs write themselves, it's so concise and compact.
@Kate they might have recommended trying it to see if something in whatever produces the HTML was breaking it. With XHR you could just spit out the string without anything else touching that XML converted json - edited
Java has awesome stuff like real oop, you don't do stupid stuff function(){} instead you implement a Callable interface, and implement a .call method, also, Java doesn't have closures because those are confusing and stupid, all that functional nonsense is stupid
Also, writing more code to do the same thing is always better
@ErikReppen The error happened even before it touched the HTML- something with PHP's simpleXML_load_file and returning the straight xmlData to be encoded.
@Kate Why do you have to load the whole file instead of a piece of it again?
22:36
@ErikReppen I only load information if/when the user clicks that year/month. Otherwise it's blank. It's to save loadtime/bandwidth. PHP would let me do similar with the display: hidden attribute, but that still loads for the user.
@ErikReppen I could be mistaken that this is the best way to do it though, as stated, I'm sorta new to the scene.
I remember going to the Java room the other day and asking "Does anyone here work with Java because he wants to", don't think I ever saw a room that silent XD
@Kate can you just pull the top level node from the file or is that what you were already doing?
@ErikReppen That's what I'm doing that's causing the issue. In the PHP only version I hunt out the year node and only pull that, and everything is fine.
Yeah, I can't think of what you're doing that would bust the same xml parser then assuming the XML is validated.
@Kate Maybe try grabbing the XML portions in smaller pieces?
@ErikReppen I thought of that, but then I'd be saving a handful of global arrays, and that feels... dirty.
22:42
All the PHP stuff should work the same. It doesn't care where you're sending all this data on the mobile end of it.
THat's what I thought, too!
I'd be surprised if it didn't break if you tried the full XML object approach in the regular browser app.
What's the name of the parser method? I'd google for similar problems too. Maybe it can't handle very large files?
Aah, that's a possibility. simplexml_load_file is what I'm using. It's native to PHP, so I can't imagine this is unique to me... php.net/manual/en/function.simplexml-load-file.php
@Kate I'm probably late, but xhr is XMLHttpRequest object... kinda designed for this in mind :P
@rlemon Yeah- I just didn't recognize the acronym. :3
22:47
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Dave VoylesI'm trying to get an entity (a bullet, a grenade, and an explosive) from my player player. Specifically, I want the shootingRate of my bullet (how frequently it can be fired). How can I do this without having to call getEntityByType each time I fire this projectile? There has got to be a cleane...

AJAX is thus the technique: Asynchronous Javascript And XML, which implores xhr as it's facilitator
xhr is a real thing, ajax is a technique (verbiage schooling)
And XML is more or less being replaced by JSON
yea, I prefer JSON over XML
Somebody should think about a new meaning of "AJAX" where the X doesn't stand for XML
Asynchronous JavaScript (Asset?) eXchange?
22:50
@dievardump I think its called sublinter
Assholes Just Abuse X
*where X === buzzwords
I installed it at work and now am at home and have forgotten..
@BenjaminGruenbaum mentioned it
sublimelinter?
@ThiefMaster J doesn't really stand for JavaScript either, you can do AJAX in other languages too
22:52
^ steal teh codez for boobs!@
nobody does so though
AJAX just stands for 'HTTP protocol requests/responses without navigating from a page' or something similar
@Loktar lol
@ThiefMaster I'm sure people who use DART do, or people who use other propitiatory langauges on browsers in weird corporations, like vbscript if that's even still supported
AJAX is a stupid name. XHR is less stupid, but still stupid. HR brings bad connotations.
22:54
ah, forgot about DART
Xtreme!!! Http Requests!
It's really just an Http Request.
Dart, coffeescript, typescript...
@BenjaminGruenbaum wat ... Asynchronous JavaScript and XML
I doubt anyone uses vbscript while working with XHR
22:54
dart.... :?
@Loktar eggs?
ts/cs are compiled to javascript :p
yea I saw it, wasn't impressed really
@rlemon dude.. look at the yolks
@Zirak Exactly, it's just an HTTP request
22:54
those are bouncing tata's
@JanDvorak All of them actually javascript...?
I mean, yea it's cool.. but eh
they be jiggly boobs
X is for Xtreme. It's been long enough since everything was Xtreme that it's now suitably ironic for reuse.
thats what Im sayin man
lol
css tits?
22:55
use that for the boobs :P
Also, you should totally use SEN
make it rain on dem tits
lol
I want to use the particles for actual things now
lol I saw it and it made me think of your boob rain project.
@Zirak What is SEN? Haven't been around for a while. New language design?
22:55
so i'm gonna make 'particle fire' and 'particle smoke' and 'particle clouds' etc.
anything I can make out of particles
@rlemon lol
emitters for all
so your going to use particles for what they are used for
22:56
Meh, laters everyone. I just fell asleep. :P
see ya @OctavianDamiean
then take them all (all the demos and classes i've written) and make a badass forest scene with a storm (lightning and all)
AJAX = Ajax is Javascript Asynchronous eXchange.
@rlemon reminds me of a screensaver I did
lightning hits a tree, set it on fire!
lightning hits the ground, destroy part of the ground.
I didn't have fire in mine however
but it had rain/storms
storm passes and sun comes out, tree starts growing again, grass grows where the ground was hit etc.
snow, fire flies
@ThiefMaster How about "(A)synchronous (J)avascript (a)nd (X)", where X can be, well, anything?
22:57
god damnit, that is the most amazing screensaver ever created
wish it would have gotten more love in the past
lol
I don't like the trees
the trees are amazing
not procedural
Right, because linux and kde are both GREAT acronyms :P
leaves move with wind
22:58
doesn't look to be anyways
@rlemon yeah they are
the only ones that aren't are the winter trees
ahh, well that video does you no justice
the other ones are created on the fly
Asynchronous Javascript AjaX
yeah its an old vid :? I made those back in like 2008 or something idk
22:59
oshit, it's late and/or early
if I can make a scene in canvas with all of these things and still have it running at 60fps i'll die a happy man
Also, php is a great acronym :P
@rlemon easily doable
@BenjaminGruenbaum Which one?
good luck, should be cool :P
22:59
@Loktar for you, for me I don't know what in the hell i'm doing so it's all a challenge

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