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Anonymous
23:05
I failed to spot the riddle in that phrase, if there is any @SOChatBot
May the Fourth be with you all!
Anonymous
enlighten me pls
@XCritics you wanna play in like ~20 mins
@PHPfan What's difficult to understand?
A farmer couldn't find his tractor. Question: What did he say?
Answer: "Where's my tractor?"
@Zirak not enough flatulence in the joke
> What did the farter say when he couldn't find his fartor?
> "fart fart fart!"
23:12
It's really pulchritudinous
Who is Swedish Chef's favorite Musician?
@tereško He wants to select from this year
-Bjork
The rest...I did not understand
> It only needs to decouple days apart.
> the only take them as the 2014 into its database "tidspunkt" = which is the "hour"
That last sentence sounds like bot speak
23:19
You are wanting to SELECT only for dating current year. I am understanding you wanting SELECT year of current. — Shmiddty 22 secs ago
I speak translator.
okluvyoubyebye
The first comment is golden
huh, just learned how to pronounce "alias".
Beforehand I pronounced it as "ah-lie-es", when it should be "eh-li-es"
ooohh
!!/tell AmaanCheval define dilapidated
@AmaanCheval dilapidated Past participle of dilapidate
...that sucked
!!/define dilapidate
@Zirak dilapidate To fall into ruin or disuse.
23:33
Say, how and when can you use normal Javascript inside a Jquery selector/etc ?
There's no such thing as a "jquery selector", they're just strings.
"Selectors that are used with Jquery" then.
> they're just strings.
Sizzle, the selector engine, parses those strings and executes some DOM commands.
Whatever they're called, when I try using a normal Javascript method after $('#id'), it often doesn't work, and I want to know how and when it can be done, if at all.
Wait, what? Can you give a concrete example?
23:36
$('section>a h1').innerHTML="Something";
That's because jquery wraps DOM elements. jquery's API and the DOM are not one and the same.
So you can't use DOM methods on jquery objects and vice-versa. How will you know what you can and can't do? By knowing these APIs.
Mmmmh, all right.
Also, are there non-Jquery ways of using CSS-ish selectors ? I barely ever need anything from Jquery apart that and ajax.
!!/tell Ariane mdn querySelector
Though I can't recommend using css selectors.
23:39
@Ariane -_-' :( :( :(
@Zirak I use them all the time, usually for scraping
Well that changed my mind
I'm converted. CSS selectors for everything.
Great
@Zirak what do you have againt CSS selectors not in the context of inverting responsibilities (that is, using the presentation layer wrong)?
@Ariane $() is a method that returns an array-like, the elements of it being the DOM elements. And it has a lot of methods on its prototype. A lot.
@BenjaminGruenbaum They're not a good model for tree navigation.
XPath is a bit better. DOM methods are best.
@Zirak I beg to differ, They're an amazing model for tree navigation. I don't know with how many such models you've worked with but most people use stuff like TRegex and horrible stuff
23:43
They might be better than cow shit, but that doesn't mean I want them in my cake.
So basically I run a loop with that thing and perform my changes on it in the loop (or assign my elements to an array)?

LIke uhm

var thisElement;
while(thisElement=document.querySelector('.section>a hq') {
thisElement.innerHTML="Something";
}
@Zirak XPath has its own fair share of problems, working with it was a pain and I'm really glad I switched to CSS selectors in my scraping code, it's much easier to work with, especially with long/complex selectors. DOM methods can't make complex selections
Hopefully not (that'll probably make an infinite loop). Also, I'm against innerHTML (same reason; it's horrible for tree manipulation. since it's not tree manipulation).
I'm not talking about the case of making your own created DOM do stuff, I'm talking about selecting stuff from a host DOM as a guest script
@BenjaminGruenbaum Of course, XPath isn't very good. And DOM methods can be arbitrarily complex
I don't care, and this is not a productive argument
@Zirak I've had the scolding about innerHTML already. I thought it would work because :

"Returns null if no matches are found; otherwise, it returns the first matching element."

But indeed that'll only select the first element infinitely. How can I make it get to the second one?
You can do a querySelectorAll to select all matching elements
FWIW I still think innerHTML has a use case, that is deserializing HTML.
@Zirak If I understand well, it makes an array over which I can iterate?
Yes, it does have a use case. And I mourn every time I have to deserialize html
!!/tell Ariane mdn querySelectorAll
Don't bother, i'm on that page already
It returns a NodeList, which can be traversed on like any other list
@Zirak what about templates? Let's say I have a Mustache template for an element in a list I have on the page, that template is relatively complex, Don't those justify deserializing HTML?
(Mustache: String * Object -> String , the result is often HTML)
@Zirak I'm sorry, but can you explain what a NodeList is? I was taught Javascript all wrong, and I have few "correct" notions.
!!/tell Ariane MDN NodeList
@BenjaminGruenbaum That's a sucky place to be at in the first place. Templates should convert strings into data models which can be converted into other data models (in this case, the DOM)
@Benjamin that doesn't explain me much... :c
@Ariane A NodeList is a List of Nodes. Things like getElementsByTagName return these, and you can sort of treat them like arrays
@Arian you know that in js, arrays are just a specific object with numeric keys, a length property, and a few methods on the prototype, right?
In the sense that they have numeric indices and a length property, so you can enumerate them like you would an array
23:52
@Zirak You mean a templating engine should accept an HTML string and return a Node?
NodeLists are the samd kind of objects, except all the elements are DOM elements, and the prototype methods are different.
Yes, or a document fragment
(Which would just require creating an element and setting its innerHTML on the templating engine's side ... )
@Florian I don't know what a prototype is. And they didn't think appropriate to teach us about objects, so my notions of them are limited to what I've learned by myself, which isn't much.

@Zirak A "node" is a HTML element, right? But I'm not sure what a "list" is concretely.
Hm, if you're thinking of java-like objects, stop right now.
23:54
I've never learned Java.
@Zirak What advantage does working on the DOM and not HTML gives you in that context? What do you think does it improve? After all at some point you have to build the DOM tree from HTML.
A list is multiple HTML elements.
An html element is basically a node
@Ariane There's html. The browser parses this html and turns it into the DOM, the Document Object Model. An html element can be translated into a node. A list is just a general name for "a bunch of things".
Everything in an html page is a node
9 mins ago, by Zirak
I don't care, and this is not a productive argument
You should not fuck with html unless you have to fuck with html
That's my view of things
23:55
@Zirak Why? I think this argument is productive, also, it's not an argument, I'm asking why you hold your opinion
Mmmmmmh. So basically, as far as I'm concerned, a list is an array?
Good. I'm tired and have work to do, so for now I'll stop my understanding there. Thanks.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Do you know about Plato's "World of Ideas"?
Or what's it called...Theory of Forms?
That one I know
23:58
Now, you have this World of Ideas, and it's a beauty. But somewhere along the line someone had the notion of bringing in a slushy machine. An actual slushy machine.
This is no longer a pure World of Ideas, since there is a concrete object there. That doesn't mean slushy machines aren't useful.

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