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00:00
That's what I see when I look at innerHTML. html and the DOM are separate entities, separate layers of abstraction, separate worlds. And this tunnel between the worlds, this abstraction leak, is making me anxious.
I'm afraid I understand the analogy differently. HTML is the idea, it's how I describe in a data-exchange format what I want. the DOM is the slushy machine, how the browser chose to store the elements.
Saaay. Is "background-position: whatever 105%;" equivalent to saying "place the background at the bottom, and then move it 5% downwards"?
ok, and you'd agree that letting the "Idea" slushy machine just bounce around in the material world will cause the same tear?
I do. When I have a template, it describes 'what I want' in terms of presentational data. I don't want to tell the browser how specifically to handle it, if it were up to me I'd just tell the template where, and how to belong in my world (like Angular does) and not manually deal with how the browsers store it as a tree and deal with it with tree traversal algorithms.
@XCritics K/D: 1.98
Getting closer and closer.
00:04
So use it if you wish, if you think that won't cause an abstraction leak.
@Zirak Oh, I agree that this sort of abstraction leak is very problematic, I just don't think we agree on which side is an abstractization of which.
@Ariane Yes :D
You think the DOM is an abstraction of HTML. I think HTML is an abstraction of the DOM
Okay.
Thanks.
That's an interesting POV though
00:06
@BenjaminGruenbaum It can be both ways I believe, depending on your point of view. html can be the data descriptor, and the DOM can be the data descriptor. It's an interesting thing since they're both data models and they can be freely converted into one another.
@XCritics
yo @XCritics
wtf @XCritics
So, I've been searching for domain registrars today when we were looking for a name. Guess what kind of ad Google just added for me on Gmail, a GoDaddy.com ad. :P
So it's what you define as the "real world" which counts. I view that as the html because of how I viewed the World of Ideas (which may seem backwards to you as well): Looking at data, and realizing the patterns behind it. You look at a slushy machine and recognize it as a slushy machine. Now you look at <p></p> and recognize it as an element.
That looks familiar
00:10
I may have suggested it to you before
Do you look at "{a:3,b:5}" and see an object, or an abstraction?
@rlemon you suggested it to me before, still haven't read it
I see a string. :/
and that string is an abstraction
I see data.
@BenjaminGruenbaum That very much depends on context, but usually I look at it and think about the underlying thing, what it represents; so "abstraction" I guess.
00:12
I still see a string :/
This is how I see HTML :) Once it's a var a = JSON.parse("{a:3,b:5}") I see a as an object. I'm no longer in the realm of ideas, I'm in the realm of slurpy machines
(of course that's invalid json, but that's not the point)
Yeah, and that's a valid viewpoint.
Coming from html, the DOM is the nitty-gritty
@rlemon The scope of the discussion is "Is creating HTML an abstraction of the DOM API, or the other way around"
Say uhm. Looking around Wikipedia, I don't really understand well what JSON is. Can someone explain it simply? I keep hearing it.
DOM API is an abstraction of HTML
my viewpoint.
00:15
@rlemon That's how Zirak sees it. I see it differently, with the DOM API has to be concise , you work on the actual data-structure that represents the page. With HTML you represent the data in a string and let the browser figure out how to represent the data structurally.
If you do stupid stuff like using string manipulations on an HTML string, you're doing it very very wrong , no argument about that, then again that holds true for XML strings, or JSON strings, or SEN strings, etc
@Ariane JavaScript Object Notation
but the HTML can exist without interaction from javascript or the APIs related, ergo the APIs must be an abstraction by definition. I see your point but it is fatally flawed.
@phenom I read Wikipedia. I know what the abbreviation means.
It's a string based respresentation of javascript objects that can easily be passed between different parts of a system
@rlemon The fact HTML can exist without JavaScript doesn't mean the browser doesn't create a DOM tree.
00:17
"system", as in, computer? It's something for interacting between the browser and other applications?
"{a:3,b:5}"  <- that's not valid JSON.
you fail
so, just a string!
the js engine and the layout engine are completely separate though. HTML and CSS can exist without a DOM API.
" If a DOM tree is manipulated in the document-forest and no-one hears, did it fall"
@Ariane, yes, possibly a computer, but it could just be sub parts of a program on one computer
4 mins ago, by Benjamin Gruenbaum
(of course that's invalid json, but that's not the point)
00:18
e.g:
!!> JSON.stringify({ hello: 'hello', array: [1, 2, 3, 4] })
@phenomnomnominal "{\"hello\":\"hello\",\"array\":[1,2,3,4]}"
@phen What's a typical usage of it?
To pass data from client to server or vice versa
Uhm, Ben is actually right about that. HTML (XML) is the abstraction.
@phenom Basically it has the same basic purpose as PHP?
00:19
@rlemon The page you work with is the tree the browser built from the HTML, it's not the HTML itself. You don't see html in web pages, you see the rendering engine's output
@Ariane, no, not at all
I've only ever used JSON to pass values from PHP to JavaScript
@OctavianDamiean I don't think it's an objective question, but I'm glad you agree with me
@BenjaminGruenbaum but that rendering engine is not the javascript engine.
see the distinction
and the flaw in your argument
@Ariane, it has the same basic purpose as XML
00:20
@Phen Sigh. Never learned anything about XML
HTML might be an abstraction, but the DOM API is an abstraction of it
@Ariane JSON is a way to describe data.
@Ariane, it's just a data exchange format
@rlemon I don't understand your argument. The browser reads the HTML string and creates a document tree . Just like the JS VM reads a JavaScript script and executes it.
@rlemon No objections.
00:21
Sigh, the more you explain the less I understand. Do you have a simple, concrete example?
your original argument.
I have my website right
I want to get a list of my tweets from twitter
@rlemon I know that the DOM abstracts the HTML tree, that is what the browser generated from the HTML string . That doesn't mean it abstracts the HTML itself.
00:22
the HTML tree has nothing to do with the DOM tho
I make an AJAX request to the Twitter API, and they return a string of JSON.
ergo the DOM API abstraction HTML (tree)
I'm being the pedant you so often love to be ;)
On my website, I can then use that JSON string, and use JSON.parse and get an actual JavaScript object back, containing the list of my tweets
@rlemon What? If I said HTML document and not tree would that be better in your opinion?
@phenom Basically, almost as if they sent you a text file with the list and you read it?
00:24
@rlemon I used the word tree to emphesize the distinction, document is more concise. As long as we know that the distinction I'm referring to is between the html-text and the html-document
Pretty much exactly
it's just text that follows a specific format, known as JSON.
Okay, I think I understand the basic concept. Thanks.
@Ariane Say you have a duck with 4 legs. You can represent that duck as an object
0
Q: CSS loading odd on first view, after page refresh everything is fine?

XCriticsI'm working on a CSS layout for my page, I'm just having a problem. On first page view the navbar loads all out of whack, but after page refresh, everything looks fine, here's an example: Before: After: I'm not sure why it would be doing this I'm kind of new to CSS, any information would...

{ "legs" : 4 }
00:24
it's a matter of semantics. Javascript and HTML are 100% separate, and the DOM API is an abstraction layer in place for javascript to interact with the HTML content, albeit an object tree.. it is not in fact attached in any way to JavaScript and therefore can not by technicality (and observation) be inherently abstracted from the API given to it. .
That's JSON
@rlemon Ter in like 3-4 hrs?
I know the point you are trying to make @BenjaminGruenbaum but your original argument that HTML is an abstraction of the DOM API is just false..
@Zirak Looks vaguely like objects in Actionscript
no matter the underlying euphemisms
00:25
@rlemon HTML strings , we were talking about html strings not documents.
@Ariane Because ActionScript is another implementation of ECMAScript, and ECMASCript is javascript.
but HTML Strings as seen by the browser is just that.
That's because ActionScript and JavaScript both follow the ECMAScript spec
HTML Strings as seen by the javascript engine are completely different
you need to be specific
> It's all about specifics Bob
@rlemon It was specific to the context of the discussion I was having.
00:27
By the way... ECMAScript... Is that an actual language used somewhere, or just some parent meta-language that other languages base themselves off? Or an extinct old language replaced by JS and its siblings?
better
@Ariane It's a specification
@rlemon The non-pendant point I saw in Benjamin's argument is without any further technicalities, just two things: An html string (or document, or file, or whatever), and a DOM tree (which can be translated to the html string). Question: Which is the more abstract?
DOM tree if you ask me
00:28
@Ariane ECMAScript is the official name of javascript.
@Zirak Exactly
but that is just my opinion
I was just being a dick pedant for a purpose ;)
None of them, both are equally abstract.
@rlemon Right, we've already established that's a valid opinion, but you were saying 'your argument is wrong' to an argument I wasn't making.
no offense @BenjaminGruenbaum I love the arguments, but I gotta get mine :P
00:28
All valid points
@Zirak @Benjamin Eeeh? Is it uhm... Like how W3C says what is okay in HTML ?
@XCritics dude, don't get home when it's ten pm for me man
I wanna game at like 8:30 (now) not midnight!
@Ariane ECMAScript defines how JavaScript has to be. The W3C define how HTML has to be.
@Ariane There's a body called ECMA which makes the ECMAScript specification
It's a really unique case. I don't know any other markup languages that interacts after 'compilation' with scripting.
I mean, there is no notion of this in LaTex, certainly not in markdown
00:32
Well, Markdown on the other hand is an abstraction of HTML.
How is it not??
I think I'm going to just give up understanding the deep theory, but I get the basic thing. Thanks.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Eh, was that question aimed at me?
Yes
I'm not sure that just because it's simpler than HTML doesn't mean it's an abstraction of HTML. You can use markdown in contexts that are not on the web.
00:33
it's main goal is to abstract HTML
how is it not
It translates to HTML, that's what it was made for ...
By the way. This deep theoretical discussion you are having... it sounds like something I'd want to run away. Debates are scary.
You can use HTML in contexts that aren't on the web as well
The soft gentle glow of my computer monitor gives me all the courage I need for internerd debates.
5
00:35
@OctavianDamiean I'm not so sure. Does YAML abstract json?
I guess it falls under abstraction then. "Abstractions may be formed by reducing the information content of a concept or an observable phenomenon, typically to retain only information which is relevant for a particular purpose."
Well, ok. Maybe.
@Zirak I can't tell, I'm not familiar enough with YAML to tell.
Does markdown turn into anything but HTML?
However, this is from Daring Fireball's website.
> Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
00:37
In computer science, an abstract syntax tree (AST), or just syntax tree, is a tree representation of the abstract syntactic structure of source code written in a programming language. Each node of the tree denotes a construct occurring in the source code. The syntax is 'abstract' in not representing every detail appearing in the real syntax. For instance, grouping parentheses are implicit in the tree structure, and a syntactic construct like an if-condition-then expression may be denoted by means of a single node with two branches. This distinguishes abstract syntax trees from concrete ...
^
@rlemon That word (AST), I don't think it means what you think it means :)
lols... charAt returns different result from [] operator on strings
I think I'll just leave the chatroom. This debate I don't even want to understand keeps distracting me. Bye-bye and thanks!
@phenomnomnominal I think it does
"false"[9] is undefined
but "false".charAt(9) returns ""
lol
00:38
@OctavianDamiean Yeah, I saw that, I agree
@Esailija That's the API though
it's stupid
@Esailija charAt was stupid to begin with (do it the Java way)
how is markdown parser not reading a ast
because there is nothing interesting it would do with it I guess
@rlemon There would be no need to create an AST for parsing markdown
00:40
no there would not in practice, but theoretically it is a very simple form, and therefore relevant to the discussion
@Zirak I wouldn't say that YAML is an abstraction of JSON. I'd say it is just a different human readable data-representation.
does anyone have a link to the code generator that generates the []+[] obfuscation
The word 'Abstract' in AST doesn't mean what you think it means.
and what do you think I think it means? prey tell?
00:42
I think it does?
It's a step in parsing code. Let's say you're parsing Java, so you go through the code and store only the stuff you care about, you remove comments, etc. You also want to know context since that affects how stuff is executed. You go through the code and create a tree that represents how the program runs.
It's a abstracted representation of the syntax
seriously. how the fuck do you know what i'm thinking ;)
@rlemon Me and Zirak are in your aquarium right now. Didn't expect that did you?
00:43
I hope my sea cucumber digests you alive.
We are that cucumber
good. brain coral is toxic, he'll get you in time.
@BenjaminGruenbaum If you get pancreatitis you can still digest yourself.
if that fails I'll just turn off the filter, fucked.
00:44
May I be excluded from the toxic death sentence please?
@Zirak you can go in my new tank. so long as you behave.
> There is a legend that says that when we write "rm -rf /" it will destroy all folders in linux. But is only a legend, it doesn't work in Fedora or Centos. The correct way to do it is using "--no-preserve-root"
Someone verify please
no way I did that on Ubuntu just to see and BOOM
does exactly what they say it does.
where's @noob1992 when you need him
00:45
@copy Shouldn't be difficult to create a test partition
@rlemon Ubuntu isn't Fedora or CentOS
I know but I won't risk it again
lol
@copy Setup a VM. :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum 6.4?
00:45
@copy CentOS, nvm, getting fedora
I have VPS access to both :/ but again, not willing to try that shit on my VPS
I know that BSD won't let you do that.
Ew I have to go to uni on a saturday.
Fedora download is slow :S
3.2 MB/s now dropped to 2.9 :/
@phenomnomnominal Truant. :P
00:47
@rlemon Take my love, take my land, take me where I cannot stand...
Fuck ... almost 3 a.m. :/
I hate you SOChatBot, all because of you.
!!is Octavian Damiean telling the truth?
@Zirak Doubtfully
Now who are we going to believe...
Awesome website, by the way: commandlinefu.com/commands/browse
00:48
Fedora is also huge, 916 mb of download
Yeah, it's bloated
@copy Oh yea, commandlinefu is pretty cool. :)
!!is Zirak Batman?
@phenomnomnominal Absolutely not
> sudo !!
So leet :/
00:50
!!is Zirak the opposite of Batman?
@phenomnomnominal Yes, absolutely
THE PLOT THICKENS
Holy shit that is amazing.
Ok, installing Fedora
K, got an empty blue screen
Yeah, you have to fill it in to boot
It's a test of knowledge
00:55
Actually, I need more help.
Good, I need more slavery
We can work a deal
@copy This is ubuntu btw:
inglor@ubuntu:~$ rm -rf /
rm: it is dangerous to operate recursively on ‘/’
rm: use --no-preserve-root to override this failsafe
sudo rm -rf /
 // @copy this is Fedora
root@localhost:~$ rm -rf /
rm: it is dangerous to operate recursively on ‘/’
rm: use --no-preserve-root to override this failsafe
Nice
00:56
@rlemon Exact same thing
what version of Ubuntu
 // @rlemon
inglor@ubuntu:~$ sudo rm -rf /
rm: it is dangerous to operate recursively on ‘/’
rm: use --no-preserve-root to override this failsafe
I swear 11.04(2?) let me do this
@BenjaminGruenbaum rm --version ?
//@rlemon
inglor@ubuntu:~$ uname -a
Linux ubuntu 3.8.0-19-generic #29-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 17 18:19:42 UTC 2013 i686 i686 i686 GNU/Linux
:9221962
inglor@ubuntu:~$ rm --version
rm (GNU coreutils) 8.20
Copyright (C) 2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Written by Paul Rubin, David MacKenzie, Richard M. Stallman,
00:58
TypeError: Cannot convert object to primitive value
at Array.toString (native)
inglor@ubuntu:~$ lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID:	Ubuntu
Description:	Ubuntu 13.04
Release:	13.04
Codename:	raring
inglor@ubuntu:~$
13.04
@rlemon I can check with an old version if you'd like, I have plenty of ancient hardware I don't mind messing with laying somewhere
Trying to get what the coreutils version was then
Say uhm. I want to show you a fiddle I need help with, but jsFiddle won't take my external URL for a background-image. :c Why not? The URL is supposed to be right, because I get the image when I paste it in my browser.
Does someone understand why Fiddle isn't taking my image?
Everyone fell asleep.
01:07
I confirm that rm -rf / works in Ubuntu 6.06
Only once though :) the second time I get
ubuntu@ubuntu:~$ rm -rf /
bash: rm: command not found
ok, once I finish Firefly, I'm gonna re-introduce /roll just to decide which episode of firefly to watch.
after you finish Firefly you should probably watch serenity
Yes, but after that...
How in hell did it not get aired again?
I have no idea, I watched the whole thing in a day
Episode 10. Maybe I should go through another no-night?
01:16
The series might appear complicated to regular Fox viewers I guess?
The Mandarin (is that Mandarin?) scared them away
m59
m59
Hey dudes. I had an epiphany (but maybe an idiotphany).
@Zirak I think so
The moon is not made of cheese
m59
m59
Could I put ALL php in php files for everything always, even in login situations?
I feel like that could be hacked.
01:18
@m59 what the heck are you talking about?
What?
m59
m59
lol
Where else are you going to put them?
m59
m59
LOL oops
that's not the way I meant to say that.
Dancing it out will be a bit more cryptic, yet amusing
01:19
Inara plays in Homeland iirc
m59
m59
take this example:
index.php -

<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
etc etc etc more html!
php( is user logged in? no - include 'login.php', yes - include 'userpage.php')
some php there?
Now more html etc
that's the only safe way I know to check for a user being logged in.
What if that were an html file using ajax to a php file that had that php in it?
"Big Bang Theory" Y U NO FUNNY ANYMORE?
@m59 Go talk to the PHP room, I don't feel like yelling
m59
m59
it's a js question..
@m59 Ask them "How do I separate my presentational logic from my business logic in PHP" and give them your example
m59
m59
I feel like someone could make the js ajax call do whatever they want since it is client side.
01:22
No it's not, it's a code architecture question
You're asking how to layout your logic, as Benjamin Gruenbaum said. php has its ways
m59
m59
I think I know the php ways..
Apparently you don't
m59
m59
oh.
Your PHP code and your HTML shouldn't mix for this sort of thing (user validation), at all.
m59
m59
Using angular, it seems like everything in the world coming from the server was ajax, so I was just following the logic..
01:24
@tereško You might like this ^
@m59 This is nothing like angular, notice how there is no JavaScript in angular templates?
!!s/like/hate
@BenjaminGruenbaum Y U NO MAEK SENSE!? Could not understand s/like/hate
m59
m59
I read that.
man, I know I suck, but I just don't see the relation.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Trailing slash
01:29
ty, this is what I get for never using sed consistently
m59
m59
3
Q: Should I mix AngularJS with a PHP framework?

DaniAngularJS is very powerful when it comes to interactive HTML5 and model binding. On the other hand, PHP frameworks like Yii enable quick, well-structured, safe and powerful web application development. Both technologies provide sophisticated means for data access, iteration and page layouting. I...

I read that the other day
s/origin/replacement/flags
m59
m59
using ajax to ask php if the user is authenticated. Sounds hackable.
To me, someone could hack the js to say they are authenticated and then get into the user system. I guess it wouldn't get them far once you make another request and the server knows better (it won't give you any information), but I would think they could get access to at least some views that they shouldn't?
"hack the js"? If the server sends content, the server should know better than to serve improper content
The point of "ajax" is that it's just http requests. It's not "hacking the js". If you're serving content insecurely, your system is insecure.
m59
m59
that's not what I had in mind.
01:38
Tough shit, that's reality
m59
m59
the js is running on the computer, obviously. You mean someone can't change loggedIn = true?
Sure they can. But you're a retard if your server gives him content based on that.
m59
m59
I said the server won't give them content.
You'll send it to them via carrier pigeons?
m59
m59
but if js is routing views (like angular does) then they would get access to a view with no server data.
01:41
...I'm pretty sure one of us doesn't understand what's going on
m59
m59
Once you're on the page, you can never change pages and access the entire site using angular js
And it's served via magic ponies, I assume, and not what holds your content and logic
m59
m59
if some of that site is restricted, then js is what is keeping up with that and whether to serve the pages
there's absolutely no php code involved in changing views (pages)...
hack loggedIn = true; so now they can access the registered section which asks the server for content which is denied. But they are still on the page.
So you're doing it wrong
01:44
@m59 you lack basic understanding of two things. 1) How client authentication schemes work , 2) How to organize server-side code
m59
m59
I haven't done anything lol. Just trying to figure out what to do.
Not what you described above which is bullshit
@m59 User enters username/password => PHP sends back a validation token => User sends the validation token on every request => PHP serves correct, validated data
m59
m59
yes...I just described that, did I not?
Session ID for example can be used as that token given the user has validated in front of the server
m59
m59
01:46
So right, like I said, the hacker gets to the restricted page but js can't get any content to fill it out.
Let's say you have JavaScript and PHP, the JavaScript does not have the sensitive data, it has to get it from the server which will not send it before the user has validated her/himself
m59
m59
Yes.
I promise, I've been saying that...
Oh, you're saying your problem is that Angular has the views for server pages?
m59
m59
But with angular, js is routing the views (pages), so they can access a useless restricted page (no sensitive data on it). I don't know if that is ok, or if I should avoid that also.
1) That's not the problem since they don't have the data
2) You can send those views only after the user has validated (with AJAX for example)
m59
m59
01:48
well, right, but you could just hack the js at any point to get the view.
m59
m59
It's all useless to me, I'm just making sure I'm not missing anything.
I don't like the idea of someone going to a restricted page, even if the relevant content is inaccessible. I want to make sure that's the expected result of this stuff.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Der Esel nennt sich immer zuerst
@copy "The donkey always called first" ?
@copy "El burro por delante"
01:51
What does that even mean?
m59
m59
Thinking it over, I guess I don't like it because the important content won't be there, but some will (I think).
@copy Ihr Kinder ist ein Hosen
German saying, you shouldn't call yourself first (only donkeys ("fools") do that)
m59
m59
if it were a table of information, the titles in the table head, for example.
@copy In that phrase, how was I 'calling myself first'?
m59
m59
01:53
Well, sorry to be a bother :)
"Zirak and me" would have been politer
Ah, ok :P
I'll try to be more polite :P
I can't decide whether Summer Glau (River Tam) is hot or not.
I was just thinking of that saying
01:54
Mom, ich rufe an.
Oh, we're doing foreign language quotes are we
פִישֵן נישט פארצַען, אִיז אזוֹי וִוי אַ כָאסֵענֶע אוּן קלֶייזמוּרֵען
Nein tun wir nicht
(Hint, it's not hebrew)
Yiddish?
01:57
@copy Sie sind Kohl
It's a very polite saying in Yiddish
"Pissing without farting, is like a wedding without an orchestra"

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