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08:06
hm... why do I keep posting in the Ministry? :)
@Scratte hm... what does it do, enlarge the profile pics? If it's the only purpose, I'd make it a function in a more elaborate userscript, what do you think?
You probably hit the "rejoin favorite rooms" and it's one of your favorites? :)
@Scratte never hit rejoin :) but it is one - I can't seem to find anything I do not bookmark
@OlegValter Adds a margin on the right, makes the numbers bigger. Removes some stuff from the title and the huge onboarding box.
I keep it in a separate script because I only want to fire it on the Reivew Queries overview. And I don't want any of the other script to fire on that page :)
the downside to my script that makes the chat use grid is that the chat is too smart for its own good :) I used a trick of setting sidebar height to 1px to keep it sticky despite it being delegated to a column, but it turned out that the chat is so smart, that it collapses rooms and starred messages under "show all" spoilers if there is not enough height :)
^ which actually makes me like the initial devs even more and dread the time when (if) the chat is reworked
I think I am going to publish the userscript that makes long tags visible in full on Stack Apps - the UI team "fixed" it by taking the easy route of wrapping long tag names with an ellipsis
Not sure I understand. I may have blocked some stuff. Can you post a screen shot?
08:13
@Scratte sure - but I think you don't have this script - I never published it because it needs some polish
Using an ellipsis is better than nothing, no? Nobody likes long tags anyway :D
Ahh.. yes. I blocked those headers to give more room for starred messages :)
@Scratte true, better than nothing :)
@Scratte ah, well, it's not that of a problem on wider screens (although I think we have a comparable pair)
@OlegValter Also not much of a problem on taller screens :P
08:15
I am using the SE_Chat_Scroll_the_Starboard. It's a little buggy.. when I join a third room, it will only show the first starred messages of the first two rooms. Then I exit the third room, it show the messages again :O
As a side note, I prefer to have one of my screens rotated 90 degrees. Gives me a lot more vertical space.
@VLAZ me too, but mine currently do not support vertical rotation :)
Ugh... mine does but currently it isn't rotated. For...reasons.
Those reasons being "working from home" and "I'm not a fan of Visual Studio".
I use the same two screens for my home desktop and work desktop and at work, I often need multiple instances of Visual Studio. And if I want to see two at once, I need to horizontal screens.
Because VS just takes up so much space.
@VLAZ don't say that out loud when Cody returns :)
And it's also a pain to keep rotating the screen when switching between which desktop I use.
Meh, I've very recently switched to Raider. It's an alternative to VS and I like it a lot more.
08:21
@Scratte I see Makyen practiced debouncing with this one :)
@VLAZ heh, if you need to do something physically to accommodate an IDE, something definitely went wrong
@OlegValter debouncing?
It's all the tools that you also need to properly see the project. It's not just the code - if it was that, I can just open two text windows side by side. If I need to see two projects side by side, I also need project explorers and other widgets around. Which take up space. Normally on a horizontal monitor, it's best to put them on the left/right. If I were to only use the IDE on a vertical monitor, I'd put them top/bottom. But it's hard to switch between both.
on an off-note - has somebody worked with Heroku deployments recently? I think I am going crazy
Basically, prevent a function from firing if you execute it many times at once. Useful if you don't want to make a lot of calls but just one. Typical example is a type-ahead suggestion. You don't want to make a suggestion for every keystroke the user does. Especially if that involves calling the server each time. So if you debounce the function, you can have it fire when the user stops typing.
I think double-beep uses Heroku.
@VLAZ Thank you :) I'd be spending all my saturday to figure this out if not for that introduction :)
Hmm.. from the silence from Stack, I think we're not getting the "last seen" back.
08:30
I've actually been meaning to look into Heroku. What exactly does it offer? I know it can host your app but can it provide other stuff like a DB/storage? Anything else?
@Scratte well, given the async nature of JS and a very high reliance on events, debouncing is extremely useful. For example, you do not want to do something heavy when listening to mousemove or scroll for too often
@Scratte I suspected as much from the start - as soon as animuson shows up to defend removal, you can bet it is not going to be rolled back
@VLAZ No idea. I'm a slow reader and their websites uses some moving images that pop ups text and removes them to explain what is what. problem is I'm only half-done reading it when it's removed. It angered me enough to close the site and I never went back.
@Scratte I'm honestly happy with that. Not a fan of that stat. I've spent all my online life trying to prevent it because it's just so misleading. With that said, you can always see when the last public action happened. I'm sort of OK with that.
@VLAZ hm... how to put it? CI/CD pipeline and app hosting service, I guess? Kind of like what Azure offers, but more specialized
@VLAZ I was just using it yesterday. An editor linked to a German site.. I posted a comment for them and checked if they were online. They weren't. So I just waited instead of rejecting the edit. This morning they updated their edit and everyone is happy. Last public action isn't a good enough metric for this.
08:34
@OlegValter OK, so it's a bit more, then. Can you connect it to GitHub/BitBucket/etc or do you have to use their own VCS?
@VLAZ yup, has direct integration to GitHub with automatic deployments on push to a certain branch, for example
not sure about BitBucket, but likely
huh, no, not natively, needs a couple of steps to work with GitLab or BitBucket
I was considering Heroku to host Boson.
And is there any storage provided by Heroku?
@VLAZ depends on what do you mean by storage - a persistent storage for app data like a database?
@OlegValter Yes. DB or whatever else.
08:39
Are you making a new and better Stack Overflow? :)
No... maybe?
Actually, I don't have anything I really want to host now.
@VLAZ well, it does have a flavour of PostgreSQL natively, integrates with Amazon RDS, and does have some marketplace integrations as well
But perhaps in the future I might.
@OlegValter Sounds good enough, to be honest.
@Scratte it's more like an inquiry into what it can do, I guess :)
If it can host a new Stack Overflow, it'll be good enough for most other stuff, no? :P
08:42
@VLAZ yup, does not look bad, it also has Redis natively if we are talking about in-memory data management. I do not have much experience with Heroku, though - in my niche all hosting is done by Google, so I mostly have to learn how to use other pipelines in my spare time
Hmm, question - what are "dyno hours"? I'm looking at the pricing and it mentions them. I assume it's some sort of activity metric.
and the infuriating part about today is that the same branch launches an app successfully on a local machine but fails with the exact same setup on Heroku - which baffles me to no end
Or alternatively, it's the hours they let the velociraptors out of their cages.
@VLAZ eh, it's just a fancy name of hourly quotas - same as with Amazon EC2, for example
@OlegValter I'm...not familiar with that, either. Does it mean that if the app is active for 1 hour, that "spends" 1 dyno hour?
08:46
@VLAZ something like that :) EC2 is provisioning a VM instance and bills you for how many hours it runs. Same goes for Compute Engine from Google. They all have a set of free hours per month, and when you exhaust the quota, you have to pay or stop the service - same with dyno hours
I guess some users just have multiple accounts to keep it running then.
OK, then. Last question for now, hopefully you can answer - can you schedule an app to run every once in a while? E.g., every six hours or whatever?
I assume you can, I'm just curious do you do that in the app itself or not.
@Scratte some definitely do - but they (instances) are usually dirt cheap to get you hooked up on using them for larger projects. Which is shady, but heck, it's much better than having to buy a server or sign up for a hosting service to run a simple server
For some clarity, I have an idea for a project which will need to pull some data every once in a while but otherwise will not need to be always on.
@VLAZ heroku does have a scheduler, it comes with caveats, of course (as if they would give us an easy way out to launch a service for a bit and then stop :)), but it is there
I'd consider provisioning an Amazon EC2 instance for that project, IMO, and simply set up a cron job
I can speak from experience that you can run one micro instance 24/7 for a month and still manage to land in free tier
but Heroku might do a good job too
08:54
I have basically no experience with any of the cloud provided app storages. So far, at work we've always hosted our own things.
I want to do some project at home and just host it anywhere. I heard of Heroku but until now, I didn't look into it enough.
@VLAZ ah, don't worry, they are all designed to make a brain dead intern feel like they are CI/CD master :) It took about an hour to start feeling comfortable with EC2, for example, and most of it was spent on calculating how much (if anything) I will have to pay to use it
@VLAZ I think all 3 options in this case are quite good - Compute Engine (Google), EC2 (Amazon), and Heroku. The latter is probably the most developer-friendly - the former barrage you with all the information about provisioning and managing instances a bit too much in my humble opinion
One-off dynos? I don't get it. Isn't is just another way of saying "You can ask us to run something for free or without putting the time on your total hours"?
@Scratte I think so. That's how I read it. But I don't get how much time they actually want to "charge" for running the scheduled task.
I image they don't charge to have it scheduled. But they do from when it starts until it ends.
But I don't really understand the "One-off" thing. How is that different from logging in and starting an application and then shutting it down again?
@Scratte which should take 1 second. But I can only assume I'd be spending more than 1 second off my free hours.
09:06
Depends, I think. It you log in and run "top", I think you're in for a some added dynos :D
I imagine there's a console that can tell you how many hours you have left. So then it's probably easier to run your thing and check how much it subtracted.
@VLAZ oh, no, they are just charged for how much it takes to run the scheduler job itself
@OlegValter So-o-o, what, about 1 second? Or let's say 5 seconds tops? Doesn't seem bad. Even if you schedule hourly, that's barely 2 minutes a day.
@OlegValter The scheduler job or the scheduled job?
Because if I set a job up to run every hour and it runs one second, I'll know how much time it uses. But I'll have no idea how much time is spent for the scheduler to run to work out when to run my job.
@VLAZ yup, I assume the model is mostly aimed to catch folks who have to do long startup processes. It does not exempt the service being run from using its hourly quota itself, so it is more like: total cost = job cost + service cost
after all, you might be sending out emails on schedule, and it might very easily eat up on the scheduler cost
if all it does, however, is launch another app, then it should be something around several seconds of the quota
Does being logged in count? Having an open session?
09:14
come to think of it, one-off dynos function the same way as Google Cloud Functions and Amazon AWS
@Scratte yes, as long as the process is running, you are billed
I'm like VLAZ. I've never tried to have anything hosted.
@OlegValter So.. don't log in unless you have a plan on the things to run? And log out as fast as you can?
That would make me a very nervous person, as I always have to play with things to get it right.
@Scratte Well, I wouldn't have much need for it too, but I had a project where I had to send automated emails daily, so had to learn about all this because it is much cheaper to use Amazon/Google as mailing services than any of the dedicated email service providers. Granted, it comes with the "manage everything yourself" baggage, but heck if that's not fun :)
I imagine it counts processes in plural. So you eat up your quota fast if you first log in, and then start up a process :D That's twice the count.
@Scratte oh, we are talking about a scheduler - if you just log in with a CLI or something, it does not count, obviously
@OlegValter But being logged in is a process too, no?
I wanted to learn all of this by creating a talkative Stack chat-bot and host it somewhere.. but some stupid script ruined my plans :)
09:18
@Scratte I think you are misunderstanding the infrastructure at play here :) All these services usually come with a CLI interface to log in to your account and do stuff like provisioning, management, logging, etc - this always comes for free.
but then you start creating apps / jobs / cloud functions / instances, whatever
@OlegValter OK. I see. That makes it a little easier on the stress level :)
when you launch them, they start eating at your quota
when you stop them, they stop eating at your quota :)
obviously, each app / instance you have running eats at your quota independently
How very logical. But you also have a degree in logic, so I suppose that fits :P
this is how they function, basically - if you are a lonely dev with one app, it is extremely convenient. But if you are a company, the prices creep up pretty quickly, which big companies are very keen on paying (I think their managers get suspicious if something does not have a fee measured in 100 third-world workers wages a month)
There is also the convenience for companies. At my last place we did the maths and it was less expensive to host stuff in Amazon than the server room we already had.
09:23
@OlegValter Yes. That's why you always need to put a high price tag on your product if you want to sell it to companies.
You need the physical machines, you need to pay for electricity, you need to pay for proper ventilation, you need to pay for any of the upgrades. You still pay even if you don't utilise 100% of the machines at the moment, etc.
@VLAZ that's exactly how they function - despite the prices creeping up for companies, it is usually still much cheaper than having a server room + keeping a maintenance person around at all times
Funny story. I know a group of people that made a packet sniffer/categorizer in the early internet days. They worked on it for a few months and it worked very well. They decided to sell it and priced it around 40 USD a month. Nobody contacted them.. at all. Then they raised the price to 400 USD dollars a month and companies stared buying it :D
Mind you, the server room we had was only for internal purposes. We weren't hosting anything for clients. Had we to actually use it more seriously, the costs around it would be much, much more.
@VLAZ true - not to mention emergencies - so most of the time using serverless is going to be much cheaper. One only has to set up their budgets and limits carefully, as I heard a lot of stories about companies / people forgetting to do that and either not counting for the popularity spikes or simply getting in a way of a bot network. Although the providers are usually forthcoming to the requests to drop the charges
09:32
I have an ex-colleague who is now working with Amazon. He managed to run some big charge by accident when deploying something that ran a lot longer than it needed to (caused by some wrong loop or something)
@VLAZ ugh, yes, this is a common story :) Btw, I think here's where my knowledge of English is lacking - were they able to have the bill revoked or not in the end?
Someone at Stack Overflow "stole" the Little Nuts avatar image :D
@OlegValter Not sure. I don't think it was a huge bill. IIRC, a hundred dollars or maybe few hundred. Big but not insurmountable.
@Scratte hm?
spinsch ..hmm, by the look at the account age, it might have been the other way around :)
09:44
@VLAZ well, yeah, certainly not - glad it wasn't that huge of a bill. To be honest, when I first provisioned an EC2 instance, I spent a couple of days closely monitoring it because I recalled a couple of stories about what happens when you forget to set up budgets in cloud services :) Thankfully, all of the providers have automated budgeting that just shuts the service down if it exceeds billing threshold or at least sends you an alert when you reach it
@Scratte on that note, I demand satisfaction from the UI team :)
Apparently, the grey background is applied to the image (??). I expected it to be applied to the image container (.gravatar-wrapper-* class) — Oleg Valter Aug 6 at 0:11
@OlegValter But they added the account age back, no? :)
they did change the background from being applied to the profile image directly to the container :) I just noticed because I was curious why your profile image on Stack Apps looks the way it does
I still have no idea why not just make a wrapper
put two divisions inside it
put image in the first one
put stats in the second one
and apply backgrounds to the divisions
I'm not sure I understand.. the gray background hasn't changed at all for my avatar image on the profile page. Not visually anyway.
@Scratte oh, it's the markup that changed
which, I guess, is going to lead me to posting another bug report or a userscript to amend that
Ohh... you mean that the background is applied to the wrapper's wrapper, instead of the wrapper?
09:54
they did everything exactly as I described but instead of wrapping stats into a second div, they just slapped the stats elements as is
@Scratte not quite, see above ^
The way I understand it is that the avatar's wrapper itself is to be split in half with the first half being a gray background and the other half a white one.
I even have a profile picture that matches that exactly.
@Scratte this is how it should've been done
argh!
what, should I fire up PS to draw that?? For Christ's sake
Ohh.. bummer.. it used to match is exactly
I guess I can only fix that by being logged into that profile for 100 days.. why oh why did they remove the badges if one doesn't have one on all of them?
^ this is what it should've been
with the image and stats elements inside respective containers
but for some reason, it's not
^ and it ends up looking like this
without the stats container
obviously, the rectangular image overflows until it encounters the first stats item
which is why your image is halfway into the lower container
Ahh.. I see.. that's just silly.
10:04
@Scratte well, yeah, and I have zero clue as to why this is the way it is now
and, more importantly, this "background" is not exactly a background, it is a shadow
if you inspect the styles:
box-shadow: inset 0 8em 0 var(--black-050) !important;
it is a grey shadow that masquerades as a background
But at least (?!?..) it's important :D
@Scratte ugh
@Scratte heh :)
I can't be bothered to log into that site every day for 100 days..
Of course.. I'm not fixed for anyone else, since I'm seeing what I'm seeing only due to my own user script :D
Oh.. no. Apparently not :D This also works when I'm looking at me from a different browser. I expected the gray area to move when the box is gone.
But it comes out like this
10:23
^ I am not sure what they were going for with the lower half, so left it as is, but here you are
Ahh.. no. That's never been the way. The avatar has always had a background that's split in half. Upper half gray, lower half site-background.
@Scratte ah, that's even easier
a moment
Yes.. it just need the image container to be split in half. Not the Outer container.
My first avatar just split my image into half/half. But then due to the split being applied to the wrong container, it didn't line up :(
10:37
Argh! Why!!!! is the no consistency on this network?!?.. Urgh!
@Scratte ?
So sometimes it's https://sitename.meta.stackexchange.com/
While other times it's https://meta.sitename.stackexchange.com/
Really?.. Is that so hard to get consistent?
@Scratte where did you find this?
Hmm.. now I can't find the other one..
@Scratte they might've been unable to buy the domain
10:52
@OlegValter Huh?.. isn't the domain stackexchange.com?
I mean can I buy lollipop.stackexchange.com?
@Scratte if it is not bought or you can afford it, yes
subdomains do not come packaged with TLDs
you have to pay for each
TLD?
top-level domain - come on :)
I think that's different for countries.. or different country domains.
I'm pretty sure if places.dk is mine, then great.places.dk is also mine.
Now I may need to pay to use it.. but that's different.
oh, sorry, I am being an idiot right now
11:02
By the basic name.. it's a subdomain, and I'd think that it would pose all kinds of issues if I could register a subdomain where the domain doesn't belong to me.
@OlegValter No worries.. :)
@Scratte no, no, sorry, you are right
I am confusing this with buying out all TLDs
You mean buying .com?
obviously, if you can own a TLD, you can setup DNS records for all the subdomains
@Scratte yes
Yes.. someone became very rich doing that.
I am surprised it seems like I can buy stackexchange.ru
usually companies buy out the heck out of TLDs to avoid scams
11:05
top level domain
I don't to write this out every time you use the abbreviation.
6$ a year according to GoDaddy
because.. I don't use this in my daily life, so it's still confusing to me.
@Scratte ah, sorry, you must understand me too - it's like second nature to think of TLDs as top-level domains for me. I promise I will get to making a userscript one day :)
11:07
I just try to find classes of elements at Stack.. so I'm not even close to that :D
@Scratte don't worry, Stacks is just as confusing to me as it is for you :) I mean I can force myself to, but I still don't understand the idea behind recoupling markup and styles
What's the difference between markup and style?
@Scratte well, how to put it? Markup is the structure, the skeleton of the page. The styling is the outer layer, basically, the outer appearance of the page
first, there was only markup (the first page of Tim Lee is still alive and well)
then, people sought to make these pages look good
then, folks realized that if you keep your markup and style together, you create tight coupling where it is not needed
but then recently something else happened, and we started regressing
So.. markup is essentially the tags.
11:22
@Scratte yes, exactly :) this is exactly what HTML is
a semantic markup that was created to make the web easily parseable and processable
but now, just open some Facebook page: div > div > div > div > div > span. bwah? What does it mean?
it is there solely for presentation, and it goes against everything HTML was supposed to stood for
Heh.. I don't do abstract very well. So I needed to work out what markup means.
this is one half of the problem - I have to give credit to folks on Aaron's team, they try to keep the markup semantic (well, to a varying degree of success)
@Scratte well, really, it's the skeleton: here is where your head is supposed to be, here is where the vital organs live, etc. Each location means something. Not so much anymore
But no one will remember the good stuff you did, when you make a major blunder :D
take basic HTML structure:
<html><head><title></title></head><body></body><footer></footer></html>
@OlegValter Skeleton to me is bones in a physical body. Or the beams that are holding up buildings. When I try to make "skeleton" work for a page, my association completely fails. That's what I mean by "I don't do abstract very well".
11:30
it is a hierarchical structure with nodes and edges where each means something
head means "here goes the meta stuff"
body means "here goes the meat of the page"
footer means "here goes some post-content stuff like credits"
Those tags can be hard to find with all that other stuff in the page :D
And no web developer seems to learn about indentation :D
@Scratte but that's (apart from the <footer> which is not as common nowadays) the structure that you will find on most of the pages
@Scratte sorry, I could not force myself to indent this :)
@OlegValter Nono.. that's not what I meant. Have you seen how the content of Stack is indented? Or some user scripts even?
I've considered when writing html in here to be used in innerHTML to add markers where I can substitute them with indentation, so that when it hits a page, it's nicely indented there as well as in my script.
@Scratte ah, that :) well, indentation is a strange beast among programmers, I have to admit. Some people can wage holy wars about it, and some just type whatever and don't even run linters/prettifiers afterwards
Everytime I see something like this I have my own thoughts about the overall quality.
12:19
So.. I reckon if the script I use for the overall review queue page only just changes the layout of that page, then I shouldn't bother posting it, right?
damn, I just found out that I should've done a clean install of the dependencies - what a bummer to spend time on
I like not having dependencies :)
@Scratte well, we don't have that luxury :) every project has about a hundred or so of them
12:35
@Scratte When real project on it's way, dependencies were auto created not build by developer :)
13:11
@Shree Sure :) But I think Oleg needs to do something manually :)
13:24
:)
13:55
Odd for someone to ask me if I tested a user script with Chrome, when I already say in the post that I tested it with Opera :O
14:17
@Spectric Someone posted a separate Question in Problems of using Stack Focus asking why your StackFocus script isn't working on https://stackexchange.com/.
@Scratte 'tis the same person that asked them for chat, interesting
turned out Spectric forgot to add proper includes (happens), and should've updated correctly
and judging from their screenshot, it should work
Huh?.. I'd not have added that include. What good is it on that site?
@Scratte no good indeed
I asked them in a comment what exactly they expect the script to do on the page.
but that does not mean users that do not know the first thing about userscripts will stop annoying the hell out of developers :)
14:29
Same user that asked me if I tested my script with chrome :D
one got to MSE and reported a "possible bug" on the site because they noticed Makyen's ARC throws "ReferenceError: StackExchange is not defined" in the console
LOL! That's too funny :)
First rule when using user scripts. Turn them off and re-check before reporting a bug :)
@Scratte they were pretty surprised when they were met with a quite hostile reaction on all sides - both from staff (because they really did nothing wrong) and from us (because Makyen also did nothing wrong) :)
@Scratte yes, up to this day, we do not know what prompted them to report - there were no issues with the page
they did their "due diligence", so to speak by reporting suspicious behavior
I'd probably just explain what was going on to them. Bringing the pitchforks seems to be overkill.
you know, it's probably the same people that can report you to the police because you look off
@Scratte oh, I think rene explained it quite nicely
14:33
Oh. I see.. well, if they were being snappy in their post, then I get it.
the post should be up, give me a moment
-10
Q: This is a bug?. I try to view another site and it works fine, but have a problem on Stack Exchange

Francisco Núñez-Todo PoderosoThis is a bug? I try to view another site, and it works fine, but I have a problem on Stack Exchange. Details: I open this URL: https://stackexchange.com/ and open the console. After a few seconds, I get the pictured error. Last version of Windows 10, and the last version of Google Chrome. Up...

note that to grasp the whole situation, you have to view the revision 1 :)
Well.. the script shouldn't fire on the page, so in the current form I understand the issue.
@Scratte yup
I'm actually not sure if any of my scripts fire on it.. :O Ha! just checked. Nothing :)
on an off note, seems like the reporter is right, the script does have problems on this page
but it runs *Spectric's
^ except it has issues, but it likely related to the lack of new stylesheets on this forsaken page
14:38
I did give Spectric a heads up that their scripts fires on pages that they shouldn't. But they've not made any modifications.
well, it does work :)
also the trick is to press Ctrl+Q twice
for the broken modal to show up
@OlegValter Heh.. the Question on Stack doesn't even include this.
not sure why, though, and best we do not advise this to the user :)
@Scratte huh, I knew I should've gone to testing instead of dev :)
Oh.. sure. I'll not say that to them. "Btw, if you press Crtl+Q you'll see the UI, but it's broken.. go make some noise!" :D
@OlegValter In order to be a good tester, you need to be a developer. Lots of developers will come up with invalid excuses for why it's OK for it to be broken.
@Spectric if you see this, please address this when you can (and my sympathy goes to you as you got quite an insistent user) either by excluding stackexchange.com TLD (the easy way) or adding custom styles there (the hard way). But you know this yourself :)
14:41
TLD = Top Level Domain. Or.. Tea with Lemon, stirred not Dry :)
@Scratte well, I don't think that's required - my friend's great tester, but she's never coded a line in her life
but her strong side is communication between parties
on an off-note, technically, @Spectric could fetch and insert new stylesheet to the page, but the consequences might be dire
@OlegValter Sure.. some people have it in them. But it helps to know how stuff works, especially when all the tech-talk starts.
@Scratte that much we definitely agree with - you don't do financial apps and learn nothing about finance, etc. And god bless you if you do aviation programs without knowing anything about it
LOL! Someone upvoted the Question about the Question :D
Wait..?! Do we will buy a domain name?
14:47
@OlegValter If the specifications right, you don't need to know it all before you start working though :)
@OlegValter But.. that screenshort.. with the var prefix = "AutoReviewComments-"; is just priceless :D
@Scratte true
@Scratte yes, it is just gold: they took the time to open devtools, to file a report, but were absolutely blind to the contents of the error message :) This is not surprising, though
But.. I don't see any snark or entitlement in that first revision. It doesn't seem like a rant to me.
Though I did note that there's not a lot of details in it..
@Scratte oh, it wasn't snarky
Ah.. I see. It's probably a shared computer. They might not even know that a user script is running.
15:09
Every time I load the post, I'm disappointed if it doesn't have another downvote :/
@Scratte You can write a userscript for that.
@Scratte Which post?
@KevinM.Mansour I assume the profiles ones
@OlegValter What do you want? I have deployed NodeJS projects and some static sites earlier.
@VLAZ I think it is fine. It is now setting at -317. :)
^ A new post from the new Staff member. Likely we won't finish from this series. :)
@VLAZ What is Raider? I have never heard about this IDE before.
15:33
@VLAZ lol!.. sure, but I want the actual score to go down :D
@KevinM.Mansour Oops, I misspelled it, it's Rider. It's by JetBrains using their platform like IntelliJ (which I've used before) and WebStorm (which I haven't) and others.
Aww.. I liked the Raider name better.
Rider is tailored towards .NET applications. It much faster than Visual Studio which seems quite sluggish by comparison. Also, has more and better refactoring tools which VS sorely lacks.
@VLAZ OK. Yes, JetBrain products are nice. I wish I had WebStorm. :)
@VLAZ Don't let Cody see any of that.. :)
15:37
@KevinM.Mansour oh, we solved it already
I was being a dummy and forgot to do a clean install
But that mean that you have purchased a license? I think Rider don't have a Community edition. :)
@OlegValter Clean install of what?
@KevinM.Mansour npm ci
npm clean install I expect.
@KevinM.Mansour Yes, we have a license through work. We already had a license for ReSharper, I believe that was upgraded.
@OlegValter OK. :)
15:39
@Scratte well, it may have been the intention behind the naming, but the command is exactly that npm ci, it's not abbreviated: npm-ci | npm Docs
^ also shout out to NPM for serving the page with cross origin access set to * which allowed my script for chat links to pull the title directly
Argh!.. that is horrible.
@VLAZ WebStorm is better in showing Unused Promises. Visual Studio Code has currently no possibility to show it. :)
Also I like JetBrains Mono font. :)
Does anyone know how to find out which maven archetypes will result in which structure?
@Scratte This is Java, no?
@KevinM.Mansour Hmm, I'll have to see if our JetBrains work license also includes WebStorm, so I can try it out. I've heard good things about it but it was paid and I never bothered with it. Right now I use Visual Studio Code and it's by far the best JS editor I've seen.
15:45
@KevinM.Mansour Yes, it is
@Scratte OK. I am out. :)
@Scratte I haven't used archetypes with Maven but I think they should be documented somewhere. I'm trying to find that.
I guess you can always just go to an empty folder, make a simple POM with the archetype you want to test and run that...
I've tried to find this many times. Maybe my Google-foo is off.
@VLAZ Sure.. but there are hundreds.
Also.. I don't understand how it really works. Does Maven keep track of which archetype it uses? I mean one can initialize one without adding it to the pom, no? How how does it know where to find stuff?
@Scratte Maven is annoying. It's...badly documented. It has documentation but I find it's just scattered too much. You find one page about X which only has a single paragraph, then after 30 minutes of searching you find a completely different page with loads more details which isn't even in the list of results.
@VLAZ Yes, give it a try. Make sure that WebStorm has little problems like little slower than Visual Studio Code but really starting up duration won't be important in big project or for people like Oleg Valter who don't sleep. ;)
15:50
Yes. I find maven is generally like a weird black box. Problem is when stuff doesn't work, then you have to go and read the source code?!?.. And nobody wants to have to do that.
@Scratte As I said, I've not used archetypes much. AFAIK, they are sample project structures, so if you generate a project from a given archetype, you get it scaffolded quickly. I don't think the archetype really matters after the initial generation. Although if you have it in the POM it hints at future maintainers where stuff should be.
Right.. but how does it find the test stuff if no one tells it where it is?
@Scratte Yeah...I was looking for some way to do something fairly trivial as part of the build process (can't remember what exactly) but I had no luck with anything that was out of the box. Looked into more plugins and there still wasn't anything. Finally found some thread where somebody said "Oh, it's super easy - you just write your own plugin for that" and pointed at the Maven source code to show how you can hook into the build process. At that point, I was out.
There's Maven Archetypes which lists some basic one. But the full list seems to be maven-archetype.list. It like a jungle.
@Scratte as in /test?
Maven is quite opinionated. Which...has upsides and downsides, I guess.
As long as you put stuff where it expects them it's fine.
15:56
It seems that each type will structure the folders differently. So then if the test or the source folders is in different places, how does maven know where to find them?
Unfortunately, it's quite hard to know where it expects them.
@Scratte You can override some of the expectations of Maven. I can't exactly remember how right now but it's possible. You have to configure a bunch of the plugins in the POM file to do that.
I guess an archetype might also contain that information?
@VLAZ Right. So if I add the archetype to the pom, then I should be all good?
Maybe? As I said, haven't used them.
I found this page which documents a few of the archetypes.
I guess you can add more from the repo. Dunno if you have to add them as dependencies or not, though.
@VLAZ Isn't that the same that I linked to? :)
I have to be honest - I didn't check your link...
16:01
No problem :)
The other link is the horrible one
@Scratte re: the emoji post - while I share your sentiment, I am not sure if that should be the case - last time I checked, it was considered a rookie mistake to count multi-byte sequences as multiple chars
Gaaargh... OK, so you can find the archetypes in the central repository. I picked one at random: com.liferay.maven.archetypes:liferay-hook-archetype and here it is. I just have no idea what is in that, as there is no documentation.
I guess you can pick a version and open its POM file which will give you an idea about the archetype. But I don't think it's great.
I swear... I don't like the JS ecosystem. I think Maven is better in many regards. But when you start to look for stuff like that I get really frustrated with Maven.
oh, sorry, I'll see myself out, there is a Maven gathering :)
mvn install oleg
damn, I can't joke back, touche
16:14
Maven is no joke.
16:30
Hmm.. surrogate pairs are two unicode codepoints, no?
Not a codepoint that will not fit 16 bits.
They're mainly used in Asia where there's a unique symbol for a family name
I guess might be a random question but - I'm taking suggestions for what to buy from Amazon. I have a gift card and around 20 Euro left over from it. So, I'd want something around that amount. However, I'll have to wait for a while for somebody to bring it here (no Amazon in my country...) or it has to be something digital.
@OlegValter Yes, but using UTF8 which I expect is used, makes the difference between using two bytes or 4 bytes. In Java, which internal uses UTF16, a higher valued codepoint will show up as two individual chars.
So that makes the difference between having set X varchars for the title field in the SQL Server database... Not that I'm an expert in how varchars are represented internally.
@VLAZ Thank you for this. And yes. I find this to be a really mystical part of "Java". I wish there was some more transparency to this.
@VLAZ I usually get usb flash cards. You can never have enough of those little helpers :)
The internet.. and the cloud is great and all. But I just like a backup under the floorboard too. Just in case.
Yeah, I don't want to buy stuff like that from Amazon. Again, no Amazon around here, so either I have to pay just plain too much for delivery (which I can just spend elsewhere here) or I have to wait until pandemic is lifted, at which point I can get a "free" delivery (colleagues from Germany will visit and they can take some small deliveries here).
So far, I've picked one book I want to get. I'm looking for maybe something else. I'm guessing approximately book-sized.
But all the decent programming books I want a physical copy of are bloody expensive.
16:56
You mean.. the good stuff costs more? :)
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