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12:02
Don't seems to be reliable on client side.
@FlorianMargaine What does (defmethod name progn (params) ...) mean?
Hi guys, how will I link a materialize nav tab to other page because the role = "tab" in bootstrap doesn't work on it.
12:17
Is it okay to omit break from switch case to allow your code to fall through?
crl
crl
ah.. I don't know anymre if I should manage the positions of my popovers with react or just simple js
this.refs.el.css({top:'..', left:'...'}) or this.setState({style: {top:'..', left:'...'}})
it's just the same
1 message moved to Trash can
@王庭茂 Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com or pastie.org
Not necessarily for an alias, but for code you want to run in both cases i.e.
switch (_sortMethod) {
  case 'az':
  case 'za':
    _.map(data.Results, function(result, i, results){
      result.LCTitle = result.Title.toLowerCase();
    });
  case 'az':
    data.Results = _.sortBy(data.Results, 'LCTitle');
    break;

  case 'za':
    data.Results = _.sortBy(data.Results, 'LCTitle').reverse();
    break;
Yes that is what I means by alias... 'az' and 'za' means the same thing
12:22
Hai
[ Seems that I can only send either all code or all plaintext..
Any ubuntu users around?
15.10
Run apt-get update for me pls
@littlepootis then?
12:23
Tell if everything's okay
crl
crl
rm -d /
It of cause should be OK...
IVE DONE IT
I FIXED IT
Actually not.. It shows:
E: Could not open lock file /var/lib/apt/lists/lock - open (13: Permission denied)
E: Unable to lock directory /var/lib/apt/lists/
E: Could not open lock file /var/lib/dpkg/lock - open (13: Permission denied)
E: Unable to lock the administration directory (/var/lib/dpkg/), are you root?
You haven't fix it.
apt-get need to be run as su
12:25
@littlepootis What had you fix?
I haven't. Ubuntu mirrors are updated every 6 hours. Someone fucked it up, it's back up again.
@Billy Yeah, that's fine
Though you could write that particular function without falling through like that
@Meredith Yeah, if the sort method is 'za', it falls through to the 'az' and then breaks.. But there's no continue; in switch statements so how can I get it to eval the first block for both cases and then the next one (whichever is applicable) as well?
Had to downgrade to low-res textures for KSP. I want to throw up. :'(
Use multiple switches
12:30
Bah. Might aswell just do an if condition before that switch
(there are other sort options so the switch is merited)
Btw that's a bit of an abuse of map
Do something like Result.LCtitle = _.map(data.results, (r) => r.title.toLowerCase)
Yea... don't use map to iterate over an array.
That is the only way I see it being used in the documentation...
Nope
Where are you seeing that?
12:34
Map is used to transform the contents on an array.
> "Produces a new array of values by mapping each value in list through a transformation function (iteratee)."
Use each instead: underscorejs.org/#each
No, that's the right place to use map
It's just not used correctly
@Meredith: He doesn't want to replace the elements with lowercase variation, he's adding lowercase variations to the elements
Result.LCTitle = _.map(... what is this
Where does that var come from
I suppose I might as well use a for loop
12:39
Yeah you're right, each is probably easier here
I'm always right.
I mean, it's a worse solution but it's less complicated
Why is it worse?
each is always worse than map
Unless you're using it to print something
Where did you get that nonsense from?
12:42
I mean, the point of each is to introduce side effects
What?!
If you aren't introducing side effects, then you shouldn't use each
The point of each is to iterate over an object or array.
Simple as that
When do you use map, then?
To modify the contents of an array.
!!> [1, 2, 3, 4].map(function(x){ return x*2; })
12:45
@Cerbrus [2,4,6,8]
Are you guys talking about forEach?
no, [].each
!!> Array.prototype.each
@maowtm "undefined"
@Meredith That doesn't exist.
@maowtm: Underscore's each
12:47
Oops yeah I meant _.each
but yeah forEach is the same
anyone integrated payment gateway before ??
each applies a function to each element of an array w/ side effects
map does it without side effects
@CodeBean Into what?
@Meredith: back up your claims
a website ??
12:48
What?
@Meredith forEach don't "apply" functions..
That "side effects" talk looks like a bunch of paranoid prejudice.
i am building a trading website
Do you know what a side effect is?
I feel like that's where you're having difficulty
In this context, I have no idea what you're talking about with "Side effects"
12:50
js is awsome
@Meredith forEach call a function with one of its arguments set to a element. It is your choose whether or not to cause side effect..
It's just simple. Use map to transform array elements, use (for)each to iterate over elements.
That's all there is to it.
In computer science, a function or expression is said to have a side effect if it modifies some state or has an observable interaction with calling functions or the outside world. For example, a particular function might modify a global variable or static variable, modify one of its arguments, raise an exception, write data to a display or file, read data, or call other side-effecting functions. In the presence of side effects, a program's behaviour may depend on history; that is, the order of evaluation matters. Understanding and debugging a function with side effects requires knowledge about...
@Meredith You can cause side effect by using the index given, or you can just use the element without modifying it..
You use foreach when your function causes (or may cause) a side effect
map when you aren't
12:52
@Meredith: no!
Just... no.
Btw, forEach can't cause side-effects
Try it
@Meredith I believe that forEach is just like for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i ++)
That's not what map is made to do.
map doesn't either, it just creates a new array
!!mdn map
12:53
@maowtm Map
@Cerbrus I assume that when he says "side effect" he means that it alters the original array, which map doesn't
@maowtm It's usually recursive but yeah
!!mdn Array.prototype.map
!!mdn Array.prototype.map
Neither of them alter the original array
> map calls a provided callback function once for each element in an array, in order, and constructs a new array from the results.
Right
And you can cause side effects with either method
But if you wanted to print each element of an array, you would use each, not map
@SomeGuy Good point that map creates a new array.
12:54
If you wanted to square each element, you'd use map
@Meredith Now you're contradicting yourself.
Because printing is a side effect
That's what we've been saying the whole darn time
No that's what I said
If you want to transform elements, use map.
12:55
You use side effect functions in each, not map
If you want to iterate over them, use each.
@Cerbrus Because printing is a side effect that is not what you are saying, is it?
Forget about those "side effects" already.
Side effects are really important
"Side effect" is too vague
12:56
That's why I'm being so anal about the difference lol
It can mean any operation.
It isn't vague
anything
It's as vague as it can possibly get
You just don't use map if you don't intend to modify the input array. You don't use map if you only need to iterate over the array. That iteration is what each is made for.
+1; Side effect is a problematic word without saying caused effect on where..
so you wouldn't have a problem with x.map(console.log)
12:58
I WOULD
(besides the error that would get thrown)
Geez
console.log doesn't modify the array
If you want to log every single element, you're iterating over the array, so you use each.
I believe using function like this won't work.
12:59
lol
Nither will x.forEach(console.log) work
Yeah you'd get an error
I was just being lazy
x.map(::console.log)
!!> [1, 0, '', '1'].map(Boolean)

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