« first day (297 days earlier)      last day (3491 days later) » 

00:01
@LiamMartens Heh. In this case they pretty much always do. They're not neat people at all. The one doing the back end code is the kind of guy who uses <br /> and the guy who's helping me out on the front end does not know the meaning of organization.
having a unified set of coding practices helps
set style rules and make sure you both follow them
@Ariane @rlemon is pretty right about that
Oh we have the same. Technically. But they don't care about them very much. As long as it works they make little effort to make things right.
try to use well known styles as well. personally I prefer KNF. but there are many well documented styles to choose from
Doesn't help that we work on deep frozen computers, sometimes Windows 7, sometimes Xp, sometimes Mac OS, and not all of them have the adequate tools. Plus they set aptana as default for everything. >.>
00:03
In computer programming, an indent style is a convention governing the indentation of blocks of code to convey the program's structure. This article largely addresses the C programming language and its descendants, but can be (and frequently is) applied to most other programming languages (especially those in the curly bracket family). Indent style is just one aspect of programming style. Indentation is not a requirement of most programming languages, where it is used as secondary notation. Rather, programmers indent to better convey the structure of their programs to human readers. In par...
KNF? Never heard of that.
Kernel normal form, or KNF, is the coding style used in the development of code for the BSD operating systems. Based on the original KNF concept from the Computer Systems Research Group, it dictates a programming style to which contributed code should adhere prior to its inclusion into the codebase. KNF started out as a codification of how Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie formatted the original UNIX C source code. It describes such things as how to name variables, use indents and the use of ANSI C or K&R C code styles. Each BSD variant has its own KNF rules, which have evolved over time to d...
Indent style is good
Don't know KNF though
you'd be surprised. you probably know a lot of these styles (because you've seen them in play and adopted them) just don't know their names
research programming styles / indentation styles and you will start to pick out the ones you use currently and learn a bit more about them
But yeah, problem isn't style conflict, it's following a damn style, whatever it is. I can deal with {'s on the next line. But messed up indentation and many code instructions per line, less so.
00:05
again making you code more consistent and faster to comprehend / maintain
@Ariane when deadlines hit and you need to scan code quickly to find bugs, styles / indentation means a lot
you can easily miss things.
@rlemon I know it does. T_T
true things
Lemme show you the monster that Aptana Studio has created.
prepare for a horror
00:07
arr.map(function(item) { return function() {
    this.foo = function() {
        return this.bar;
        };
        this.bar = {
        a: 2
    };
}.bind(item) });
tell me that wouldn't just fuck with you
@Ariane Meh, I've seen worse
@rlemon "foo" and "bar" make me furious to begin with.
@Ariane those indents are so, strangely done ;o
Right?
@Ariane learn to love them
00:08
@Ariane haha
foo bar biz baz bing bop
@rlemon Never.
But I have seen worse as well
anything that is clearly a placeholder variable for the example
@mikedidthis don't you have work in the morning? :P
00:09
@rlemon There's always (or almost always) a way to use something better than a meaningless variable.
for a meaningless example, not really.
"input" and "ouput" are already heaps better.
"yourDomElement"
<div id="foo"></div>
console.log(foo); // in modern browsers there is no need to getById on elements with an ID defined.
00:10
the example was about indentation
^ if I was showing this as an example there is no need to use anything but foo
maybe 'a' ?
it is not important what they are called. that is the point
Always, I work best with 6 hours sleep.
foo and bar are recognized as 'meaningless dummy crap'
using anything with meaning brings your attention away from the actual deal
^ that
00:11
<div id="myDiv"></div>
console.log(myDiv); // in modern browsers there is no need to getById on elements with an ID defined.
@Ariane longer to write.
@Ariane look at this simple HTML page, this is worse I think

http://1drv.ms/1d75X2e
@rlemon ^^ that
Pretty bad.
indeed , so yes I have seen worse
00:12
keystrokes === time. time === money. so keystrokes === money. (however there are many other considerations here)
I will always almost go for readability > minimal LoC
I can't blame him though, he has only been programming for a couple of months
if( condition ) statement; // never

if( condition ) {
    statement; // way more readable.
}
I never sacrifice clarity or readability. Because I can't stand it in others.
the whole point in placeholders is that they are completely arbitrary
if( condition )
{

}
00:13
yea but you cannot really be consistent with that
Oh ugh I dislike opening braces alone on their line so much.
//annoying
I don't always put the first bracket on the same line
return { a: 1, b: 2}
how would you write that?
Me? Well without any context,

return { variableA: 1, variableB: 2 }

Or ideally:

return {
   variableA:1,
   variableB:2
}
ugh
Copy paste failed.
00:15
or bracket on seperate line ;D
@LiamMartens that throws errors
function foo() {
    return
    {
        a: 1,
        b: 2
    };
}
foo();
try it
Edited.
@rlemon Really..?
you need to also pick a convention that is possible to follow in your language
00:16
oh does it , wait what language are we talking about right now?
@BillyMathews return expects something. a new line terminates it because of ASI
None I think.
(Automatic Semi-colon Insertion)
return
{
    a: 1,
    b: 2
};
this ^
turns into this:
00:16
@rlemon There's such a thing? What language does this?
return;
{
    a: 1, <- unexpected tolken
    b: 2
};
@Ariane Javascript does this
it is a mistake if you ask me
wait does it , never noticed maybe hm
Ooooh riiiight. It indeed doesn't allow me to make my code pretty, always.
yes it does.
does it only do that for return?
00:17
!!google javascript ASI
no, for everything.
@BillyMathews Most stuff really
if()
{

}
off-topic, but I wish I could set a touchpad 3 points pressure to do a middle-click
00:18
works because of how the language works.
return just expects some different stuff. but it is the most common mistake you see from people who use said style.
well I guess your right, but I have never encountered problems , don't really know
I think you can manage with
var myArray=new Array(
    1,
    22,
    13
);
don't use new Array
use array literal notation
avoid calling the constructor function
How do you do that?
var arr = [
a, b, c
];
same for objects
var obj = {
a: 1
};
00:19
Why?
What's wrong with the constructor?
1) shorter to write. 2) less overhead for the same thing
Overhead?
work done in the background to facilitate what the code you are writing is actually doing
@rlemon I saw 2 coming but not 1.. that's just lazy :P
not at all :P
00:21
Hah. So basically it needs to translate Array(balues) but it natively understands [values]
@rlemon Actually visually I totally prefer Array(). It's obvious, at the first glance, that it's an array. It's written Array.
382
A: Is JavaScript 's "new" Keyword Considered Harmful?

Shog9Crockford has done a lot to popularize good JavaScript techniques. His opinionated stance on key elements of the language have sparked many useful discussions. That said, there are far too many people that take each proclamation of "bad" or "harmful" as gospel, refusing to look beyond one man's o...

there is issues with 'new'
seriously. any experienced dev (js) will tell you not to use it
especially for arrays and objects.
Does the same go for PHP?
there are cases where you want it. but those (generally speaking) are not them ( [] and {} )
interesting
@BillyMathews no clue. haven't gotten that deep into php
00:23
I never use "new" in PHP
I didn't know "new" existed in PHP.
I usually just do $var = array();
Yeah. Me too.
@Ariane new does exist though
I think
yea when working with classes
you do use 'new'
00:25
I use 'new' in js all the time. but I can also avoid it as well. I probably should.
Oh yeah. That. Unfortunately my teacher hasn't taught us objects much. Too many have a lot of trouble without them.
object creation can be quite expensive in animations / games.
that kinda shit
well my teacher hasnt even begun teaching me PHP ;D , I'm a self-thought one :|
function Person(name,gender) {
    this.name = name;
    this.gender = gender;
}
var me = new Person('rlemon','male');
when making your own class like functions 'new' is very handy
@rlemon I haven't really looked into game development
00:27
I don't even know how you'd create "me" without new.
Though I have tried using CryEngine for a short time
@Ariane you can't
amirite.jpg?
I surrender. I'm redoing the indenting myself. And I'll tell my teammate not to use Aptana for any reason, ever.
I haven't actually heard from Aptana :D
Me neither, until ITs decided to install it on the computers in December.
00:30
var me = Object.create(Person.prototype);
me.name = 'rlemon';
me.gender = 'male';
...Not intuitive at all.
I like "new".
avoids the new keyword there. but I don't follow this in practice.
But basically, most of the reason is that it's a little more taxing to use "new"?
rlemon.ca/js/Brushes.js <- code for the header animation
@Ariane basically - Douglas Crockford has some descent arguments against it
!!google Crockford on the new keyword
00:32
ugh
not just so questions dork
nice website I like the design
do you know who Douglas Crockford is?
!!wiki Douglas Crockford
well now I do
his word surely isn't "law", but don't ignore the guy because of his lacking design skills.
00:34
Hmm. I see. Shrug That something is a bit less taxing doesn't really move me when "new" seems so much clearer.
well, I won't but I like a good design though
@Ariane well I tried. using new Array over [] is silly and I will not be the only person to tell you that in your career I am sure of it.
Well maybe someday when I'm more used to JS. Right now I still struggle a bit.
fair enough
@Ariane how long have you actually been programming??
00:38
At all? 8 years maybe. But back then, I was 14 and only using a custom script language for a game. Programming for real, a bit less than 3 years.
But well, I was taught JS so wrong you wouldn't believe it, so it doesn't really count.
hmm, what custom script language was that then?
eAthena script
hmm never heard of it..
is it like made for beginnners or?
Uh.
I did quite a bit of work in sphere .55i (Ultima Online pre runUO days)
00:43
dont know that either haha
@LiamMartens An example. pastebin.com/MuMac7qq
oh looks complicated enough ;D , but I have never seen this scripting language :)
Heh. You'd have to have been into private Ragnarok Online servers for that.
hmm , what Ragnarok??
I do think it's better than starting with VB, which I did
I started with BASIC a long time ago.
it is a fun little language.
00:48
@LiamMartens Well uh. It's a game. o.o
VB was pretty good for its time.
RE INDENTING DONE. SHIT.
yea for it's time , but compare VB to other languages like C# or even C++, its not that good
also when you think about the syntax VB is way different than most of the other languages
@Ariane well congrats ;D
well it is a BASIC language
BASIC (an acronym for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) is a family of general-purpose, high-level programming languages whose design philosophy emphasizes ease of use. In 1964, John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz designed the original BASIC language at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. They wanted to enable students in fields other than science and mathematics to use computers. At the time, nearly all use of computers required writing custom software, which was something only scientists and mathematicians tended to do. Versions of BASIC became widespread on microcompu...
I know BASIC ;D
that is just within my knowledge of programming ;)
But still I don't reallly like it
00:51
Oh. BASIC was an acronym. I thought it just meant that it was a programming language that could only do basic things.
C# is really nice.
but it all really depends on what you want to do
Yea I like C# as well
what do you mean?
well, I mean we are in the HTML room discussing languages. I assume you are both web devs?
but I don't really know a lot about you so :P
Yeah I only do web stuff indeed.
well sort of, at the moment I do a lot of web development, but I also do software for .NET for example
00:54
@LiamMartens good stuff. what kinda software? winforms/WPF/ASP/..??
I unfortunately have only ever ventured into C# and winforms.
In the beginning winforms, but I learned XAML, so I also do WPF, because Microsoft might be dropping winforms support in the future
Sheesh. I'm certainly looking forward to the programmer preparing the image resizing thing in PHP. The slider loading and converting 15 images with an average size of like 2500 x 3000 px is so slow.
@LiamMartens yea that dropping support is starting.
latest VS and stuff has limited compile options
Oh is it already starting? I wasn't really aware of that.
(I still have to support XP as well)
no more .msi support
00:56
I mostly use WPF anyways, but winforms is easier for simple programs I think
just drag and drop, don't mind the composition
@Ariane I have an image resizing script if you would need one
(I work in Agri industry at a company that makes automation control systems.) the interfaces I design generally are not meant to be the prettiest. just functional with things in the right place.
@LiamMartens Oh thanks, but I think he'll be fine.
when ever I try to jazz things up I get told to change it back because they will not like it :/
but i'm slowly getting through to them that the older guys are going to retire soon and their kids will take over and want this to be updated.
@rlemon yes that is one of the uses for winforms today, functional not pretty, and to support lower versions of the .NET framework,
4.0 is the best I got. (win xp limit)
00:59
switching everything to WPF will be quite a task though
most of the stuff I support is c# 2.0
what is the earliest version of c# you've worked with?
i think 2.0 as well, but that was for kind of an 'illegal' ish program, that I wanted to work on pretty much every PC
so I went for the lowest .NET I could work with
after 3.5 it is a much better language
well yea, they have improved alot
Grr. Someone gave me a CSS tip recently here, and I tried it out quickly in the style editor and it worked. But now that I'm trying to put it in the actual CSS...
01:03
@Ariane what tip? :)
@rlemon what do you think about C++?
useful for gaming and low(er) lever programming (also if you plan on doing anything not on windows)
http://www.uqac.ca/pral/beta/

Trying to make all .item but .active invisible in the media query for width below 815px. The slider.
stop posting credentials :P
@rlemon yes true; and what about the so called 'speed difference', they say C++ is way faster. However I haven't really experienced major speed differences
.item:not(.active) *, .item:not(.active) {
    display: none !important;
}
01:06
use jsfiddle or jsbin or something
the chat is google indexed and you really don't want to be giving out any credentials here.
Hmm, not sure it would help. It's a slider that I can't really reproduce.
never exchange credentials really ;D , bad practice
Sigh, I'm telling you it's not important. Those will disappear as of next week and they're only meant to prevent random people from typing in /beta and committing the crime of seeing an unfinished site.
well yea but it's still a bad practice ;D
01:09
Anyway, would you have an idea?
also (if i'm being critical) that css is atrocious
But I can understand putting a simple protection on the beta site
now what is your problem.
@rlemon That CSS is compiled LESS.
you can get it to output prettier
01:10
I had enough trouble getting Lessphp to work. x.x
I switched to scss a while back. ask @mikedidthis how
Shrink your window until the menu disappears and becomes a button.
At this point I want the slider only to have the middle image. which is div.item.active.
I don't even use LESS
It's not a LESS problem, just a CSS one. Wondering why I can't get that thing to disappear.
so the indicator won't disappear?
01:12
what "thing"
the shopping cart?
The slider's side images. On desktop it has 3. On mobile it has to be a single image.
If you don't see the slider, reload. The huge images are making it buggy at the moment.
now circle what shouldn't be there.
on my screen those blue buttons are still next to each other
Lol. Reload the page.
@Liam It's a Chrome bug. Only when you load the page THEN shrink the window. Odd bug, that.
ignore the double bottom, that was the screenshot utility
01:14
yea that is what I see as well
but what is wrong.
don't you see the rotating loading circle?
The slider. Well for now it's still buggy. Y'all reload the page until you see a functional slider. The programmer will fix that soon enough.
you see what I see
slider is an input type. you mean the carousel ???
ok now I see images
at first I only saw "Loading"
01:17
Yeah, it's also called that.
but slider is already a thing
So you only want the middle one to be visible ?
you can't just dub something else a slider when it as well also has a name
@rlemon wowslider.com It's a valid term.
@Liam Yes.
no it is a stupid term that was adopted
(imo)
01:18
I'm French. Don't ask me about fine English details.
sliders are a thing. so are carousels. someone fucked up a while back and now we know carousels also as sliders.
welll are you sure you can do this in CSS only?
I'm trying to take it back for sliders everywhere.
Sliders are these things aren't they?
http://jqueryui.com/slider/
who's with me?!
@LiamMartens yes
01:19
@rlemon I am with you ;D
@LiamMartens Well, yes. The middle image, if you look with Inspect element, is given the class .active. Which means I should be able to grab it, and thus everything but it, with CSS.
@rlemon Okay, I get it now, slider isn't the right term. But don't blame me for inventing it.
:P I don't. I was just trying to inform another person. thus taking it back! :P
But are you sure the JavaScript doesn't take over the style? Since I see inline styles as well?
01:21
@LiamMartens !important should beat those, no?
I am not sure whether it also beats inline style
also if you look closely
inline styles have 1000 specificity
the active class switches around automatically
which is how the images turn around,
@rlemon and what about !important.
01:23
Yeah. Essentially the center element is always .active.
oh wait now I get what you mean :)
(if you need to use !important; for anything but overriding on content you are not writing, there is a design flaw)
@rlemon Well this is precisely what I'm doing. That and media queries that refuse to obey and I didn't have time to research why.
hmm I don't see display:none; showing up in the CSS though
01:27
well inline styles are not your issue
ah I see it in your CSS mediaQueries.css
Yeah it's there but it doesn't show up on inspect element. Which means I'm not selecting it properly. But damn, should be simple enough.
indeed that is what I noticed as well
uhm
what if you take .controlls
out
then it works
at least with me
  #slider>div .item:not(.active) {
    display: none !important;
  }
...? I was in .controlls? Damn, I'm blind.
01:32
Woohoo, it be working. Thanks!
no problem :)
Getting some sleep, its 2:35 here in Belgium, so bye
G'night! And thanks again.
02:21
Could anyone tell me why when I add a display: inline to my text style, it overwrites the text-align: center, and moves it all back to the left?
 
2 hours later…
04:09
Morning
04:38
All sorted here
Is the javascript room the best place to get help with google maps api embedded on my site?
04:53
I have a small query
@all goodmorning guyz
!!help
!!/help
!!\help
WTF :((
05:34
any1 here??
05:58
mornin
@Vicky caprica is offline, the bot will be online when @rlemon logs in...

« first day (297 days earlier)      last day (3491 days later) »