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user5870134
00:26
@WayneConrad Ah, just ended up using a local jQuery script.
03:55
Oooo cool ruby things. Apprently if you def func(*regular_argument, **hash_arguments) it will put all the hash style arguments in the second variable, and all the normal ones in the first. stackoverflow.com/questions/40700203/…
04:17
108
Q: What does a double * (splat) operator do

RoyleeHave you seen a function declared like this? def foo a, **b ... end I understand that a single * is the splat operator. What does ** mean?

 
4 hours later…
08:10
Hi filks
*folks
what is the effect of replacing a has_many collection
does it delete existing associations?
 
5 hours later…
12:44
@WayneConrad Not really, though it sounds 'cinematic'. As the wiki says, "Ollantay is a dramatic play, originally written in the Quechua language. It is considered by some to be of Incan origin---and as such the oldest and deepest expression of Quechua literature---while others believe it to be of colonial Hispanic origin."
I've found it by accident browsing Spotify semi-randomly
 
1 hour later…
13:51
@cafe_ That was fun to listen to. Thanks for the link.
@AlexanderSuraphel I think it does, but I can't swear to it. I'd try it in console while watching the log to see what SQL statements take place.
14:42
Hey guys. Got a simple question here. I'm trying to use rspec and capybara to simulate a user logging in. After doing fill_in and click_button what should happen? Do i use rpsec to expect something? if so how should it go?
i tried expect(response).to redirect_to root_path but received the error undefined local variable or method 'response'
Just found out about ssh -Y
My life has been changed completely
@Cereal Heh, yeah. Fun stuff. Slow; I seldom use it. But useful when you need it.
@angkiki I'm afraid I don't know.
15:12
@angkiki if you're using capybara you can try expect(page).to have_current_path('/foo')
@WayneConrad Very slow, but campus is closed today and I had to finish a lab in IBM rational software architect which is on the campus computers
15:29
@Jared thanks i'll try that out
user5870134
15:47
Good evening, guys.
Where do you live that it's evening, @mango?
user5870134
@Cereal I tend to use "Afternoon" & "Evening" interchangeably, not sure why :D
user5870134
@Cereal It's currently 15:54:09 here, so it's actually afternoon.
16:19
@Cereal Rational Software Architect? Is that what Rational Rose got renamed to?
@Cereal "-Y Enables trusted X11 forwarding. Trusted X11 forwardings are not subjected to the X11 SECURITY extension controls." That doesn't sound very special.
It's not very special, but it's very useful for the rare occasion when you need to use a GUI tool over a SSH connection.
@thesecretmaster It's special in that it is even more dangerous and insecure. Theoretically. Pragmatically, the X11 Security Extensions aren't widely used, so it's more or less the same as -X.
Wait, that's possible?
Its how all of my college year 1 was done. Emacs over x11
16:27
What do I google to find how to use these GUI programs over ssh?
In fact, AFAIK, in the default configuration on Debian and Ubuntu, -X and -Y are the same.
ssh -X somebox and then run a X11 app such as, for example, gitk and watch it (somewhat slowly) pop up on your box.
@thesecretmaster X11 was always designed to be network-transparent. That's the whole point of separating servers (which display stuff on the screen) and clients (which ask servers to display stuff on the screen).
Can you "claim" already opened windows from the user you've ssh-ed in as?
The problem is, most modern apps aren't designed for network transparency. They require far more network roundtrips than older apps, which were written in times where this way of using X11 was the norm: one beefy headless server for running apps, and cheap, thin X11 client terminals for display.
@thesecretmaster I don't think so. Usually clients connect to a server on startup.
16:32
I'm just thinking about using this when I ssh into my desktop (at home) from school.
By the way, thanks for all the background info @JörgWMittag
considers trying to run rubymine over ssh
reconsiders
16:58
Anyone mind looking at my answer and filling in the gaps?
0
A: File only not showing it is empty after size method is called

thesecretmasterIt's because you've only opened the file for writing, not reading. When you file = File.new('output.html', 'w') you open "output.html" for writing, and then, as expected you write "Hey" to it (file.write("Hey")). If you were to open the file now, it would contain "Hey". Here is where it gets weir...

user5870134
I just read an article about a guy who used a PILLOW to kill someone.
Have you ever read Othello (Shakespeare)?
user5870134
He beat him & strangled him to death with a PILLOW.
user5870134
@thesecretmaster No I don't read Shakespeare it's too boring for me.
user5870134
@thesecretmaster Can you give me a quick overview?
17:05
@thesecretmaster That's a pretty clever intuition on your part.
One of my favorite Japanese directors turned Othello into a Samurai flick:
Ran (乱?, Chinese and Japanese for "chaos", "rebellion", or "revolt", or to mean "disturbed" or "confused") is a 1985 jidaigeki epic film directed and edited by Akira Kurosawa, and co-written by Kurosawa, Hideo Oguni and Masato Ide. It is a Japanese-French venture produced by Herald Ace, Nippon Herald Films and Greenwich Film Productions. The film stars Tatsuya Nakadai as Hidetora Ichimonji, an aging Sengoku-era warlord who decides to abdicate as ruler in favor of his three sons. The story is based on legends of the daimyō Mōri Motonari, as well as on the Shakespearean tragedy King Lear. Ran was...
Oh, wrong Shakespeare story. Never mind.
user5870134
I was in utter disbelieve this man used a PILLOW as a weapon.
I don't know the mechanism by which a pillow smothers, but it's a real thing. I imagine that when you put enough weight on the pillow, it compresses it such that air doesn't flow easily through it.
user5870134
You know someone hates someone else when they're willing to use a pillow to kill them.
user5870134
@WayneConrad possibly but still, it's the first time I've heard someone die because of a pillow.
user5870134
It could have been a pillow fight that got out of hand :D
17:16
At one time, it was a popular means of murder in American cinema. SWMBO watches many true crime shows--I'll have to ask her if it's a real thing.
user5870134
@WayneConrad on another note.
user5870134
I don't mean to be rude when I ask this, but were you alive in the 60's? I have a question about that decade.
user5870134
@WayneConrad So, I recently got into an argument with a friend about the state of cars in the 60's and he said they all had a tonne of smoke coming out the back, to which I said, that's absurd. Was he right, were the cars then as bad as they say they were?
user5870134
@WayneConrad Was that rude...? Did I go too far?
17:35
Sorry, I got called to a meeting. You're not rude. I was alive then, and local air pollution was much worse. Car exhaust was acrid and nasty, and when a lot of cars ran in a place, the pollution was bad enough to be both noxious and to impact health.
user5870134
@WayneConrad Thanks for clearing that up for me.
user5870134
On an other unrelated note, I would like to share a JS images pre-loading script. That's allowed me to pre-load images for slide shows.
user5870134
window.PreloadImages = window.PreloadImages || function(array) {
  var preloadImages = {};
  if(!preloadImages.list) {
    preloadImages.list = [];
  }
  var list = preloadImages.list;
  for(var i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
    var img = new Image();
    img.onload = function() {
      var index = list.indexOf(this);
      if(index !== -1) {
        // remove image from the array once it's loaded (for memory consumption reasons)
        list.splice(index, 1);
      }
    }
    list.push(img);
user5870134
You then use it like this:
user5870134
window.PreloadImages(["x.jpg", "y.gif", "z.png"]);
user5870134
17:39
By using this script I've eliminated the "white background flash" I get when the image is changing. Now my image changes almost seamlessly.
Thanks for sharing that.
user5870134
Anytime :)
23:44
@WayneConrad 60s? Ancient times! :)
But, to be more serious, I saw these photos yesterday, warszawa.wyborcza.pl/warszawa/… - depiciting Warsaw before the outbreak of WWII
quite poor

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