« first day (2071 days earlier)      last day (693 days later) » 

10:00
@ANinJa: Please look at @jcolebrand addition, which is more in depth
10:34
@jcolebrand @jcolebrand you said "until that point is reached." here which point are you mentioning please explain. that point means to point when nodejs need io operation if yes how it identify that the particular point is reached. please explain in some detail with simple language as I'm new in this node world
hi guys!
@serbasi: Hi
 
1 hour later…
11:42
Hi
12:37
@AbhiAdr Hi
 
2 hours later…
14:46
@ANinJa Do you know what a callback is?
I apologize for the time difference, if that causes issues, because I am in the Central Time US
@ANinJa When you defer execution, that is what you are describing. You say "Please wait to execute this until the thing I need is available for me." Threads work in that way on the CPU because there are multiple queued with the OS and they are each usually waiting on either their own time to execute or IO to be available.
Ecmascript is different in that it has a single work-thread, with a queue of tasks to be executed (have you ever used setTimeout on a webpage?)
Every cycle, if it isn't working, it checks the work-thread to see if there is a task of some sort waiting to work, or if time has been reached and it needs to fire a new task from the queue (setTimeout)
I hope this is making sense.
I will wait to continue until I hear feedback
@jcolebrand: The question is mainly for me, but may help @ANinJa, when asked to do IO operation (ex. fs.readFile), does node use "free time" between execution of other things to read the file himself? Or as I remember it, ask the OS to get the file and notify node once the file is in memory, which is close enought to "opening a new thread"?
@DrakaSAN do you think I'm making sense?
To me, yes, you are making sense, but since I use Node regularly, I already have a idea of how it work, ANinja seems to still have a strong java mindset, and want to approximate node's working with java
So either a explanation on why node and java aren't at all the same thing and require a entirely new mindset, or how node and java are "close enought" and how you can approximate this for that would probably help him
Also, how are you today?
15:01
@DrakaSAN Well, let's consider what the API tells us.
You have require('fs').readFile and require('fs').readFileSync
Pretty sure it'll go both ways based on the request type, based on code blocks like this one
@DrakaSAN I'm having a pretty good day today, thank you for asking.
I only slept about 5 hours last night but that's all my body apparently wanted.
I'm sure I'll sleep more tonight
@DrakaSAN Yah, I figure. I wanna give him the opportunity to catch up
15:24
Ah, long time I didn't had to read C++
Me too
Sometimes I'm confused when I read stuff, but fortunately good naming still holds true
Seems in ASYNC_CALL it push to the event queue, but since it's C++ and not node, I presume the function is called in a process/thread of its own in both cases
@jcolebrand: Well, 5hrs of sleep is fine as long as you feel well rested, and you didn't had to force yourself to wake up
And there's coffee to keep up while waiting to go back to bed :)
(Coffee, the best friend of any software dev)
@DrakaSAN I don't know, I kind of stopped looking
It may, it may not
That gets deferred to the V8::Isolate class
I didn't go looking to see what that thing does
And going down that much into the rabbit hole may not be the more productive use of our times
Right
Suffice to say that it doesn't "force it to spawn a new background thread" unless you use a library which makes that explicit promise to you
In node almost everything you do runs in the same thread that you started in
15:29
I just hope ANinJa will accept that and make up his mindset without understanding the deep functionning of V8
It's so much so that I would say that with 100% certainty until you know for a fact that you're on a new thread, you aren't
Yup, it is a schrodinger thread, it may or may not be spawned unless you look at the specific case
For certain use-cases and for certain people in the industry, they will be on separate threads as much as 1000% of the time. But for most people, it's not going to spawn a new thread because people are just doing the basic thing and aren't introducing instability into their node app.
@DrakaSAN No, it's basically never going to spawn a new thread unless you force it to.
I mean, V8 might
But that's the implementation of the engine below node
What happens if you switch from the Google js engine to the MS js engine?
Are you promised to have the same runtime specS?
Big but interesting question, but I think I would get lost before understanding the specs, so being able to answer that
15:45
It make me wondering about the future of node, if MS and Mozilla's implementation of node take off one day, will we see the same problems that browser JS have with different implementations and support
@DrakaSAN That is why we are standardizing on ecmascript so that it doesn't matter what happens under the hood, the interfaces will remain the same
16:02
Yup, JS came a long way thoses last years, I remeber it being hated by everyone when I was in highschool. 3yrs later when I enterred engineer school, I had a hard time understanding any critics against JS
ES5 and 6 changed JS so much it's almost a brand new language
and I m waiting for ES7 to come fully to node, I learned JS at the right time
16:25
@DrakaSAN Indeed you did sir

« first day (2071 days earlier)      last day (693 days later) »