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08:55
anyone knows a good book for nodejs?
09:08
I've been going through "Node.js in Action" as a beginner and I think it's good to learn the ropes.
09:19
The one downside of it that I've encountered is that since it was written in 2014, some of the libraries covered in the book (for instance Express) have evolved since and the code needs to be adapted if you want to build the example applications in the book
(or otherwise use older versions of the libraries)
@Bill I never read a book on js or node.js.. I learn by digging in and play around :) but the importance when coming into nodejs I believe is asynch, promises and other flow tools. This book seem to cover the modern techniques: davidherron.com/blog/2017-01-01/…
node is very frequently updated, so look for a fresh copy at least, even if you don't think David, the author, is the first you wanna learn from :)
09:50
@ErikLandvall i am currently doing that but i think i can improve even faster if i found a good book. And also it will be a good time killed if i am on a bus unable to test my skills and want to kill time :D
yea all the books that i have found are old.. and talking about nodejs 0.10 i cant find anything new at least from a library...
What version do you use when trying stuff out? @Bill
i use both 6.9 and 7.7 (6.9 at work and 7.7 at home)
and i started using node js since 6 ver i havent even look all the older ones...
You don't have any github account?
Looking at your profile, didn't see it.. :)
You comming from a c background? or what did you do before nodejs?
10:04
well i was a c++ programmer but now i work as a web developer
most of my works are private at gitlab :)
 
4 hours later…
14:22
anyone can explain usage of timers in Node.js loops?
@SerhatAtes: To make a timeout or to measure the time taken by the loop?
to make a timeout, i asked a question and got solution but i need some clear explanation.. how it works in async manner
To set a timeout:

setTimeout(function foo()
{
// do cool stuff
}, 10e3 );

If this does not explain what you like to know, pls elaborate.. don't like guessing games :)
i mean in that manner
for (var i = 1; i <= 1000; i++) {
setTimeout(function () { console.log('something') }, 3000);
}
and solution is
for (var i = 1; i <= 1000; i++) {
setTimeout(function () { console.log('something') }, i * 3000);
}
This will set 1000 timers that all will trigger about 3 seconds later
the solution you have has stated an interval of 3 seconds in betweeen each
14:32
i understand scheduled 1000 messages delayed at the same time , after 3 seconds i got every messages same time
correct
Guys, quick doubt: using a HTTP PATCH method to update an array: should the server iterate through the array to check what's in need of updating OR should the server believe the incoming array and just replace the existing entity with the incoming one ?
(appart from the "is this actually what I want" checks, obviously)
a detail that could be good to know, your stated timeframe does not have to be respected by nodejs, if the loop is blocked you will have to wait for other jobs to complete before the rutin is triggered..
but how it works @superhero_ , it is the nature of async manner ?
idk what you mean by how does it work, the last param is the "sleep" time until it triggeres the rutin you defined as your first param... idk how much more clear I can make it.
14:36
@SerhatAtes: Well, when executing the loop, you are using sync commands, so all setTimeout are stated one following another.
When the loop end, you go back to async mode, where the notifications from setTimeout will start to happen
@MoshMage: When in doubt, ask your team what they think it should do
@MoshMage I would expect you to only update partial, else I would use PUT method..
@DrakaSAN team is two (counting me) and the other person is holding a different position - I'm reading RFCs so I can back my claim; but got side-tracked with all the high-english used in RFCs
but all setTimeout s set in different time maybe 100ns in between, am i correct ?
@superhero: What he may do is send a sparse array, with only the value in need of updating
@superhero my thoughts exactly - a PUT replaces, a PATCH updates
14:41
@SerhatAtes: Yes, the time for the processor to go back at the beginning of the loop and increment your variable
Thank you for your responses
@SerhatAtes: However, I don't see any practical reasons to do that
Anyway, @DrakaSAN and @superhero thanks for the inputs (it's not like we can change anything, we dont hold the server) though it was something i wanted to clarify :)
@MoshMage: Well, PATCH is a cut short PUT, so your teamate may not be wrong. It depend on what the array contains, what you send in the request, and how you interpret the RFC. While replacing the value blindly is more what PUT should do, I can see how someone could defend that. Also, how do you separate value that don't need update and value that need to be removed...
I see a reason for it, but never needed it in any project, PUT works, but why not be semantic, it really doesn't add anything to your api except radabiliy of the difference. But it's very unusal I would say
14:45
@MoshMage: If you can ask the one that hold the server, it may be your best guess to have a precise answer ;)
@DrakaSAN yeah you are right
i was just wondering how does async manner works in a loop
 
6 hours later…
20:55
Hey anyone around?

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