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15:22
@yojimbo87 best of both worlds? Combine RoR and node? The fact you have to go and communicate between them is a big penalty. Unless you seperate the services well it's best to do it in or the other.
16:02
@Raynos man you are sharp :D
"sharp" ?
I would say either use Ruby & eventmachine or node.
It's possible to have a node server & a RoR server app running side by side without inter-communication but that feels like a pain in the ass to develop.
The more I know and learn, the more opinionated and bitter I become :(
yes I meant something like bitter with that "sharp" thing
I mean no offense
I have the same behavior on certain topics
No it's fine. I'm aware of it myself.
I think that there is still some time which needs to pass in order to node.js become a full featured web stack (it's just my opinion)
My original comment was unneccesary and argumentive
16:17
I saw the same thing with mono vs ms.net
express, now, mongodb / couchdb, backbone. You've got it all there.
yes
that's really good
All that's lacking is solid documentation and hand holding tutorials. Also API freezing and stability.
And growing confidence in node.js as a secure web server.
I think what is also important is IDE
It's just new and people aren't familiar with how to build a large application on it from scratch
Probably yes.
16:19
people tend to stick to one thing and use it
The problem with node is the learning curve.
Once you understand the entire thing it's perfectly usable but it's a heavy learning curve.
yeah and that people don't understand JS
Thats a big one tbh.
You need to really know how to use JS in a functional manner to do node
You cant just come from a statically typed server-side language and use node in a familiar manner
But from my point of view, I know node, I know express, I know mongoDB. I see no reason to use RoR
I understand and that's good for you that you are able to use it for all what you need
however people who are used to also other frameworks and have many year experience in them just can't make the switch right away
True.
Depends though
ASP.NET vs node. I'd take node any day :D
16:27
also maturity of other frameworks in certain areas is maybe greater because they solve and evolve on the particular problem for many years
sure it depends
Yes. but if you want real time application or many user applications then just use node.
it depends is the most common engineering answer :D
If you have a fresh project with those requirements pick up node, (or EventMachine, or Twisted)
yes for real-time node is the chuck norris among others
Although you need to be good at javascript.
Also another big thing about node is solid control over abstraction
You want low level? you got low level. You want high level, then include someone else's work.
16:31
exactly this is why I like it
Me too.
I also just really like javascript
I tend to hate JS because I didn't understand it and I was too affected by other static OOP based languages
but after few great books and crockford video marathon it was like a new world
Yep. I dont like static languages anymore. I also dont care about OOP inheritance
classical OOP and static languages go hand in hand
95% of people don't realise that there are better and more powerful patterns then classical OOP in dynamic languages.
The irony is this: If you don't go in, you can't find out.
btw do you know how to add feeds to this room if the owner is still absent?
6
A: Chat clean up & owner rules

balphaSure. In most cases, the room owner is more or less arbitrary, because it's just the person who was first to create the (e.g.) PHP room. But of course it makes sense to have several owners, especially for rooms that are quite active and have developed their own "style", and have those owners be p...

I forgot I saw this on meta
17:31
I'm making @yojimbo87 owner of this room. Use your powers wisely :)
many thanks
room topic changed to Node.js: Node.js room
@yojimbo87 o/
That's better. Did you hunt down balpha?
Where does it tell you message share of room?
If you can feed the dailyjs in
wait
@Raynos you want to be owner too?
17:44
Why not. It's not like anyone else uses this room
ever.
ok I was just asking
No it's cocol. Thanks :)
:) no problem
we should steal some users from node.js irc at freenode or wherever they group
Yes >_>
we should
maybe this room could widen it's specialization
something like real-timish node.js based shtuff
17:49
I don't know.
We just need people to embrace node. That's all
but it's closely related also to other stuff
it's like people in JS room are also asking html/css stuff
True.
General evented servers is fine here.
Maybe change it to SSJS
btw since when did JS room became so popular?
it looks like it have the most posted messages among all other rooms
It always has been
JavaScript has been very popular
C# used to be popular and died,
C++ and PHP used to be and are slowing down
so uncommon :)
17:54
Star that
There we go :)
That's a good one too.
how about mastering node?
open source book
Havn't read that yet
it's not complete but some parts are good
18:02
Is it community driven? Can we propose content?
@Raynos are there other people in JS room which are using node.js beside you?
yes its on github
but I think guy who manages it is too busy with other stuff
18:16
found this one recently
That's neat
most famous node.js picture :D
room topic changed to Node.js: Because you rock when you don't block
:D
:D
@yojimbo87 how do I write directly to the cache?
you mean to L1 or L2?
it can be done only through C or C++ as far a I know
I see.
18:25
8
Q: "register" keyword in C?

NickWhat does the register keyword do in C? I have read that it is used for optimizing but is not clearly defined in any standard. Is it still relevant and if so, when would you use it?

18:43
posted on March 23, 2011 by ryandahl

Starting next Thursday Isaac, Tom, and I will be holding weekly office hours at Joyent HQ in San Francisco. Office hours are meant to be subdued working time – there are no talks and no alcohol. Bring your bugs or … Continue reading →

posted on March 23, 2011 by Isaac Schlueter

npm 1.0 is in release candidate mode. Go get it! More than anything else, the driving force behind the npm 1.0 rearchitecture was the desire to simplify what a package installation directory structure looks like. In npm 0.x, there was … Continue reading →

posted on March 24, 2011 by ryandahl

We are starting an official jobs board for Node. There are two goals for this 1. Promote the small emerging economy around this platform by having a central space for employers to find Node programmers. 2. Make some money. We … Continue reading →

posted on March 26, 2011 by ryandahl

2011.03.26, Version 0.4.4 (stable) CryptoStream.end shouldn’t throw if not writable GH-820 Drop out if connection destroyed before connect() GH-819 expose https.Agent Correctly setsid in tty.open GH-815 Bug fix for failed buffer construction Added support for removing .once listeners (GH-806) Upgrade … Continue reading →

posted on April 02, 2011 by ryandahl

2011.04.01, Version 0.4.5 (stable) Fix listener leak in stream.pipe() (Mikeal Rogers) Retain buffers in fs.read/write() GH-814 (Jorge Chamorro Bieling) TLS performance improvements SlowBuffer.prototype.slice bug GH-843 process.stderr.write should return true Immediate pause/resume race condition GH-535 (isaacs) Set default host header properly … Continue reading →

posted on January 01, 0001

Welcome to part 18 of Let’s Make a Web App, a tutorial series about building a web app with Node. This series will walk you through the major areas you’ll need to face when building your own applications. These tutorials are tagged with lmawa. Click to show previous tutorials. Part 1: Introduction Part 2: Installation and Skeleton App, source code commit: 4ea936b Part 3: RE

posted on January 01, 0001

jQuery 1.5.2 RC 1 jQuery 1.5.2 RC 1 has been released, and the final version of 1.5.2 should be out on March 31st. Kern.js Kern.js (GitHub: bstrom87 / kern.js, WTFPL) by Brendan Stromberger helps generate styles for more refined kerning using Lettering.js. Lettering.js has recently added a gallery of sites that use their styles; it’s worth checking out, too. Zoomooz Zoomooz (G

posted on January 01, 0001

Browserify Browserify (GitHub: substack / node-browserify) by James Halliday makes CommonJS packages work in browsers by bundling up modules into a monolithic file. I know we’ve had a lot of script loaders on DailyJS, and detailed discussions about monolithic files vs. loading scripts on demand, but I assume James has structured Browserify this way to make the require syntax easy to

posted on January 01, 0001

Welcome to part 56 of Let’s Make a Framework, the ongoing series about building a JavaScript framework. If you haven’t been following along, these articles are tagged with lmaf. The project we’re creating is called Turing. Documentation is available at turingjs.com. Last week I looked at how to build a cross-browser innerHTML API. In this week’s post I’ll cont

posted on January 01, 0001

There’s not a doubt in my mind that a version of Minecraft in JavaScript is possible. Imagine it… WebGL graphics and a fast Node server! AlteredQualia has some impressive WebGL demos that use three.js. I seem to remember covering three.js on this blog before, but the author has really been pushing it to new heights lately. The Minecraft demo really caught my imagination. The

posted on November 09, 2010 by tim

Part I of this series explained basic object graphs and visually described references, closures, and basic inheritance in JavaScript. Part II compared different styles for doing object-oriented programming in JavaScript. Now in Part III we'll get creative and look as Ruby's object model and compare it to how JavaScript works. Also I'll show how to implement some Ruby style classes. JavaScri

posted on November 10, 2010 by tomvc.be

In this article I will introduce traits.js, a small library to define, compose and instantiate traits. Traits are reusable sets of properties and form an alternative to multiple inheritance or mixins. Traits for Javascript A common pattern in Javascript is to add ("mixin") the properties of one object to another object. traits.js provides a few simple functions for performing this pattern s

posted on December 02, 2010 by waratuman

This is the 7th in a series of posts leading up to Node.js Knockout on how to use node.js. This post, cross-posted from GitHub, was written by James Bracy, founder of Redis To Go. Redis To Go is a dead simple solution for managed Redis instances. Node.js and Redis Pub-Sub Node.js is a perfect platform for creating event driven applications. Redis and WebSockets are great companions to N

posted on February 21, 2011 by geoff.flarity

This article outlines how to create a realtime heatmap of your syscall latency using HTML5, some great node modules, and DTrace. It was inspired by talk that Bryan Cantrill and Brendan Greg gave on Joyent's cool cloud analytics tools. While specific, the code provided could easily be adapted to provide a heatmap of any type of aggregation Dtrace is capable of providing. System Requirements

posted on February 28, 2011 by i

These are some basic steps for writing a NodeJS module. Most of the suggestions in this document are optional. You can definitely write your program however you like, and many in the node community enjoy trying out new creative ways of doing things. This is merely a set of patterns that noders have found to work for them and their projects. Use Git Most people in the node community use

;_;
feeds
you make me sad
feeds are bad?
19:00
No there ok. What annoys me is backlog spam :P
should I add more or is this enough?
Its ok
damn I should be coding today instead of SO surfing
Thats not my fault
what do you do in terms of coding?
that's internet fault (Being a good software engineer is 3% talent, 97% not being distracted by the internet.)
mainly asp.net mvc, (no)sql and node.js
in other terms also server administration
19:14
I see
I do asp.net / mvc / winforms / tsql / client side web dev.
so you are fellow .net developer
Yes ;_;
is it work related?
Yeah full time employed
Maintenance project
and you are also studying parallel with full time job?
19:21
Its a placement year
but node is spare time work
I see
I used to work for various kind of companies
but near future seems more enterprise related
:(
enterprise makes me sad
I had to work on IE6 today
ew
have you proposed node.js in work?
Eh no. Not applicable. Too much bureacry
I try to propose unit tests :D Not much success
I remember this when I was working at siemens
that was hell
20 managers on 1 coder
19:30
Whats the point of node if you have a large sql server db
there is not even client for that :D
Sql server and node.js is no-no
Win forms application & node is a no-no
The only use for node at work would be zombie.js
and what's the progress of your game?
how it's going?
Its on hiatus whilst im a lazy sod.
I sometimes think when I'm too lazy to start coding that I have a burnout syndrome
but it's probably just like the quote about internet
20:03
I have that a lot and/or am lazy
20:19
posted on April 04, 2011 by ryandahl

If you’re compiling a software package because you need a particular version (e.g. the latest), then it requires a little bit more maintenance than using a package manager like dpkg. Software that you compile yourself should *not* go into /usr, … Continue reading →

20:43
posted on January 25, 2011

On this episode Pedro Teixeira learns how to use MongoDB inside node.js using the Mongoose ODM. Note: I store clear-text passwords on this tutorial as an example. It's just to simplify. In real applications you should store a (salted) hash.

posted on February 03, 2011

On this episode Pedro Teixeira digs into javascript patterns for iterating over asynchronous functions.

posted on February 10, 2011

On this episode Pedro Teixeira shows you how you can use should.js and expresso to unit test your app.

posted on March 01, 2011

On this episode Pedro Teixeira explores the awsomeness of the new Mongoose API.

posted on April 01, 2011

On this episode Pedro explains you how you can survive dependency hell and freeze and bundle your app dependencies using node_modules and npm bundle on node v0.4.0 and greater.


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