« first day (64 days earlier)      last day (106 days later) » 

13:39
chrome://flags#enable-webassembly in chrome canary :O
 
1 hour later…
14:44
Is some sort of Observable going to make it into the ES spec? I can only recall Object.observe, and cannot find a source indicating some sort of formal Observable proposal. I figure you guys might have a link to something?
 
3 hours later…
17:40
@ndugger Object.observe is dead, observable is stage 1 at github.com/zenparsing/es-observable
18:14
@BenjaminGruenbaum I literally posted that 2 messages up :(
 
1 hour later…
19:17
@BenjaminGruenbaum when reading a spec, and it mentions how something should have a property/method/etc but it doesn't say what it should be named, does it matter what it's called, as long as the feature exists in the implementation?
Example:
> A CustomElementsRegistry's list of defined local names is the list containing all of the local names of the custom element definitions in the registry.
19:37
It's things it uses to describe the spec.
An implementation does not actually need to have them - as long as it matches the spec
Object.observe !== Observables
We (Netflix) are working on the reference implementation for ES7 Observables.
Kevin works for netflix?
I've said a few times that Netflix has some really smart people working there
How's Netflix working out for you by the way @SomeKittens ?
@BenjaminGruenbaum IIRC that's blesh's doing.
@BenjaminGruenbaum so far so good. Only ~month in.
19:41
@SomeKittens blesh is working on the next Rx which is es-observable compatible, but not the reference impl. It's arguably more important.
Last I chatted with Rob Wormwald (another Rx5 contributor) he said that the reference implementation would be a subset of Rx5
Rob is a funny guy.
@SomeKittens you are at netflix now? congrats! that sounds really cool
@AwalGarg yup, yup. Totally different than any of my other jobs.
It seems like Netflix is good about fostering innovation and critical thinking with their devs
19:49
@SomeKittens great! what are you working on there, if you don't mind me asking? :)
@AwalGarg Very cool
I'm a Sr. UI Engineer with Insight Engineering. We build the tools everyone else at Netflix relies upon to make short-term (< 1 day) decisions, mostly operations stuff.
My slogan of "We're watching what you're watching" was sadly rejected.
very nice!
Another silly spec question. When the spec says that something should be a "sequence", are they referring to a specific kind of instance, or could it be something as arbitrary as an array?
> If observedAttributesIterable is undefined, let observedAttributes be an empty sequence<DOMString>
Go easy on me. I'm only just now learning how to actually read specs in depth
You talking about the DOM spec @ndugger ?
First rule of spec reading: no one really knows how to actually read the spec - we take educated guesses :D
20:02
@BenjaminGruenbaum Do you say that knowing Rob, or do you find the "subset of Rx5" idea ridiculous?
I'm writing a polyfill for the new changes to the custom elements API. It's almost like a completely new api...
@SomeKittens I know Rob from GitHub, he writes very clunky Rx code, he probably got better over the last few months with NgRx and all.
@ndugger well, first of all the #whatwg room in IRC is full of people who'd love to help you navigate the spec and learn how to make it more accessible. Second: html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/infrastructure.html is where most of the terminology is defined. DOM usually is specced in IDL which usually has good references from place to place.
Link to the spec you're talking about?
So far it's been pretty easy to get the features implemented. It's just a question of how literal the literature is.
That's a good question, whenever in doubt go to the IDL: heycam.github.io/webidl
It's vague so that different languages that implement the DOM can use different types for it.
I figured as much
thanks
20:12
sure, anytime.

« first day (64 days earlier)      last day (106 days later) »