12:51 AM
@Scratte I've seen :) I still don't understand your aversion making top-level IIFE async because it's just that - an IIFE, but your approach is not shabby either.
you are not the only one who does not like wrapping things into a top-level async IIFE, though
we are getting a top-level await
natively in the language - it is still experimental, but works like a charm where supported. You will be able to specify await
at the global level without any boilerplate once support improves
@VLAZ yeah, it will probably be another 10 years before JS gets something like FutureTask
.
I was mostly referring to the reluctance to make one single wrapping function async
but I see @Scratte found a solution in a nested async function that closes over the other ones - I still disagree with this approach, but it's a fine solution, methinks
@Scratte I have an improved version for ya that more closely resembles what Puppeteer does and allows to reduce the scope of events listened to (as MutationObserver
instances can listen to any node, not only the document
)
const waitForSelector = (selector, context = document) => {
const initial = context.querySelectorAll(selector);
if (initial.length)
return Promise.resolve(initial);
return new Promise((resolve) => {
const observer = new MutationObserver(() => {
const target = context.querySelectorAll(selector);
if (!target.length)
return;
observer.disconnect();
resolve(target);
@Scratte and join us too :) Although I can't promise many benefits...
@KevinM.Mansour I thought I linked to it here when I announced it :) I am 1 edit away from making it eligible to talk, btw. That said, I ran out of "how to serialize getters" to edit :)
anyone knows a couple of good posts that are in need of an editor?
@VLAZ they are still in the denial stage :)
@KevinM.Mansour oh, you see, that's how you do your CSS these days - you put it into HTML one rule at a time, just like ye good old days of inline styles. Can't blame @Scratte for thinking the language hint should be css
:)
@Shree some context, please?
@Scratte nowadays it works mostly the same as client-side JavaScript + some features you'd expect from a "real" programming language - like process management, environment variables, and access to filesystem. Other than that - practically 0 difference
apart from some environment-specific things (like process
global in Node, and DOM in client-side JS), you can safely write programs that run both client-side and server-side without learning anything additional. It's learning the ecosystem around it that's a huge time sink
well, that, and Streams - they are an extremely important and very cool feature of Node.js (basically they are pipes) that has a very mind-boggling API - consuming them is a blast while developing them is a nightmare
@VLAZ any behavior in particular?
@Scratte while I disagree that there is no way to make Community comments useful, yeah, as implemented, they only confuse others, I have to admit. I was initially optimistic if you recall but by now it's, well, obvious they do not work as intended
I also just realized that I developed my "chat replies" script while having my "chat textarea" script on making them only work in tandem :)
@KevinM.Mansour I think it is reported as a bug
@Scratte I think I am starting to agree on that - it seems like nothing short of a threat of a strike is working. It is very ironic considering this is basically the same tactics that was used by the early labor unions because of whom we now have mostly fair working conditions (I mean, in a sense that it is usually considered that employees have a life)
although I think employers started to find a way around it by providing "on-site" benefits and making employees feel about the company as their "family" when in fact it is far from it. Wait...
@KevinM.Mansour they patched it in recently
@KevinM.Mansour jeez, using margin
with flex
instead of flexbox-specific properties... Like align-items
, justify-content
, etc
ugh, SOCVR request generator fills the console with a lot of messages when opening an inline review modal :)
10
Did the grace period for edits on posts recently go away? Or did the mechanism break maybe?
I was recently editing an FAQ post on MSO, and after saving the edit, realized I changed something which I didn't intend to.
No problem, I noticed this well within the 5 minute grace period window; I edit...
@KevinM.Mansour now they are justifiably confused because apparently, the bot can post comments :) Which could be partially addressed by providing a big indicator that this is a bot and not a user
13
There are a ton of magic links which expand in the comments, some of which are main, meta, or community specific, and some which are templatized (on the surface, I'm not sure if they are explicitly defined on the backend). I would like to suggest an improvement to the comment editor to list autoc...