Feb 1, 2019 22:08
Too broad my arse.
Feb 1, 2019 22:08
Feb 1, 2019 22:07
No worries. Frankly, I just wasn't going to put the time into reporting it. If you want, I can find the question I referred to.
Feb 1, 2019 22:05
Yeah, I'll answer it on the site and the downvoters/on-holders can feck off.
Feb 1, 2019 22:05
No worries. BTW, the too-broad thing has happened before with questions relating to RxJS. Error handling, IIRC. I called the downvoter out on it - in a comment - and had my two SO questions downvoted for it. Some people are just idiots. And are just not worth the time.
Feb 1, 2019 22:02
I'll write an answer for this one. The gist of it that in a chain of operators, consecutive operators subscribe to one another - via the lifted observables - and those subscriptions are made by passing a subscriber instance - the operator's - rather than an observer or separate observer callbacks. The symbol is for interoperabilitry - between versions, etc. That is, it could actually be a Subscriber, but fail the instanceof test.
Feb 1, 2019 21:55
Yeah, there are some real jerks on SO. Your question was nothing if not specific. Not knowing the answer doesn't make it broad. I'll checkout the other question.
Feb 1, 2019 21:42
But timezones will likely make this chat async.
Feb 1, 2019 21:41
Sure.
 
Jan 16, 2018 08:20
The answer is "that's why linters have === rules".
 
Jan 21, 2017 00:53
No worries. Hope you get it working.
Jan 21, 2017 00:53
And report it as a bug if you can isolate it. Look for strange characters and whitespace.
Jan 21, 2017 00:52
Perhaps you should create a simpler harness to investigate why there are some that you cannot read via database.object(...), etc.
Jan 21, 2017 00:50
Either way, I think the mechanics of the join are okay. It's just unfortunate that you have some data integrity issues to look into.
Jan 21, 2017 00:49
Maybe enable the participants to see what happens. Perhaps those keys exist.
Jan 21, 2017 00:49
For some reason, whatever has been stored in the database for each thread is not valid. There are threads in there that have missing author keys (and perhaps participants, too?) It's in the database, so it's whatever was written.
Jan 21, 2017 00:47
Yep, those keys just don't exist for some reason.
Jan 21, 2017 00:45
If .object("members/" + thread.author") does not work, but pasting the output of console.log(thread.author) into the path does work, I'm struggling to what could be happening.
Jan 21, 2017 00:42
That makes no sense, then.
Jan 21, 2017 00:42
Pick on of those listed in your grab and type if in directly.
Jan 21, 2017 00:40
The thread.author is a valid members key, right?
Jan 21, 2017 00:39
Yeah, entirely possible. See previous comment.
Jan 21, 2017 00:39
Before the push, log console.log("members/" + thread.author); and replace the backtick expression with same. That is, remove the ES6 template literal entirely and re-type it to ensure there is no dodgy character that got copied off the SO web page.
Jan 21, 2017 00:37
From the thread. It's the value of thread.author.
Jan 21, 2017 00:37
But it's not reading anything from the database if $exists returns false and $value is null.
Jan 21, 2017 00:35
Does "members/" + thread.author actually exist?
Jan 21, 2017 00:34
But $value is null, which is AngularFire2 saying that the key/path does not exist.
Jan 21, 2017 00:32
value.$exists() in the do - as shown in the last screen grab.
Jan 21, 2017 00:30
If it exists, it should include the children. What does calling $exists() return?
Jan 21, 2017 00:29
Or just replace it with "members/" + thread.author".
Jan 21, 2017 00:28
Just put it in a console.log() call. Actually, maybe delete it entirely and re-type it in case there's some insane Unicode character in there or something.
Jan 21, 2017 00:26
What does logging the backtick expression (members/${thread.author}) before the push output?
Jan 21, 2017 00:23
This is all rather weird. Make this change .do(value => { thread.authorName = value.username; }) so that author is not overwritten, but ... this is still weird.
Jan 21, 2017 00:17
That's a problem, it's saying the member does not exist in the database.
Jan 21, 2017 00:11
So what's logged in the do? For the members? You're saying that thread is being mutated - that is author is reassigned - but it's somehow lost when it comes out of the combined observable?
Jan 21, 2017 00:07
Log the values in the member observable's do: .do(value => { console.log(value); thread.author = value.username; }) and check that the keys exist, etc. And make sure the paths that I've used in the answer are correct regarding your database structure, etc. The mechanics of the answer should be sound, it'll just be some niggling detail that's hard to debug via comments, etc. I think you are almost there.
Jan 21, 2017 00:07
For logging purposes, add a do after the forkJoin like this Observable.forkJoin(...memberObservables, () => threads).do(threads => console.log(threads)); then you should see what is happening. Each thread should have been updated, with the author and participants replaced with user names. So the template should use {{thread.author}}, etc. Participants will be an object, so you'll need to enumerate those as in that earlier question of yours.
Jan 21, 2017 00:07
That looks fine. What happens after that? Errors? Do you have the imports in your code? And what version of RxJS are you using?
Jan 21, 2017 00:07
I've fixed the bracket/syntax errors. Are you saying that the array of observables is empty? That should only be possible if there are no threads.
Jan 21, 2017 00:07
They are ES6 template literals: stackoverflow.com/questions/27565056/…