Found myself in a situation where I was making one of two rookie mistakes:
- Writing code that I should get out of a library
- Writing super complex code that could be greatly simplified using better patterning
What I'm trying to do is pretty simple, I need to send instructions to some JavaScript code that prints fields from an object to the page. Things started out fine, the following string:
message, tags, date
Easily instructed the code to get these elements from the object using
field_array = instruction_string.split(',')
obj['message'], obj['tags'], obj['date']
Then I realized that I wanted to modify that date field to reflect the time zone I was in. Enabling the string to carry special instructions for a field added a little complexity with regex, but still wasn't too complicated:
message, tags, date(GMT-5)
Using the code:
var special_instruction = /\(.*\)/ig.exec('date(GMT-5)')[2]
RESULT: special_instruction = 'GMT-5'
I realized that I was getting in over my head when I realized that I also wanted to tell the output to adjust the date so that it reflects the time delta since right now instead of printing the actual date:
message, tags, date(GMT-5_)(SINCE_NOW)
The regex that I wrote didn't work:
var special_instruction = /\((.*)\)/ig.exec('last_updated(GMT-5)(since_now)')
RESULT: special_instruction = 'GMT-5)(since_now'
Although there is probably a way to fix the regex, this indicates that I should be using a tool or established pattern to do this instead of writing custom code off the cusp and screwing around with it for way too long.
