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07:33
morning
morning man
sup @ARr0w
?
do you have a labour day in Pakistan?
07:48
yo bro. My monday was of.
nothing bro, at office.
Morning huys
hi @Shaneis
hey @AndyK
War
War
meh
how was labour day?
War
War
08:00
meh
which one was labour day again?
War
War
yesterday
ah yeah it was grand, didn't do much tbh
War
War
I have a problem with transactions to solve (again) this morning
hi @War
War
War
08:03
Why is SQL such a whiney bitch?
@AndyK hi
#lmao War
War
War
I have a business process that intermittently raises transactions in lines that work normally everywhere else
2017-04-30 20:11:45,989 [73] ERROR  Core.Workflow.ExecutionContext - Faurecia Import: The underlying provider failed on Open.
2017-04-30 20:11:45,989 [73] ERROR  Core.Workflow.ExecutionContext - Faurecia Import:    at System.Data.Entity.Core.EntityClient.EntityConnection.Open()
   at System.Data.Entity.Core.Objects.ObjectContext.EnsureConnection(Boolean shouldMonitorTransactions)
   at System.Data.Entity.Core.Objects.ObjectContext.ExecuteInTransaction[T](Func`1 func, IDbExecutionStrategy executionStrategy, Boolean startLocalTransaction, Boolean releaseConnectionOnSuccess)
that's not even helpful
the first line in the stack there is basically in my core "add an entry to the db" method
that's basically telling me "sorry your method for adding stuff is broken "
I blame Linq/EF
War
War
well what about the 20k other pieces of data it just put in!!
the problem is that I have a heirarchy of complex transactions going on between servers
and it hates me for telling it to do that
morning, shaneis, war.

@andyK, what about you? do you get labor day off?
War
War
08:06
@ARr0w morning
morning @ARr0w
yerp Arrow
I had a long weekend
we went near by the sea
War
War
Looks like I can get us doing incremental rollouts now
means if I need to do I can do many production deploys in 1 day
it was quiet
just the sound of the waves crashing on the beach
it was great to be in the real world
good, andyk. Same here, i visited the sea of another region of Pakistan ^_^
it took a 3 hours drive. But worth it.
War
War
08:22
This process is officially a work of art guys
Very good @ARr0w :)
08:38
@War you don't say? :P
by the way, any of you recognize 'mirc'? :P
War
War
08:50
@ARr0w I used to live in mirc
I love it's scriptability
I actually built a means to script mirc with C# a few years back
@ARr0w I have an endpoint that takes in N number of files and transactionally processes them as a batch in a long running process
each file is wrapped in its own transaction and within that transaction there are sub transactions
potentially up to hundreds per file (the process is that complex)
all this happens at a single mouse click or on a schedule automatically
09:06
wow O_O
would you share its images?
i want to see it @war
War
War
Yeh and on friday that went in to production with only a few hours of testing
the net result is that the complex stack of hundreds of transactions went bang all over the place all weekend
@war, i also used to live in mirc. I joined there in 2003. But i wasn't a programmer nor explored this passion of mine. I was there until 2010
War
War
i'm still dealing with the fallout now
@ARr0w screenshots of what ... mirc? I don't have that code any more
your script mirc.
War
War
I lost it during my last huge nas crash (I wasn't using cloud based TFS back then :(
09:09
aww
well for you that must be piece of cake now :D
since 2010 to now. I just got invited back by a friend there in Dalnet. So yeah i've been joining there lately, again. ^_^
War
War
It was hell from what I remember I had to basically script calling up .Net then marshal the mirc objects in to my module
only objects that I had exposed were availble not the full api so it was nicely sandboxed
and that is where you had your experience of dealing with encapsulation
XD
neat!
War
War
That was back when I was toying with PiNvoikes on most of windows API directly ... I was doing stuff like injecting low level packets in to socket streams to test network flaws
it was a fun time ... I was learning about network security and stuff
I had some great code for crashing LAN ports
i wish i had found guide and interest of programming back then. I'd be so cool like you today.
War
War
that's how I managed to kick everyone off me off the college network once when I just fancied downloading something big
back then 100mb/s was basically unheard of but our college was fed from BMouth uni and they had aweseome inet
they were basically a backbone provider
09:13
O_O its still unheard of here.
War
War
It's great when everyone is on dialup to do stuff like pull half of wikipedia lol
lol
War
War
nowadays I don't bother ... there's no challenge in it
broadband round here is stupid fast
true that. well we have boardbands too, but shared and even cooperate societies uses shared connections -_-
War
War
15 million or so web pages that make up wikipedia ... I could probably pull those in under a minute
I wouldn't mind having a crack at getting root access in to a google datacenter though some time
09:15
:D you don't say
i do have interest of ethical hacking.
War
War
well it would be cool to tinker with google brain
@war things will end as google will be ringing your house's door bell? :D
War
War
yeh oferring me a job or something
unless you also get a crack to avoid getting your location traced
War
War
lol
I wouldn't hack google from home
I'd at the very least onion route my packets
09:18
vms.
War
War
then vpn tunnel from the other end of the onion route in to a vps rack and do the hack from there
i so want to experience these things
War
War
I'd effectively use googles own infrastructure to hack google if it were me
and it is all you :D
War
War
that way if they trace the hack it would show that a server on their data center hacked them from a vpn tunnel made on the end of an onion route which is basically near impossible to trace back
if done right
09:23
true that
i've had this discussion with my ex colegues
 
2 hours later…
War
War
11:21
   at System.Linq.Enumerable.Any[TSource](IEnumerable`1 source, Func`2 predicate)
   at CompiledRazorTemplates.Dynamic.RazorEngine_b6ee7aa7beb84bbbba2cef1cae66f59f.<>c__DisplayClass10.<Execute>b__3(Invoice inv)
   at System.Linq.Enumerable.WhereListIterator`1.MoveNext()
   at System.Collections.Generic.List`1..ctor(IEnumerable`1 collection)
   at System.Linq.Enumerable.ToList[TSource](IEnumerable`1 source)
   at CompiledRazorTemplates.Dynamic.RazorEngine_b6ee7aa7beb84bbbba2cef1cae66f59f.Execute()
well that's helpful!
War
War
11:36
jeez
1 exception ... 1MB of logged exception info
11:53
Hi all
War
War
@Alex Hi
Hey War
hey @Alex
Hey Shaneis
@War, a question.
War
War
12:01
@ARr0w An answer?
@War
i copy pasted my code here.
on right side on screen there's login hyper link button.

http://www.bootply.com/oXcjYF1mOZ
this code is on layoutpage.cstml
War
War
ok
how can i get this form data in my home controller and check the credentials
popover form data on my home controller to check these credentials.
@ARr0w You can have that in its own form. Submit it to a custom action via POST
i have read in mvc tutorial that i'd require the modal to post to any action that is why i'm confused.
12:09
You'd probably want to use AJAX so the user stays on the same page
@model *
Bootstrap modal is just a DIV
Oh
no, i meant the class model.
Are you using view models or binding directly to a model?
If you have a VM, just add a few fields to that for the form. Then POST it to a custom action on the controller
actually, in current scenario, i don't require a model. Because i'm just receiving credentials. I want to get these two values in my homeController. Where i'll match these with database credentials.
VM? virtual machine?
xD
War
War
12:11
@ARr0w You wnat something like this ...
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function() {
    $.ajax({
		type: "POST",
		contentType: 'application/json',
		url: "Home/Login",
		data: JSON.stringify($('[data-toggle="popover"] form')),
		error: function() { /* Nope! */ },
		success: function(data) { /* Yup! */ }
	});
});
You could just pass them in as strings... public ActionResult Login(string userName, string password){ ...... }
War
War
that assumes you have a login action on your form
yep i do have a login form and okay alex, war. let me try guys. Thanks
I have a simple PHP script that uses PDO to 1000 insert to my database in a loop. Now, is it realistic that it should take 80 seconds to complete it?

for($i = 1; $i <= $USERS_NUMBER; $i++) {

$result = $myPDO->exec("INSERT INTO `user` (`name`, `password`, `email`, `picture`) VALUES ('user${i}', 'pallahasha', '${i}[email protected]', 'picture.jpg')");

}
And yes, i want to specifically use a loop insert like this, and not multiple at once
War
War
@Dexception yes it is ... batch the execution
12:15
@War no @War! Stop trying to fix the XY Problems!!!
and if php has threads that'd be awesome dexception xD
Alright, so it seems normal?
shaneis, haha.
im doing benchmarks so i want to specifically test how fast this is
War
War
@Shaneis lol ... i just don't care ... if people wanna ask XY questions so be it
12:16
@War :D
War
War
@Dexception try something like this ...
$command = "";
for($i = 1; $i <= $USERS_NUMBER; $i++) {
  $command += "INSERT INTO `user` (`name`, `password`, `email`, `picture`) VALUES ('user${i}', 'pallahasha', '${i}[email protected]', 'picture.jpg')";
}
$result = $myPDO->exec($command);
@ARr0w even if you thread this code the db will IO lock your perf
you'll have a queuing problem in the db layer code
:o thanks for pointing that. It may cause big damage of data loss
War
War
It's stuff like this is the reason I use EF ... I can say do this, and this, and this ... then call SaveChanges() and it gens one big script wraps it in a transaction and executes it on the db
1 hit to the db, and it's transaction protected
true.
War
War
It feels like most PHP coders these days are still missing this ... I've never seen a single line of ORM code in any PHP app ... it's a joke framework IMO
12:19
transaction management, is this what it is called, right?
War
War
the issue being that you end up with "half your data" in the db when stuff goes wrong
@ARr0w it's not even that
You could I spose (in the code I posted above) add the SQL transaction stuff
but rarely does anyone do that
no idea why
weird PHP people
well, must not be aware of it.
War
War
I still love the old analogy of the house built with PHP
nice cover up.
or you'd have some php dev(s) killers after you.
War
War
The dev so proud, pointing out how great his wonky house is and pointing at his "odd tools" in the 3 walled garage
you open the door and it falls over
the dev then then shouts at you for breaking his house
12:22
haha
War
War
this is PHP all over
there's nothing wrong with it per say ... but it usually results in stupidity
70% of software houses here are working on php xD
@War i cant seeem to get that to work of some reason. It inserts nothing
War
War
And people love to quote Facebook and a shining beacon of an example as to why PHP is so great ... but they forget ... zuckerberg and his team rewrote the language and buitl a compiler for it to get where they are today
and facebook is a buggy pile o crap these days
@Dexception no idea... PHP is foreign to me
hahaha, no doublt.
very heavy and seriously with some shitty bug issues.
War
War
12:24
do you have to do some wierd shit to declare variable $command
also whats "$myPDO"?
I was guessing it was some ref to a SQL command or similar object
when printing out $command i get 0
myPDO is the PDO object
hi @Alex
$myPDO sounds like $myPowerDeceptionOwnage
War
War
for example using C# and EF I could do something like ...
var command = string.Empty;
user_numbers.ForEach(n => command += $"INSERT INTO `user` (`name`, `password`, `email`, `picture`) VALUES ('user${n}', 'pallahasha', '${n}[email protected]', 'picture.jpg')");
var result = db.Sql(command);
such a beautifully elegant language C# :)
and because that's using EF ... I got a transaction there for free
found the problem
12:27
yo. But what about F#?
War
War
so it either all went in or noe went in
concatenation in PHP is with dot :)
War
War
ah ok ... did you put a semicolon on the end of each insert statement
I got it to work now
War
War
you prob need t that too, to keep SQL happy
12:28
took around 52 seconds this time
so 30 seconds faster it seems
War
War
52 seconds
WTF
seems slow i agree
War
War
how big is that list?
War
War
I could do that in under a second
something not right there
12:29
how fast should it be?
War
War
well if it were me I would expect 1000 simple inserts to take about 1 second ... no more
non batch?
War
War
if it was like 1.5 though i would prob be like "meh, it'll do"
I don't do non batched inserts
my entire stack is geared at batching stuff
This is non batch inserts
thats why
War
War
that said I can force individual inserts but it keeps the connection open between them
12:31
which i do now?
im not doing multi-insert, im doing with a loop. Therefor, does it seems right with 50 seconds for 1000 rows to insert?
@Dexception ok I'm going to crack...
@Dexception why are you doing a loop?
War
War
you want to build something like ...
BEGIN TRANSACITON
  INSERT INTO `user` (`name`, `password`, `email`, `picture`) VALUES ('user1', 'pallahasha', '[email protected]', 'picture.jpg');
  INSERT INTO `user` (`name`, `password`, `email`, `picture`) VALUES ('user2', 'pallahasha', '[email protected]', 'picture.jpg');
  ...
COMMIT
Because i want to benchmark it, just to see
War
War
like I said though ... I get the transaction bit for free basically
EF "just does it"
so I just say something like ...
db.Add(someEntity);
db.Add(someOtherEntity);
db.SaveChanges();
@AndyK Hi Andy
War
War
12:37
Is it wrong that Like Jessie J right now?
it's great background tunage
Maybe I should not admit this in public
@War I feel like you used to be cool
:|
War
War
When did that happen?
I listen to all sorts though
like last week it was imagine dragons
and I went through a linkin park phase
@War Try "Crystal Swing"... :)
I tried with beginTransaction with PDO, and it now takes 0,098 sec
War
War
bit of coldplay
@Dexception that's more like it
12:40
@War wooo!
War
War
transactions FTW !
you also get a safety net with that
all or nothing
no partial inserts
@Dexception now all you need to do is wrap that up as a generic function
InsertAll<T>(ICollection<T> items) { ... }
or some PHP equiv
this is the worst thing about EF ...
2017-05-02 13:02:40,355 [8] ERROR  Core.Workflow.ExecutionContext - CLeX Import: An error occurred while executing the command definition. See the inner exception for details.
2017-05-02 13:02:40,360 [8] ERROR  Core.Workflow.ExecutionContext - CLeX Import:    at System.Data.Entity.Core.EntityClient.Internal.EntityCommandDefinition.ExecuteStoreCommands(EntityCommand entityCommand, CommandBehavior behavior)
   at System.Data.Entity.Core.Objects.Internal.ObjectQueryExecutionPlan.Execute[TResultType](ObjectContext context, ObjectParameterCollection parameterValues)
that tells me nothng baout where the problem happened at all
^ yup. Exceptions are dreadful in EF
War
War
13:05
I've gotten to the point now where all the easy problems are solved
i'm left with only abstract descriptions of what may be an issue in the form of obscure exception logging
old school debugging ... comment out lines of code til it works
I hate this :(
the problem is in a dynamically generated block of code inside the workflow engine :(
13:23
@war

$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {
var txtemail = document.getElementById('#txtemail').innerText;
var txtpass = documentgetElementById('#pass').innerText;
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
contentType: 'application/json',
url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
data: {email: txtemail, pass: txtpass },
error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
});
});

i tried your exact js, it wasn't hitting the action of home controller.
I tried this approach, even this is not hitting the action of home controller
War
War
does this contain an input tag ...
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]')
and if you put "debugger;" after ...
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {
are you hitting it when you hit the button?
debugger gets to this function, i did check.
in browser
but then it doesn't go further.
browserLink Failed to load resource: net::ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED
War
War
that's notrealted ... that happens when VS's own browserlink stuff (signalr) loses the connection
usually happens when you stop the debugger / the app running on VS
nope bro, the debugger mode is on
@ARr0w Ignore that error. That's Visual Studio related
13:28
um alex.
i have also placed the debugger on the home action "login"
it doesn't land there either.
War
War
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {
	var txtemail = document.getElementById('#txtemail').innerText;
	var txtpass = documentgetElementById('#pass').innerText;
	debugger;
	$.ajax({
		type: "POST",
		contentType: 'application/json',
		url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
		data: JSON.Stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass }),
		error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
		success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
	});
});
put that in the page and hit the button
with the tools open
it should stop on "debugger;"
Don't need debugger that way. Use Chrome and put a breakpoint on the first line of the submit click handler
War
War
depends where th ecode is
it does stop on this function even in javascript file, war bro
War
War
it's easy if it's a script file
can be a bitch if it's on the page itself though @Alex
13:30
war, i have a custom.js, where this javascript code resides.
War
War
@ARr0w put JSON.Stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass }) in the watch window
does it look right?
and when i'm putting debugger on this function, on click the browser stops at this point
Tell me about it. Under Sources in Chrome debugger, I scroll down to where the JS is and put a breakpoint
War
War
given that you're already using jquery why not change these ...
document.getElementById('#txtemail').innerText
^ that
War
War
13:31
$('#txtemail').val();
Go jQuery all the way. It's easier
War
War
yeh
code works better if its consistent with itself
(general coding standard I tend to adopt)
okay
War
War
for input elements .innerText may not work ... it's an odd one
but jquery's .val() will ... always
alright
War
War
13:33
so when you inspect ...
JSON.Stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass })
what you getting?
are you getting the vals you put in the login form?
VM74:1 Uncaught TypeError: JSON.Stringify is not a function
at <anonymous>:1:6'
i wrote that command in console of
War
War
ah ok
chrome.
War
War
it's Json.Stringify()
I think
Json.Stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass })
Uncaught ReferenceError: Json is not defined
at <anonymous>:1:1
(anonymous) @ VM77:1
War
War
13:35
dafuq?
JSON... uppercase
War
War
yeh I thought it was
jeez
JSON (not a function)
JSON.stringify(someJsonValue, null, 2);
json is not defined XD
War
War
13:36
ah its the cap S
JSON.stringify({ foo: 'bar' }); <-- works fine for me in this window
JSON is a built-in JavaScript object
Not jQuery related
War
War
if that's not working your browser is buggered
I hate how JS does this upper/lower case mess
that's wokring here as well, war.
War
War
yeh it's not even consistent within itself
13:37
let me do some changes to this function.
replace js with jquery.
War
War
JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass })
^ should be a string that contains your form output
Also, use console.log(JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass }));
War
War
although i'm pretty sure you can just do ...
var txtemail = $('#txtemail').val();
var txtpass = $('#txtpass').val();

?? is this fine?
War
War
JSON.stringify($("form"));
13:38
Looks good
War
War
@ARr0w much better
alex : console.log(JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass }));
VM91:1 {"email":{},"pass":{}}
undefined
war, it will work replacing that form
with
data: {email: txtemail, pass: txtpass },
@War
after inserting some data in textboxes.
I ran this command on console and this is what is returned:

"{"email":{"0":{},"1":{},"txtemail":{},"email":{}},"pass":{"0":{},"1":{},"txtpass":{},"pass":{}}}"
War
War
jeez
nvm just do what you're doing
var txtemail = $('#txtemail').val();
var txtpass = $('#txtpass').val();
var data = JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass });
whats in data after that?
{email: 'user', pass: 'pass' }
this is what i tried war.
War
War
if it doesn't look like that you did something wrong
13:48
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {

var txtemail = $('#txtemail').val();
var txtpass = $('#txtpass').val();
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
contentType: 'application/json',
url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
data: {email: txtemail, pass: txtpass},
error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
});
});
current code
War
War
DUDE WTF
you're not paying attention
i did
JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass })
War
War
that's not the same
i tried this
War
War
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {
	var txtemail = document.getElementById('#txtemail').innerText;
	var txtpass = documentgetElementById('#pass').innerText;
	var data = JSON.Stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass });
	debugger;
	$.ajax({
		type: "POST",
		contentType: 'application/json',
		url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
		data: data,
		error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
		success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
	});
});
try that
13:50
War
War
whats in "data" when you stop on that debugger statement
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {

var txtemail = $('#txtemail').val();
var txtpass = $('#txtpass').val();
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
contentType: 'application/json',
url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
data: JSON.stringify({email: txtemail, pass: txtpass }),
error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
});
});
let me try debugger too
War
War
@ARr0w no way
$('#txtemail').val() <-- this did not return an object
$('[data-toggle="popover"] input[type=submit]').on('click', function () {
    var login = {email: $('#txtemail').val(), pass: $('#pass').val() };
	var data = JSON.Stringify(login);
	debugger;
	$.ajax({
		type: "POST",
		contentType: 'application/json',
		url: '@Url.Action("Login","Home")',
		data: data,
		error: function () { /* Nope! */ },
		success: function (data) { /* Yup! */ }
	});
});
okay trying this
War
War
unless you have more than one field with the same ID on the page ... that should be fine
13:55
war, lol it is in jquery library
can't reach to this debugger point
for me to check
the value in data (var)
War
War
eh?
not pausing at this point on button click
war i'm off from office. Place is shutting down,.
we'll discuss this tomorrow.
War
War
14:21
@ARr0w ok
15:10
meeting in half an hour guys so I'm going to head off early
talk to ya tomorrow
see ya
War
War
15:27
o/ bye
15:59
See ya, Shaneis
 
3 hours later…
War
War
19:10
.
I have a thing on the WPF room.... when the room is quiet for a long time, I throw in tumbleweeds
* * * * *
SqlFarmer.GenerateTumbleweeds(5);
* * * * *
 
2 hours later…
War
War
20:53
*****
Lol
:)

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