« first day (1953 days earlier)      last day (3215 days later) » 

fge
fge
00:23
Heh, I've just had an idea
Make a SonarQube plugin for Ruby
It does not exist yet; and I have programmed a sufficiently robust API to allow for this
@fge (y)
I heard my new workplace, SonarQube is using. But still I have no idea what it used for
fge
fge
@CrazyNinja it is, at its core, a static code analysis tool
ahh haa.. I heard this in my last lecture; static code analysis
fge
fge
00:41
"static" as in such a tool will never try and actually run your code; it can only detect what it thinks is defects in the sources that it has at its disposal
something like codecity plugin in eclipse?
or FindBugs
fge
fge
I don't know codecity
FindBugs could be viewed as such a tool... Except that it also analyses the generated byte code
Do you know JSR 305?
Ohwell, nevermind
That's a technical detail
@fge nem :(
@fge But I saw it in your profile
fge
fge
What? JSR 305? In my profile? Doubtful
JSR 292, yes
Err, no, JSR 203
JSR 292 I want to master
well.. no idea what that is
fge
fge
00:49
JSR 203 is java.nio.file
Kind of a certification?
fge
fge
JSR 292 is java.lang.invoke
Mastering about Java docs?
fge
fge
JSR 305 is annotations dedicated to static analysis tools
JSR: Java Specification Request
'Request' for what?
fge
fge
00:51
Improvements, for some definition of "improvement"
To the base JDK API, to the JVM, etc etc
Or a new API
Woooooo....
that's toooooo much official Java
fge
fge
Maybe; but it produces results :p
JSR 292 appeared in Java 7; and without it Java 8 wouldn't have lambdas :p
so, the result is, release of versions ?
fge
fge
Of major versions? Yes
JSR is kind of a community like IEEE ?
fge
fge
00:54
No, JSR are the items; the "community" is the JCP
Just like RFCs are the items of the IETF
alright
fge
fge
(damn; I know too much Java for my health)
 
3 hours later…
04:15
@fge der?
 
6 hours later…
10:23
@Gemtastic ... hi... :)
How often do you check your mail ?? :P
:)))
It depends on which mail
I've been pretty busy the last few days. The only mail I've replied to is to a recruiter
I see.. Hope all is fine..
10:43
I've got a nasty cold but it's mostly annoying; I can still code.
you will get cold code :)
Well, I'm not saying the code might not suffer from it, but at least I can do something, it's not like when your fever is so high you can't even write System.out.println("Hello World!");P
10:57
:)
 
3 hours later…
13:43
Morning, Java!
Morning
Morning
Hey @Gemtastic I hear you have sick coding skills...
Badum tss
Yeps
Hope you feel better soon
13:46
Thanks
Morning @Joe @Gem
14:01
is there any technology that has an observer-ish pattern that alerts the application of changes in the database?
OakBot Online.
fge
fge
@FasevMoweasck not a general technology for that, no... But that looks like an XY problem, so start by explaining your problem first
@fge oh, thank you for promptly responding. We have this database that gets updates on say 'statuses' of hardware devices. The status changes are dependent on the user of the machine. Say, if a user turns up the device, it changes its database status to 1, and when off to 0, when using 3. But, we are abstracted from how those statuses gets updated. The only gateway we have for status updates is by constantly querying the status.
I implemented a thread that constantly looks up those values. however, they are hitting performance of the CPU badly. specially multiple threads looking up on multiple devices. More especially when the statuses changes often. Each change on the 'observed' DB, should be reflected on our native DB. When write/update queries are hitting, it eats the CPU resource badly.
Instead of monitoring the database, you should monitor when you update the database.
fge
fge
How complex is your table so that updating one column hits performance that badly?
14:15
its not really complex. its like real-time replication from one DB to another @fge
fge
fge
But you do know that DBs themselves have replication protocols, right? Why can't you query the "original" database anyway?
@Michael, I monitor when does the updates run on my native DB. if the same status comes up on the timed check, they ignore the update. however, if the status changes of the observed DB is too frequent, then it would update the native DB same times
ahhhh @fge, im so sorry, i had the wrong statement of problem. I was already on that part that looks on the observed database, rather on the native DB. But the same problem exists, it has to constantly schedule a lookup for check. i wonder if there is a technology that would notify if there are changes instead of constantly checking.
@fge replication wouldnt be possible on this setup. one is MSSQL and the other is MySQL
fge
fge
Aargh, MySQL
see, the whole discussion gets ruined when MySQL gets mentioned. OMG, if only I knew this would be problematic, i couldve hit my professor back in 2010 for 'glorifying' and promoting that sh&*(& to me and my classmates
fge
fge
OK, nevermind that
There is still something I don't understand
Do those devices really update the db themselves?
Or do they go through a gateway to do that?
(but yes, MySQL is crappy)
14:26
im not really quite sure how they do that. but when the supplier demonstrated the product to us, he just turns on the device uses it, and constantly hits the refresh button for his select query on MSSQL to show that the status changes..
fge
fge
Ah, so this means you don't have the source of all this part of the chain?
yes, the only access we have for these updates is by the observed database.
fge
fge
Well, I see only one solution then
i was thinking, there should be a technology of some sort already. because, would you agree that its quite straining to check on every half a second the status of the database. heck, what if every 1milisecond for mission critical reasons
fge
fge
A trigger on the MSSQL db
But how to write that trigger, no idea
14:29
okay... then what would it would do to the application
fge
fge
The application needs not monitor anymore; it just needs to react to the events sent by the trigger
yeah, but how do he say 'poke' the application that something changed. and then run the methods that needs to run.
fge
fge
14:42
That is for you to figure out :) I don't know MSSQL at all, I only ever use PostgreSQL
 
2 hours later…
16:36
I really don't like JSF >_>
17:14
hey
17:27
Hello
have you work with java graphics ?
Define Java graphics
Because JSF IS a Java graphics
18:25
@Gemtastic Is it?
@Gemtastic its is bad.. real bad!
Yes, It's the JavaEE way of providing web graphics.
And I agree 100%
I much rather just make a REST API and build a real frontend on it
But alas, 'tis school
and I don't understand why school teaches outdated stuff.
I mean JSF is not outdated, but there are things way better than JSF already present
18:42
In this case it's the JavaEE specification. Since it contains JSF still we had to use it
JavaEE specification doesn't have JSF
JSF is a framework built on top of JavaEE specification
No it's a framework included in the JavaEE specification
JSP is not however
JSP and JSF are not connected any more either
@Gemtastic where did you read it?
In the JavaEE specification
can you show me?
19:04
@gem it mostly talks about the JSF standard which is different thing
What do you mean?
the first link talks about the change they are gonna do in JavaEE which will also affect the JSF standard specification
Yeah, that's why I said the second link is better
Still, it lists JSF as a part of the JavaEE specification
The implementation is another thing
the second link just a list of JavaEE technology
but it doesn't say anywhere that JSF is a part of JavaEE specification
19:22
Ok, this line kind of prove your point - Major additions to Java EE 5 include the JSTL and JSF technologies that simplify development of web applications
Good. :P
However, it's not a good technology >_>
JSF: Use poop to make poop and polish you poop with poop to try and make it less poop.
 
2 hours later…
21:29
Is this true?
22:17
@Vogel612 I asked my friend about haskell OSS
how would I know?
I'm German
well... context :D
thanks, what'd they say?
he told me right now Haskell lacks a proper IDE and some people are trying to create one, so you can try that one.
There is also a project for Postgres type check
I can't recall the names of the project. I should have written down the names of the project.
I will ask him again and come back
The IDE thing sounds rather interesting
I'll need to get into compilers and formal verification anyways.
let me guess.. I can ask around on #haskell at FreeNode?
22:32
@Vogel612 I think it is this one : github.com/leksah/leksah
why is #java on freenode invite only?
22:46
no clue
fge
fge
23:29
@ItachiUchiha you just have to register your nickname

« first day (1953 days earlier)      last day (3215 days later) »