@MadaraUchiha do you know if there's a good existing implementation for interacting with SO chat (for writing a bot)? I'm using ChatExchangeJS but jacob said it wasn't done and I want to stab him, and I didn't spend enough time trying to rip apart what works from rlemon's bot
I don't know how it is in other countries, but there was something that surprised me much at the wedding .The registrer was using a fountain pen that she had to dip in ink. I asked why was she using such an old tool, and she said that the ink had to be official ink, because it doesn't fade. I was :O
@ItachiUchiha lol. Hurry, let's start an argument!
@Tavo I would use it because I like such things :D I also love pocket watches :) The old ones with a chain you can pull out of your suit. Maaaan I love such things :D
@Unihedron today im building my sokoban GUI, and i need help in FXML
i want to display the level on a Canvas, but a custom one, so i created a class that extends Canvas, and displays the level, something is wrong with the initialization of this class, because it doesnt work, and when im asking for the width,height its 0,0.
My controller implements Initializable, if i try to create the displayer in the initialize method, it works because i'm giving it a path to a file, but i want the user to browse for a file, so i cant create the displayer there...so im stuck
SOLID principles: does the SRP violate the open closed principle? SRP says a class should have only one reason to change, but open closed principle says don't change; extend.
"SRP says a class should have only one reason to change, but open closed principle says don't change" both fragments before and after the comma is wrong
The single responsibility principle states that every module or class should have one responsibility over the functionality provided by the software, because it is bad design to couple multiple things that change for different reasons at different times, "A class should have only one reason to change.” is a generalization of the rule and not an interpretation.
It also doesn't contradict with OCP because it doesn't.
@TimCastelijns "it doesn't say you cannot modify the class, it only says you should be able to extend from it without having to modify it" - ok, so you're saying, if I want to extend my class, I should be easily able to do this without changing the superclass?
@TimCastelijns "I am not saying that. The guy you are referring to says that" why did you respond with that when I clarified above?
I'm confused now: In object-oriented programming, the open/closed principle states "software entities (classes, modules, functions, etc.) should be open for extension, but closed for modification";[1] that is, such an entity can allow its behaviour to be extended without modifying its source code.
it's open for extension so Hoverboard can extend it, it's closed for modification because a Skateboard is a Skateboard and nothing else
and Skateboard inherits from Vehicle, which should also satisfy OCP and be closed for modification, so Vehicle should not need to have its source code modified, and neither does Skateboard
@TheCoder you should not have to modify the superclass when extending, because any new functionality you add should be in your own object with the new extensions as overriding and optionally calling the old functionality when relevant, but not modify it
suppose we have PrintTheFirstTenNumbers which prints 1 to 10 in a method.
PrintTheFirstTenNumbers only does what it does - print the first ten numbers - and after the implementation is done, it shouldn't ever be changed, because every other thing that needs to be done isn't its problem.
I guess I'm also demonstrating the SRP while we're at it. :P
@Gilad The problem is exactly what @uni mentioned. Your Scene points to the SokoGuiDisplay object which was created by the FXMLoader while loading the FXML and it injected it into the Controller. If you ditch it and use a different SokoGuiDisplay object, it will not return you the correct output for height/width or anything similar.
when you guys are writing code, so you continually review your code ensuring the principles are followed? After a design decision, do you ask 'does this violate any solid?'
@ItachiUchiha But then how would one get the correct values out there? They are correct in the first place, but in another one it is not? I am not familiar with FXML so this might be stupid :)
so I break it into smaller objects that do every other job, and I make sure those jobs are "complete" and "extensible" so I don't write spaghetti that is hard to chew through
@ItachiUchiha Will do soon (hopefully). Currently I am not sure what to do with it, but when I find a project, I will. Currently I am still sitting and documenting my current project :/
DIP -> why? because implementations can change, I want my program to work at all times even when the library is "improved", how? by not assuming what an interface does and taking it exactly what it is for all, not for every
OCP -> why? because objects should behave for itself, new objects can behave similarly if they want but it's not my problem, how? by not having objects that are "dead" or doesn't fit into any useful shape
LSP -> why? because all fragments should be modular and allow substitutions, and that it lets the subclass do what they want under the same contract, maybe more efficiently with more info
I have a class with a 3 element case statement. I need to add another case so decide to refactor - all cases are now classes and I have a seperate class and use polymorphism to call a superclass method - what principle am I adhering to?
heck, all of your objects might already be adhering to all of SOLID already
you should be more worried about "is my code good enough that I can develop with it" than "does this adhere to some arbitrary rule that apparently would be good for me"
SOLID teach you principles that make your code in OOP be better designed and easier to maintain, but ultimately you are using OOP design and not SOLID, it's just a small upgrade to avoid bad design
@geisterfurz007 I misinterpreted the question. I think I answer the question correctly but I can't tell you that with a 100% guarantee since I took that test almost 3 years ago.
I'm more surprised that someone thinks I should know every site related to programming out there :)
I don't care about trash sites even if they're in a field I'm interested in
> Go on .. pick the language you're most comfortable with.
JS, JS ISN'T HERE
WHAT ABOUT SCALA
Java, C, Python, C++ <- what is any of this going to be useful in a real job
java doesn't use references, it uses values, jesus christ
"Awesome! Based on your responses and the usage pattern of other users, we'll start you off at Level 1. Our Learning Engine will get you to Level 5 fast!"