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22:01
side?
aloha all
on-site interview?
Anyone know of a good start-to-finish project type guide to HTML/XHTML
my girlfriend wants to learn and shes not fussed on HTML-dog
htmldog ?
:P
Something more project based would be better @Nathan so there is a sense of completion/applications of different elements
22:06
W3Schools moved to bin
3
LOL
Does SitePoint have anything like that? They have tutorialish PHP stuff
the evil W word
I have a copy of Using Netscape 2 *Special Edition* here, but it's probably not worth the postage to mail it overseas...
@Nathan what is that?
oh wow
thats hardcore
It's a pretty good book... covers cutting edge things like VRML. Almost 1000 pages.
@IvoWetzel Yeah, now can you fix some of the issues being reported? :P
Picked it up cheap in the local library discard bin...
Specifically, I messed up something again: github.com/BonsaiDen/JavaScript-Garden/issues#issue/56 sigh...
22:11
VRML?
@Nathan Oh man using netscape 2 !
something relay messaging lists?
@YiJiang It's 23:10 here, I need to go to bed. Came home late today since I visited a shared flat this evening
@IvoWetzel Did the flat meet your approval?
dunno, I need to visit at least a few before I make a decision
22:14
:For successor, see X3D. VRML (Virtual Reality Modeling Language, pronounced vermal or by its initials, originally—before 1995—known as the Virtual Reality Markup Language) is a standard file format for representing 3-dimensional (3D) interactive vector graphics, designed particularly with the World Wide Web in mind. It has been superseded by X3D. Format VRML is a text file format where, e.g., vertices and edges for a 3D polygon can be specified along with the surface color, UV mapped textures, shininess, transparency, and so on. URLs can be associated with graphical components so that ...
wow.. its canvas :D
oh wait no i know VRML
i used that on a project for 3d models
no it was a plugin-based attempt at 3d
yeah i remember it now
It's funny actually to see that a lot of the book covers things that are still true/useful, like JS, but then there's this "VRML IS THE NEXT BIG THING!!!!ONE!" chapter that's totally laughable now.
@IvoWetzel Real Life takes so much time, and is so expensive.
I'd happily spend some of my money for mre time
22:17
@Nathan she just told me HTMLdog "sucks because it doesnt show you how it looks after you code it"
shes a fan of Lynda.com
I'm glad I can enjoy my kids' childhood even though I have to work hard so they don't have anything to worry about.
@Nathan :)
@MylesGray I was actually going to mention Lynda.com because it used to be quite good; Lynda cares about standards and accessibility and stuff.
They have one HTML/XHTML basics that promotes font tag :(
I bought it for her but its very.. meh
22:19
Too bad.
A List Apart is also a mecca for Doing It Right; you might find something there.
In fact they can be a little over-the-top elitest imho.
i like ALA but they are a bit OTT at times
btw, we had someone for an on-side interview at the office today...
user1385191
blech, lynda's stuff is really boring plus you have to pay for most of it.
that guy failed so hard at the coding, I'm kinda sorry for him :/
:(
Failing at code is sad.
22:22
@IvoWetzel how badly did he fail?
he got the exact same challenge that I had back in feburary
@MylesGray It took him 4 hours to come up with the stuff I wrote in 10 minutes >_>
Oh dear jesus
what was it?
Ouch
@IvoWetzel is a god.
well, we're making a 2D game engine thingy thing, so make an educated guess
user1385191
was hit-testing the big stumbling block?
22:24
@MattMcDonald No hit testing involved, just some basic iso stuff
@IvoWetzel "on-site interview" is correct; I just didn't know what you were talking about at first.
user1385191
I'm terrible at hit-testing beyond this.x > bounds.x or using the pythagorean theorem
I don't think he really prepared himself for the interview
I did spend a day before the interview just writing some code... so I was well prepared :P
user1385191
lol the only code question I had in my interview was: "do you use any design patterns?"
anyways I'm off to bed... but it's incredible how much of a difference there is between people
user1385191
22:26
my response: "is that a trick question?"
@MattMcDonald o/
user1385191
(thinking it was silly at the time that programming could have design patterns)
@MattMcDonald ... I thought it was "Is that a trick question? I use design patterns all the time in EVERYTHING I do."
22:27
Re-usable coding is based on patterns
and documentation
ADD FREAKING DOCUMENTATION!!!! /off to bed now ;)
user1385191
you see, I come from a crappy program, not some great compsci program like the one across the city.
Dont use XML documentation though
user1385191
out in half the time, peers are much dumber
Use something like NatDocs
@MattMcDonald :(
Tbh I didnt learn about design patterns at uni
I learned from stackoverflow
user1385191
22:28
I learn from books
I actually learned more about coding from stackoverflow then my compsci course >_>
user1385191
I dont write AS3.
I dont like classical OO anymore.
user1385191
:(
@Raynos +1 on that
22:31
Inheritence << composition
Design Patterns are relatively new, but many CS classes/professors are outdated.
@Nathan by relatively new you mean the 80s ?
The web is relatively new.
user1385191
I'd rather take compsci than the tripe I'm taking right now
Oh my bad
its from 1994.
Your right they are relatively new
Wikipedia says "Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software was published in 1994 "
22:32
@MattMcDonald what are you taking?
I'm taking comp sci & maths.
It's pretty good.
Don't have to take mickey mouse courses which get sublemented by real maths instead.
Yes, the web is relatively new too, but you're likely to get Web 1.0 when you take a course anywhere.
I remember having to write a hash table in C for our coursework
user1385191
instead of
And just not knowing how to do it
user1385191
We were actaully annoyed our lecturer didn't show us how to make a hashtable in C.
Where as I can now understand it's a trivial thing. And he just said "Just make a hash table". it really is a "Just"
user1385191
apparently, there's a shortage of compsci students
... I went to college from 1993-1996 and didn't learn about the web in any classes; but many students taught each other things.
@MattMcDonald but you get to do game design! and game programming!
my course is just straight up shit
22:34
Ironically I did officially learn Objective C on the NeXT platform, which is all the rage again for iPhone apps :)
and "web design and web development"
user1385191
just one crappy 3d class
user1385191
I went into the program wanting to be a designer
we have a 3d class.
user1385191
didn't turn to programming until I was 17
22:35
"Computer graphics" Write a 3d animation in C using openGL.
I really appreciate programming and computer science a lot more doing a placement.
If you have a chance to do a placement year take it.
@Nathan did you learn lots of smalltalk at uni?
@Raynos None at all.
I expected smalltalk to be big in academia in the 90s
Any book reccommendations @Nathan? I was thinking visual quick pro but they dont do much anymore
My best professors taught the concepts, and used whatever language/platform was handy at the time. I think mostly C-family languages.
some standards compliant books on css/html would be good
22:39
@MylesGray I don't know any good HTML books... except maybe Visibone cheatsheets
which I love
thats awesome
must.... buy.... oneee
I thought so :)
And @Raynos I'm not even a real CS major; I wimped out with an Art major and a CS minor :)
@Nathan o. sucks
@Nathan @MylesGray I have the visibone cheatsheets. They are awesome. Do get the full one though. I wimped out on the php/mysql
user1385191
I don't know how I'd make 4 years of compsci work now that I have a decent job.
Im thinking of getting the everything book
did you get it laminated?
22:42
I don't think lamination is worth it-- you can just buy another if it wears out and it's still cheaper.
Also things change faster than the paper wears out.
I have the everything book and a couple of the smaller ones. The PHP/mySQL stuff is actually less useful because it's so extensive, and I tend to google the official docs for it rather than using the cheatsheet because it's faster.
@Nathan its $50 for the book and $90 laminated?
user1385191
I've yet to read a reference to a "good" PHP book
er, the visibone PHP/mysql is slow to manually grep (compared to google), but less informative than the official docs.
@MylesGray unless you are a total pig or Aquaman or something, the unlaminated version will last longer than necessary.
@MylesGray oh no I got the 30$
@Nathan okay cool :)
22:47
I like the css reference and html. And the DOM. The IE7 / FF reference is cool
Meh css is easy to reference in your head
CSS is simple given a year of experience
@MylesGray another reason you don't need lamination :)
haha true...
yeah ill just buy it unlaminated
what are the charts?
Big versions
of stuff.
@MylesGray btw you might want to buy a good serverside book.
Probably want to pick up a good ASP.NET MVC book :D
user1385191
I've got my big O'Reilly Python book
22:55
@Raynos ewwww... .net
expensive hosting?
no thank you
@MylesGray I cant recommend any books on node.
I just meant structuring large code behind for websites
Wouldnt do it in php
ewww.
@Raynos python/perl?
And doing it in node is just hardcore.
I've seen 2 node books
Just pick Java or Python and have free hosting with google
22:57
@MylesGray I'd rather use J2EE then python/perl
@Raynos what ASP.NET MVC book would you recommend?
@Box9 how does python code behind work
61
Q: Best ASP.NET MVC book?

pearcewgI'm going to be starting a new project with VS2008/ASP.NET, and I would like to use MVC. What is the best MVC book out there? (Are there any good ones?) Edit: I threw in the asp.net-mvc-2 tag so we could possibly get some updated answers.

@Raynos what is the reason for choosing ASP.Net?
thanks
@Raynos what do you mean exactly? The same way as in other languages
22:58
@MylesGray I know it and it allows easy large structuing
@Box9 Oh I meant what are the major frameworks that are build on python
Ah, Django is the most popular
I think that's the one google supports too
And I think Twisted provides similar async functionality to Node
Ah django. Ok.
@MylesGray just hack something together with node, express, mongoose & backbone
What are peoples fav server-side languages then?
and reasons?
23:01
node.js
Yeah, node for its simplicity
PHP with the Symfony framework. Because it's like Rails but without learning a new language.
And there's vibrant documentation, development and community around it.
I dont know any PHP :D
do you guys like MVC or another model?
im not a fan of MVC i must say :/
very slow development
Symfony uses an MVC pattern and has a bit of a steep learning curve but is then much faster for development than doing it manually
Now I wouldn't do anything bigger than one DB table without Symfony (or equivalent; I am looking in to ASP.NET MVC)
23:08
I like loose MVC.
You have your representation on the GUI of your data and you have your data,
And there completely seperate.
Then you have some kind of communication layer and some kind data storage layer.
so its more like MV?
Yes.
My definition of MVC is the Backbone view of ModelViewCollection.
I like having sets of models and manipulation them
i dont like the controller layer
it makes little sense to me
I like all three but I like to be able to cheat a little in the view sometimes.
@Nathan ooo. What do you mean cheating?
23:15
I noramlly like having connection strings in the model and then maybe just having quick connections in the view if its a one off
@MylesGray "connection" strings?
@Raynos adding anyhting other than presentation to the view
A view should be a wrapper around a dom object
@Raynos like DB queries
@Raynos I just don't like the "you shouldn't need anything other than <? echo $value ?> in the view layer" attitude I see sometimes.
23:16
@MylesGray db queries in js? ...
Oh. PHP implementations
@Raynos php
im not talking about MVC in JS
MVC in php
Sometimes the right place for manipulating data structures/collections/whatever is actually the view, and you need real code to do that, not just a subset in a template language.
I like hooking them up by events
okay bought me the visibone book
:)
user1385191
I have no problem helping other people out with code, yet MVC makes my head spin around endlessly. C'est la vie.
23:19
Heh.
You shouldnt bind your views & inputs together though
The way I envision MVC is by a simple game.
You have a rendering mechanism, the view. A persistant data model of your game world. The models, and the input & loop which is the controller of the game. I'm just a big fan of loose coupling.
My opinion is heavily swayed by working on maintenance projects. I value extendable, re-usable and maintenable code highly.
Yes it is slower then hacking it together.
But then you end up with a mess. @MylesGray you know what messy code is like and how code inheritence/maintenance is not fun.
@Nathan whats the split in business projects between fresh project work and maintenance/enhancements on existing projects?
Yeah exactly
you need to code by a model if you want it to be reusable
@Raynos it varies extremely widely
@MylesGray I had to write some code last week where I was accessing the database through the permissions singleton in a GUI object constructor :D ( There really wasn't any alternative). That's why you need something set up. MVC is just a nice meta construct
@Raynos why no alternative?
23:30
Because the usage of the control was auto generated designer code.
So I only had access to the constructor, not the calls to the constructor.
Ideally I would have used a factory.
:/
Not fun
@Raynos even working in one position in one company I have alternated between "all new development" and "all maintenance" for parts of the same year.
Though I've been here long enough that much of the "maintenance" is on stuff I wrote. Some of the worst!
@Nathan I've done the same. I'm just wondering as a whole on average. What are the amount of work done as maintenance/enhancement and as new development
is it 50/50
is it 80/20 or 40/60
... I guess it depends on how well you write it in the first place and how well you can convince your bosses to throw it out and start over :)
I guess so.
23:36
some things I've deployed have almost no maintenance. Others break constantly. The worst things break the most often.
Our company is larger so we have a permanent team on maintenance for a project.
Its not that bad.
I learn a lot about project structure.
I need to learn more about high level design.
Yeah, I'm in an IT dept at one hospital where everyone handles a lot of little things. There are bigger teams of programmers in the corporate HQ.
I am usually working solo. I wish sometimes for other programmers to collaborate with.
But I get to do things like figure out why PHP with Fast CGI is so horribly slow on this Win 2003 server!!
Oh is that fun?
I actually have a suprisingly good balance between writing C#, SQL & JS. I dont touch any html/css really. We dont really create new pages.
I do like how they never bothered to train us in js or sql. "You dont need to write efficient SQL all the other stored procedures take 5s each anyway. It doesn't really matter! Just nest selects & joins about 4 or 5 deep!"
Actually I think most SQL servers rather like that sort of thing.
Really?
I meant a select in a select in a select
23:44
This one time, I consolidated about 20 IBM DB2 (on OS/400) queries into one monstrous query with lots of JOINs and cut the execution time by 90%.
    SELECT * FROM (
          SELECT Foo, Bar
          FROM  (

          )
          JOIN (
                 SELECT Baz, Boop FROM ...
          )
          ON Bar = Faz
     )
But I think that's particularly true of the way the OS/400 system works. More like a tractor than a sports car.
@Nathan reminds me of "this one time, at band camp..."
@MylesGray :D
@MylesGray I liked that phrase until I stumbled on more details of its use in American Pie... should probably stop using it.
23:48
hahaha, yeah not the best movie ever made :P
I'm kind of more in favor of the "OK SO THIS ONE TIME..." method of introducing a story used by davesecretary, an inspiring writer and proof that CAPS LOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR AWESOME.
3
hahaha
caps lock cruise control for awesoem
:P
srsly now you will spend the rest of your waking hours catching up on davesecretary stories.
@IvoWetzel If I said the big 7 in germany which 7 cities come to mind? (In order of big-ness)
user1385191
@Nathan also know as loud Howard from Dilbert.
23:57
@MattMcDonald Do you know him? I mean you're Canadian too, right?
user1385191
never heard of davesecretary

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