« first day (1649 days earlier)      last day (3300 days later) » 

4:00 PM
that was wht i tried first. then i read the docs and they say i need "\"TableName\""
 
@KarelG what dialect?
 
-5
Q: Give me teh Regex, please

Johnny BonesI have this block of code in C# code-behind: string input = "CN=L_WDJACK127_WDC_SSIS_USER_CH,OU=ALOSup,OU=Infra,DC=internal, DC=mycompany,DC=com" string pattern = @"CN\=(.+)\,"; MatchCollection matches = Regex.Matches(input, pattern); foreach (Match match in matches) { Console.WriteLine(mat...

This is why I hate regex questions. But at least this guy tried stuff
 
@SterlingArcher Bestest question title
 
except for that summary.
he'll miss a lot of views for that.
 
@Zirak it's been edited already
 
user1596138
4:01 PM
@SterlingArcher lmao oh ok
 
did you have backticked your table +db name ?
(weird suggestion)
 
in sql I need to double quote them becasue they are MixedCase.
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/app-pgdump.html#PG-DUMP-EXAMPLES
The very very last exampel on the page shows my what i SHOULD be typing..
 
@Luggage How odd
 
yea. i use pg_dump all the time so i know it can find and get to my db jsut fine.
just never referenced a table name
ohh well. i't not critical at the moment.
 
Guys I'm proud to announce that my beard is coming in very nicely
 
4:04 PM
did you have tried backticking it ?
 
That is all
 
@KarelG i'll try but that's not what the docs say
 
Nope. -t Users -t "Users" -t "`Users`"
 
single quote that shit
 
4:07 PM
ohh, some of those backticks i jsut typed were removed by chat
 
double quotes are for nubs and java
 
and postgres
single quotes for string literals, double for object names
 
He did mention "nubs"
 
but yea, i tried single.
 
have you tried triple quotes?
 
4:08 PM
i'll try on linux in a bit in case it's some shell oddity on osx, but i doubt it
 
Only in programming...
 
or triple-double?
 
I remember some guy's face when I told him javascript has triple equals
 
OSX was designed as an OS with a bunch of shell oddities
Darwin may have gotten evolution right, but his kernel sucks
 
@ssube Job control to fd 4...
 
4:09 PM
Sorry to be "that guy" but does anyone here think they may be able to help me with my issue? Ill shut up if not. :)
 
@KarelG that's literally so accurate
 
well, it's bash.
i've never encountered a shell problem yet.
 
@gburning We don't know what the issue is, tell us so we may be able to help.
 
@Zirak It's a bit earlier in the chat log. Don't want to spam. :)
 
oh, sorry then
 
4:11 PM
Np! Would be awesome if anyone is able to help
 
omg, i'm such a fool.
 
I suspect it's a fairly simple problem but that part of Javascript is still very new to me
 
I forgot the table names are singular in this db, not plural.
<hangs head>
 
...
can happen bro
 
4:13 PM
yea.. i know.
but embarrasing, none the less
 
@SterlingArcher I feel like listening to semi-emo stuff
like BFMV
what do you suggest
 
What would be the best app to learn how to make them RESTful?
 
Can't go wrong with BFMV
Maybe some Atreyu
 
yeah, but I want something new
 
Hmm, all my new stuff is pretty heavy
 
4:15 PM
Had anybody gone thru this JS series? youtube.com/…
 
@Mosho Underoath maybe?
 
!!youtube attack attack the wretched
this is pretty fucking good
 
not new, but if you haven't listened to them, do it!
 
@GNi33 sure, a specific song?
 
4:17 PM
I can't help but wonder how accurate this is
 
is Javascript used to display a gif graphic while swf file downloads? like monitor the transfer across the http header or something?
 
that's racist
 
@SterlingArcher Skeptics
 
Guys i'm not going to go searching for non-white people who have died on a hot air balloon
XD
 
4:21 PM
do it
 
On 7 January 2012, a scenic hot air balloon flight from Carterton, New Zealand, collided with a high voltage power line while attempting to land, causing it to catch fire, disintegrate and crash just north of the town, killing all eleven people (ten passengers and the pilot) on board. An inquiry into the accident by the Transport Accident Investigation Commission (TAIC) concluded that the balloon pilot made an error of judgement when contact with the power lines became imminent, trying to out-climb the power lines rather than using the rapid descent system to drop the balloon quickly to the ground...
 
USS Shenandoah was the first of four United States Navy rigid airships. It was built in 1922–1923 at Lakehurst Naval Air Station, and first flew in September 1923. It developed the Navy's experience with rigid airships, and made the first crossing of North America by airship. On the 57th flight, Shenandoah was torn apart in a squall line over Ohio in 1925. == Design and construction == Shenandoah was originally designated FA-1, for 'Fleet Airship Number One' but this was changed to ZR-1. The airship was 680 ft (207.26 m) long and weighed 36 tons (32658 kg). It had a range of 5,000 mi (4,300 nmi...
 
^ Apparently you shouldn't smoke pot and pilot a hot air balloon.
TIL.
 
military airship
didn't know they had those
 
hahaha mosho's avatar
 
4:21 PM
> 6 × 0.30 in (7.62 mm) Lewis machine guns
8 × 500 lb (230 kg) bombs
 
@Mosho : is that avatar in response to zirak ?
 
what did zirak say about it
I think it was frenchie
 
On 26 February 2013, at 07:00 Egypt Standard Time (05:00 UTC), a hot air balloon crashed near Luxor, Egypt. The crash resulted in 19 deaths out of 21 passengers – 18 on-site and one in hospital hours later. It was the deadliest ballooning disaster in history, surpassing the Alice Springs hot air balloon crash in 1989 which killed 13 people, and the deadliest aerostat disaster since the Hindenburg crash in 1937 which killed 36 people. == Background == Hot air balloons are commonly used in Egypt to provide tourists with an aerial view of the country's landscape and famous landmarks. In Luxor, such...
^ This one killed 9 people from Hong Kong and 4 from Japan. Does that count?
 
does anyone know how to monitor download status from http web server of a .swf file?
 
@JoJo yes
 
4:23 PM
@Retsam holy shit
 
Which applications should I consider making RESTful?
 
I am so not flying in one of those
 
wait, do you mean during the download?
 
@ssube check for it with JavaScript?
@ssube yes I just want to display a spinny graphic if it is still transfering is all
 
@JoJo i thought you meant like request logging. A progress indicator, maybe JS, if the events exist.
 
4:24 PM
@StevensHaen the question doesnt' make sense. RESTful is an ideal while designing an api
 
@StevensHaen that's an absurd question.
 
@Mosho my personal favourite would be "Reinventing your exit"
but the whole "They're only chasing safety" is brilliant and is a sort-of post-hardcore classic already
 
@Mosho they were mostly passive, but super common in WWII
bomb balloons over london were the biggest
hard to see a target or fly a plane when there's a pile of blimps
 
It's interesting, though, because there was a whole era where the big fear was an armada of airships coming and bombing your city to rubble.
 
@Retsam or the next city south, if the wind picks up
I imagine that's why offensive airships never caught on.
Big, slow target largely at the whim of the environment. It's like PHP all over again.
 
4:27 PM
Actually, I think they might have caught on... if not for the nuke.
 
idk, these worked just fine
 
nah.
 
They aren't really that at the whim of the environment; bombs and zepplins aren't that easily blown off course, as I understand.
 
even withou the nuke, traditional airplanes are more capable at deliving bombs
 
@Mosho "Airship ready"
 
4:29 PM
@Retsam those things have very different sizes and wind-effect-profile-thing-words
 
@Luggage True. Maybe the airships were the fear before planes were really a thing.
 
now, airships towed by planes, carrying fuel, as long-term transport/air bases would be fun
 
Perhaps. I doubt an airship can really evade any AA missles.
 
floating aircraft carriers
 
and likely difficult to make stealthy
though, i'd live to see a stealth airship
 
4:30 PM
@Luggage it is big enough to mount point/missile defenses
 
which just robs some of your bomb weight budget
 
If you guys are interested, this podcast episode is what I remember talking about airship combat: Hardcore History: Logical Insanity
 
but a cluster of airships can be guarded by a few with missile defense systems
 
I think fleets of many many unmanned ballons makes a lot more sense.
 
The episode is about the nuke, but it opens up talking about blimps and zepplins.
 
4:32 PM
@Luggage yeah, clusters tied together, guarded by a few armed balloons and with air patrols
 
(It's called Logical Insanity, because he calls the nuke "a logical answer to an insane set of questions", which is perhaps the best description I think I've ever heard)
 
just enough power to stay in the right spot, skeleton crews for defense and distributing gear, but otherwise floating fortresses
if boats weren't cheaper and easier, they would be great for invasion and coastal warfare
 
slow enough moving that you can hit them with guns. don't need missles.
Very interesting, but I just can't see them being practical.
 
guns have a very limited range, unless you have railguns
even missiles have a altitude ceiling that is, I believe, lower than some planes
 
well, if you made airships with missle defence, i think a big gun + radar + computer aiming would be an answer
 
4:35 PM
an invasion force of aircraft carriers and zeppelins going up against a country with ground forces and massive railgun emplacements would be fucking sweet, though
that could be in any movie
 
any vehicle can be countered. Planes at least can be fast enough that you have the human response times to try to counter that.
 
that's also how things will look when the US and China inevitably get into a war :(
 
surprise is always the best bet
 
If you want a movie with airship combat, there's always the Three Musketeers. Shame it sucked.
 
What's a connection pool in NodeJS?
 
4:36 PM
Its terrible if you want to be a Dentist. — Alex K. 19 mins ago
 
@StevensHaen It's a general term for things like database connections. not node-specific
 
@Retsam right? Attractive eastern european women, airships, swordplay... it had everything.
 
you keep a 'pool' of connectiosn open so you don't have to open and close them for each request to the db
 
@ssube Hi
 
At one point, the French are surprised by a zepplin suddenly arriving... which was hilarious. There's no way a zepplin is sneaking up on anyone.
 
4:37 PM
you take an already-connected session out of the pool, use it, and then put it back when you are done
 
@Luggage Well, isn't that simply a connection, as opposed to a pool?
 
most DB libraries will have pooling built in.
 
@Retsam I dunno, they are awfully quiet. :P
 
I got like 5 minutes into the movie and decided to keep a list of all the logical errors. I ended up with like 30 things on the list.
 
speaking of movies with problems.. anyone see Interstellar?
 
4:39 PM
which movie ?
 
way worse than Gravity as far as bad physics
 
@Luggage I thought they wrote all that off to magic aliens?
 
But even the human-built machines were bad.
 
I loved it
 
 
4:40 PM
So.. they launched the 'ranger' on top of a rocket with multiple stages int he begining. that's realistic
 
But.. then that same vessel can land and take off from 2 planets
without a big-ass rocket under it
 
As a terrible golfer, this hurts me
 
weaker graviteh
 
4:41 PM
a bit, but not enough to turn that little craft, tht's mostly cockpit into an SSTO
 
@Mosho Actually, hilariously not.
 
well, story was solid
and graphics were great
fuck physics
 
It needs a several stage rocket to leave earth... but it takes off from a super-gravity water planet with a half-waterlogged engine.
 
if I wanted to see some physics I would go outside
 
Also matthew mcconaughey went on and on about "you gotta leave soemthign behind" and refered to newtons laws. Only.. they only dropped weight AFTER the burn, which was pointless.
and as soon as the parts disconnected, they started falling backwards, when the rest of the ship could keep drifting, unpowered, fowards
 
4:43 PM
never practiced golf ... there is not enough space for that in my country
 
But yeah, I liked the film overall... and I would say it probably got physics better than Gravity did, as far as I've heard.
 
you live in the Vatican?
 
well, there are golf courses, but i have to drive at least one hour to get to one
 
I'm ok with movies no being realistic. but they can't go on about physics that mcuh while showing you something wrong.
 
belgium see my logo : beer + chocolate + waffle + fries
 
4:43 PM
@Luggage Ehh... yeah they can.
 
I didn't hate the movie. I enjoyed it. But it bothered me that they chose to jsut ignore all physics about half-way trough
 
Morning
 
everythign up until they got to the wormhole was pretty decent
 
I don't mind pointing out errors in Physics... but they really never "bother" me. It's not the point of a movie to have perfect physics..
 
they were prepping you for magic aliens
 
user1596138
4:44 PM
@SterlingArcher lolololol
 
Normally I'd agree. I don't rail aginst star trek
but Interstellar seemed to make a big deal about both in the movie and talking about it
how they got consultants, etc.
 
And, they did get a lot of physics right. I mean, they actually had correct time dilation; the wormhole was actually not a hole, etc...
 
did nolan not hired a professor to calculate + simulate the wormhole effect with computers ?
 
yea..
 
@Retsam it may not have actually been a hole, but it wasn't actually a worm, either.
 
4:47 PM
Adn they were going to send that robot into the black hole to send out data.. right after explaining that you can never send information out of a black hole.
 
The robots actually felt like how the military might really make robot, both in design and function. (and *spoilers* we didn't have to rehash the "evil robots" trope again)
 
yea, i liked the robots, mostly.
 
My biggest complaint with the movie is the ending. That it didn't end with "TARS will return in the Avengers 2", mostly.
 
hehe
and the end was a little too happy
and felt forced.. as if they decided at the last minute that he needed to live
 
Ehh, that's very subjective. And, (spoilers, view edit history).
 
4:50 PM
yeah the end of that movie ... it was too open
 
Mostly, I find that a lot of people don't like the movie because they were expecting only hard science and then the movie ended up being a lot more emotion-driven.
 
I think it'd be damn hard to make a completely realistic space movie and have it not be boring
 
@Luggage when s01e01 is 20 years long and they get to Mars at the end, yeah, you'll lose most of your viewers
then 150 years of terraforming and building shelters
 
i'm not saying it must be real-time like '24'.
:)
 
there is a scene which caused a large brain strain. That the actor ended in ... <spoiler>
 
4:54 PM
@ssube Speaking of, they need to make the Mars trilogy into something
 
@KarelG you've never woken up in a bookshelf after a long night?
 
also only takes liek 6-9 months to get to mars.
 
@SomeKittens Ah man, I need to actually read that series. I read like... the first 2/3rds of the second book.
 
20 years is the scenic route
 
Also, they're making both Foundation and Childhood's End miniserieses
"Miniserieses" sounds like Gollum
 
4:56 PM
They need to consider the KSP generatnio when making movies, now.
 
@SomeKittens the what now?
 
Nah. Those people don't watch movies. Too busy playing KSP.
The Mars trilogy is a series of award-winning science fiction novels by Kim Stanley Robinson that chronicles the settlement and terraforming of the planet Mars through the intensely personal and detailed viewpoints of a wide variety of characters spanning almost two centuries. Ultimately more utopian than dystopian, the story focuses on egalitarian, sociological, and scientific advances made on Mars, while Earth suffers from overpopulation and ecological disaster. The three novels are Red Mars (1993), Green Mars (1994), and Blue Mars (1996). The Martians (1999) is a collection of short stories...
 
@SomeKittens the filthy cable execses have stolen my precious!
 
Given the rather large spoilers, it'll be fun to be a book reader
 
I'm still hoping we someday get an actual television adaptation of Wheel of Time...
 

« first day (1649 days earlier)      last day (3300 days later) »