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user1804599
19:00
Don’t bother with Java if you can bother with C#.
do you still like C#?
user1804599
Kind of.
user1804599
It’s better than PHP and Java. :F
I expected you to move fast
user1804599
If I need to target .NET I’d prefer F#, though. But C# is still pretty slick.
user1125394
19:03
there's maybe one thing not too bad in java , the Servlet thing
user1125394
oh well no
I don't want a nipple whitener, but thanks
user1804599
@NaN The only good thing about Java is that we—non-Java programmers—can have other programmers to feel superior to.
I don't feel superior to java programmers. I feel sorry for them. :P
user1125394
guys just asking because I've recently used java's websockets (docs.oracle.com/javaee/7/tutorial/doc/websocket004.htm) does C# have a native similar way? but I have no idea of C# servers way of programming
user1804599
19:06
@NaN I used Fleck with .NET and it works pretty well. Avoid Alchemy like the plague, though.
user1125394
third party libs right?
user1125394
yes I know about it
user1804599
@NaN Yeah. But hey, no checked exceptions!
Man, i <3 some of the guys I work with. They fail my code review for doing this (They despise ternary statements)

maxScore = curScore > head.GetScor() ? curScore : head.GetScore();

yet, he checked in prod code without a review with the following:

CMPI_MemIdentType[] allNonSurvivorSSRIs = Array.FindAll<CMPI_MemIdentType>(nonSurvivorData.MemIdent, new Predicate<CMPI_MemIdentType>(delegate(CMPI_MemIdentType ident) { return ident.attrcode == AttributeCodes.SSRI && ident.memrecno != survivorHead.getMemRecno(); }));
@RyanTernier what's wrong with your code/
19:10
they hate ternary
oh, lol. they're dumbasses.
user1804599
I think I’m going to write an APL interpreter for .NET.
user1804599
With .NET integration.
@RyanTernier I'm not going to try and figure out what that code does
it looks like they're using delegates instead of lambdas...
it breaks, and it's .net 2.0
19:11
silly .NET 1.1
you can't use generics in .net 1.1
I like ternary, usually place ? and : on separate lines though
They have their uses, and they're good when used properly (like all coding conventions). It bugs me when people say "I can't read them". I tell them to go get a book and read about them.
@ton.yeung that's not ternary's fault, that's just bad programming
that does not sound very nice but hardly a fault of ternary imo
19:16
you probably shouldn't use ternaries more than 2 layers deep
@RyanTernier if somebody told me "I can't read them" for ternaries and was unwilling to learn, I'd tell them to find a different job
a = b > c? c == d? : z : y == k ? B : a;
nooooo
that's horrible
you can write all if else on the same line also
I often do stuff like a = b == null ? c : b;
most concise null check I've found
a = b?? c;
19:19
^
Unless you do:
a == b.Text == "" ? c : b.Text;
You can't use the null colloscating opoerator
@JohanLarsson sorry, it's actually usually more like this:
Wish there was a ?.
a = b == null ? c : b.prop1;
so the null coalesce doesn't work because I need to access a property of b
fuck this, it's beer time
19:30
that started three hours ago
This week I have been taking over sole feature ownership of an enterprise-level relational metamodel mostly hand-crafted and undocumented
and I started using SQL in paid work....last week.
fun or pain?
I definitely deserve beer.
@TomW I could help you out! My consulting rate is $235/hr...
@TomW $125/hr
I'm out.
19:36
i'm resisting the urge to put a meme up for what i just saw...
well it's funny how spencer pulls out once an asian low-balls him.
you went from 200 - 120. There's other words i could use, but they might bore you if I told you the lore of that word that rhymes with shore.
"Objective: To have my skills and ethics challenged on a daily basis."
Lol Skills? Yes. Ethics? wat?
I'll manage, thanks
"ONCE FOCUSED ON AN OBJECTIVE, I BELIEVE MYSELF TO HAVE AN UNDYING LUST FOR SUCCESS WITH ACCURACY AND EFFECIENCY."
so using that
ill even keep the mispell
YES MUCH EFFECIENCY!
19:41
Has anyone used C# in Unity3D Game Engine?
lol
finish it off with a little zombie clipart
String string = "String"; ?
user1804599
Needs moar var.
"Work Experience: Dealing with customers' conflicts that arouse."
and less keyword cannot be used as a identifier
19:42
var string = () => { return "String"; };
@ton.yeung so i guess you never went into Networking?
part
"Excellent memory; strong math aptitude; excellent memory; effective management skills; and very good at math."
3
user1804599
@SpencerRuport var string = () => { return new Cons('S', new Cons('t', new Cons('r', new Cons('i', new Cons('n', new Cons('g', new Empty())))))); };
@RyanTernier oh god that ones priceless
19:45
@rightfold - Well that's just silly.
"I am superior to anyone else you could hire."
"I vow to fulfill the goals of the company as long as I live."
"Although I am seeking an accounting job, the fact that I have no actual experience in accounting may seem discouraging. However..."
love them!
hello
@RyanTernier I'm ok with the last one. Applicant is asking the company to take the risk of training them
You can only ask
I've never had a clue what I was doing in any job I've started, apart from the most recent
> Monads became an important part of the programming language Haskell where they tackle the awkward squad: IO, concurrency, exceptions, and foreign-function calls.
+1 for 'awkward squad'
@TomW One of our offices hired 4 university grads. Day one they threw them in SharePoint, biztalk and dynamics courses (2 week long courses) to get them certified. Now those guys are the leads in those fields and travel accross canada working with companies to implement them.
was a good idea
19:59
yep, that's how smart companies do it
before the crash, everyone did it
I graduated a couple of years too late for the 'just apply to every grad programme' tactic to still work
only a couple
exactly
many companies employ some contracts of sorts with training.
friend of mine did an MSc with our mutual former employer
like: We're sending you on a 10k$ training trip to learn x. we require you to work for us 1 year after this
that locked her in for several years on penalty of repaying the MSc fee
20:01
There's a lot of them around here.
she aced it and as soon as she could leave, she did
@ton.yeung Masters' fees vary depending on subject and institution but it's a few thousand
at least
undergraduate degrees in the UK are subject to regulation w.r.t fees, I don't think postgrads are
Always printed as B/MSc here
or MEng, or MPhys, or whatever
an MPhys is what I have, and it's a bastard hybrid of an undergrad degree and a MSc
I guess at some point there was an effort to make science degrees more rigorous by default, so I did an extra year with a 50/50 mixture of theoretical classes and thesis
barely at all
sometimes I wish I did
well, it's interesting. That's why I took it as a degree in the first place
but the money stinks and the work culture sounds like waiting to die
/get tenured
but it seems basically impossible to do anything useful, certainly in physics, probably in science in general, without being an academic staff member
it sucks up a ton of time, more than anybody who has a job can spare I think
My work ethic wasn't well-formed when I was a student, I didn't really have the drive to figure out real-world research problems, possibly because the teaching material is so contrived that it doesn't really prepare you for how the work is actually done
found it too frustrating to dredge through papers and books to tease out the meaning. Software makes much more sense to me, someone somewhere WANTS you to understand it
I know the financial industry is really into physics grads
Cosmology and so on gets a lot of press, most of the work that goes on is a lot more mundane
I like that part. It's all abstract, so it doesn't contain critical dependencies that can just fall over and invalidate all your work
whereas anything that happens in a lab is so vulnerable to bugs and oversights you spend most of your time re-doing work that went wrong
experiments don't contain bugs, they're MADE of bugs. Your job is to search through the bugs to find the one factor that was correct
Well, basically my position is, I'd like to understand more. I don't have any great desire to work in the field though, because the reality is a lot uglier than most people realise
@ton.yeung not so much, I don't have experience of that side of it. More in the sense that the work environment is dreadful and it sucks the life out of you to achieve something nobody cares about
I was at an informal class reunion a few weeks ago that was about 50% PhDs
so I have a good idea of what my life would have been like if I'd stayed on. No thanks.
I ought to start trying to bridge the gap between physics and CS
that's a handy side effect
if someone can work out how to make money out of it, a share of it is yours if you make it happen
First, claim you can predict the market.
...
Profit.
even better if you CAN predict the market. You won't be rumbled so fast then
parallelising lab work would be nice
My university bought/built one of the top supercomputers in the UK, I think it might still be the 3rd most powerful or thereabouts, on the assumption that compute jobs would be in demand
last I heard it was usually idle
oh man
in 2007 it was world #36
now it's not in the top 500
yeah, IBM kicked up a stink about the standard used to measure
as soon as they weren't top
I think they might actually have scrapped it :(
known as Thames Blue
doesn't show up on the site or on google anymore, except as past news stories
20:42
whats with nail clippers at work? im not getting the whole 'personal grooming at my desk thing'
for my part, it prevents me from biting my nails
I don't use nail clippers or bite my nails. Haven't for years.
no...
I have to keep mine really short otherwise I can feel the stuff that collects under them
guitar, a little, when I was about 10
@TomW I love picking that stuff out
didn't get into it
20:47
I have nail clippers in my car. I dunno why anyone would do it at their desk.
Is that sort of like how I can touch my bellybutton and feel it in my dick?
what did i just walk into
@ton.yeung - Yeah it bugs me too but I just go out to my car and do it outside. Less clean up that way.
Just rip 'em off.
No utensils required.
20:53
I like my fingernails thanks. ;)
@JoshVarty that's precisely why I (occasionally) keep the clippers around. If I don't have them, I will do
It's still obnoxious to everyone around you.
I do it discreetly, and not often.
Once I've felt it, it drives me nuts. I can't stop myself biting or picking at it
It's said that nail-biting is a stress reaction
I wouldn't disagree
I don't bite, but I do rip.
well, I don't think I'm the typical programmer, and nor is most of my office
20:58
Is there a typical programmer?
can you draw outside the bounds of a wpf control?
Yes
With RenderTransform
@KendallFrey this guy
I hope you recognise him
I don't
@KendallFrey hm, yeah, ill try that

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