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22:00
it depends on the problem space and what you're trying to do, but this is definitely not an easy problem
those can be frustrating, but they're often fun, too ;)
Are you familiar with any documents or searches I could look at that would help me implement a simulation for this?
@Reed - Yeah, frustrating while doing, fun when finished haha
it depends on your goal here - are you trying to maximize growth given a time?
or something else?
@Reed Sorry I was interrupted. I am trying to hit goals while not overproducing.
It is the "not overproducing" part which seems to imply that some cycles need to be skipped. That part is the killer part for me.
hello
22:10
can i share
thankx
@TravisJ - It seems like simulated annealing might be a far easier approach. As long as you have a fixed goal, and you can walk (forward) through your graph, and you have some way to simulate changes in the cycles (ie: some randomness), it's easy to implement
It won't give you the optimum solution, but will often do a very good approximation of the optimum, and is easy (relatively) to implement
That was the exact analogy my friend gave (annealing)
22:13
i want to make simple messaging system
Simulated Annealing is one of the easier simulation options to program, and often one of the best in terms of getting results quickly and easily
@Reed - So you both gave a very similar suggestion. Now all I have to do is see if I can implement it in code.
Wikipedia has a good explanation with pseudocode en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simulated_annealing
Cool. I think this should be enough to occupy me for a while
@MR.alaa What type of messages, for what platform/usage?
22:16
i use asp.net
i want to make simple one
where user can exchange message between them
answer
reply
delete
and so on
i find many but more complecated than i need
@TravisJ :p Thanks
@MR.alaa This is for users on different computers?
on different computers
for the same website
22:21
Do you need the messages to be persistent? (ie: do you want to send a message to somebody who is "offline" right now?)
yes
i will looks like
inbox
in yahoo
Do you guys want to hear a good joke?
As long as it is safe for work
Knock Knock....who's there?
who's there?
22:24
<after a while> Java :D
But it was optimizing the response for the specific architecture of that particular bar!
Sorry, house*.
(Don't know why I said bar.)
@TheodorosChatzigiannakis - Too much foo :P
sql> DELETE FROM world.human_race WHERE iq < 100

Query OK, 3.45 billion rows affected (0.01 sec)···
haha
So you took out of all the children and handicapped people? Kind of a bad solution don't you think?
22:32
So - I have to give a (very short 10-15 minute) talk in a couple of hours on async/await in C#. Anybody have suggestions for a good sample app to use for an intro on async/await?
Shouldn't you be more worried about the really smart people who are evil than the average people who are just trying to get by?
Ohai @everyone
Should I just go with a WPF app or something
@ReedCopsey - Is your target audience more of a .net or of a .exe crowd?
@TravisJ I'd be more worried about people who think up anything beginning with "DELETE FROM world.human_race"....
22:33
haha that too
@TravisJ General developers, but most are .NET devs
@TravisJ Why do they have to be geniuses? I think deleting everyone who wants mass destruction would be better
From a purely utilitarian standpoint
I shouldn't have even brought it up
@ReedCopsey How about something with networking?
@RoelvanUden Only problem is that I'm not sure the venue will have decent internet access - so networking's a bit of a pain
22:35
@ReedCopsey Venue...?
@RoelvanUden Place where I'm doing the talk
What is the most commonly used scenario for async/await?
Does anyone know how to do things with a WPF datagrid combobox column?
@ReedCopsey One thing I think could be nice is using unit tests. Have watched many demos where they switch back and forth between code and a console app, in a test everything is right there. Also wpf > winforms at least in this chat
Or at least, a highly used one.
22:37
DownloadAsync is probably up there
@ReedCopsey Oh no that's not what I implied, I suggested to use a networking-based application as a sample. You know, how a thread per connection is a really poor scaling mechanism and how IO completion ports allow events to be passed when a pending operation completes? Fundamentally, async/await is ideal for these kind of applications with heavy IO or networking.
@RoelvanUden Yeah - Not sure how to demo it easily, though, since I'll probably be offline
@ReedCopsey Hm, local HTTP server for example? Just throwing ideas here
I wish there was File.ReadAllTextAsync
@RoelvanUden he could use your imagehider :) It runs pretty slow even with files local
It is also very cool
Well.. stenography is mostly CPU based so async/await has little value.
Only UI threading (WPF comes to mind) and IO-bound work really benefit.
22:42
Does anyone know of any good, in-depth WPF books?
WPF is just a convenience thing.
@RoelvanUden true still a cool demo though :)
@JLott Aww, glad you miss me ;) My workplace blocks the chat but not main SO. So work sucks now by a lot.
This is my first time using C#. I compile my application on a Windows 7 Professional 64-bit system for Release and Any CPU. I attempt to load them on a 32 bit Windows XP machine and it says "This is not a valid Win32 application.". What mistake am I making?
@Alec No .NET installed at all?
22:44
@RoelvanUden .NET 2.0
Are you absolutely sure the XP machine has a .NET installed? In the literal sense, the compiled binary of .NET has a 'new' type that indicates it is .NET. Every machine since Vista recognizes this, but XP was not shipped with any version of .NET and therefore should require an installation of .NET to be able to give version mismatches and execute code.
I'm 99% sure .NET 2.0 is installed because I just went through the installer and did a reboot. Maybe it's my compiler settings?
@LewsTherin That's not fair
@RoelvanUden Could I convince you to try running it on your machine and seeing if it works?
@Alec Unfortunately I run Windows 7.
22:49
Oh.
@Alec Are you sure your project targets .NET 2? What VS did you use to develop it?
VS Express 2012
By default, it will target .NET 4.5, not .NET 2
Is there a way I can change that? I plan on deploying this software on hospital computers that are stuck running 2.0
In the project properties for the project, you should be able to change it.
right click on the project, choose properties
the framework should be in the "Application" tab
22:52
@ReedCopsey Thank you so much!
I feel silly now.
Moment when I get like 15 errors haha, guess that's kind of expected though when downgrading 2 1/2 versions.
@Roel haha :)
mistargeting the framework is a common accident
I have done that from IIS Manager before on accident
@johan - I wanted to use javascript's callback functionality: gist.github.com/travisjj/c5a430c928917e67b3bc
I don't understand
@TravisJ Why not just use System.Action there? Why make an interface for that?
(not sure, actually, what the snippet is intended to show)
23:00
@Reed - Hm, not a bad idea lol
public void Speak(Action caller)
{
caller.Invoke();
}

void Main()
{
Speak(() => Console.WriteLine("!"));
}
I guess I was just looking for feedback since my interface approach didn't feel right
I'd write it as:
public void Speak(Action caller)
{
caller();
}
but yeah ;)
cool, that works too
I didn't know you could just use () on it
yeah - you can call a delegate directly
if you're using arguments, the .Invoke() syntax sucks
ie:
public void Speak(Action<string> caller)
{
caller("Foo");
}

is much nicer than using Invoke
Lol
I didn't understand until just now that using the <> for action allowed you to define input parameters that you can use from a lambda.
Thank you for that Reed
You're welcome -
You can do fun stuff, ie:

static void Main()
{
SpeakAction = Console.WriteLine;
Speak("Foo");
}

// Define other methods and classes here
public static Action<string> SpeakAction { get; set; }
public static void Speak(string text)
{
if (SpeakAction != null)
SpeakAction(text);
}
23:07
that is neat :)
Getting functional with C# is fun
that's part of why I love F# so much - learning F# makes you think about C# very differently
I have always used interfaces there instead of action types because I couldn't quite figure out how to use multiple parameters
though there's plenty of stuff you can't do in C# that gets frustrating at that point
I think using actions in a Dictionary<type,Action> is a pretty fun use of them
ahh - yeah, Action<T> or Func<T,U>, Func<T1, T2, T3, TResult>, etc
23:09
I have only done some basic stuff in F#
Nothing complex at all
Isn't your talk soon?
@Kian What isn't?
@TravisJ Will need to leave in about 30-40 minutes
almost done with the apps though ;)
@LewsTherin Getting banned from SO chat
@Reed - Didn't want to sidetrack you
23:11
@TravisJ What else is StackOverflow good for? ;)
@Kian Yeah, there is so very little I can do at work now until the next few months :(
haha
@RoelvanUden @JohanLarsson @TravisJ Thanks for the advice - just FYI, decided to whip together a quick local WCF service, since I can connect to it sync + async locally without a network connection, and I can just put a Thread.Sleep(random.Next(300, 2000)) in the service to simulate a slow network connection ;)
Nice :)
not await Task.Delay()? :)
23:16
I do something similar to that in javascript when I am writing demos. I will use a setTimeout to simulate an ajax call's asynchronous behavior.
Does my analogy here make any sense? stackoverflow.com/a/18115354/65358
I feel like I'm getting tired
@JohanLarsson COuld've done that if I cared enough about perf, but since it's a locally running service, I just slept :)
good luck with the speech
@Reed Makes sense to me.
That one confuses a lot of people when they come to threading
I do think the syntax for C# was an odd choice (and allowing any reference type to be a lock)
lock(someObject) does seem like you should be "locking" that object :p
Threading still gets me every once in a while
I don't use it that often so I am not familiar enough with it
23:27
you'll want to thread your simulation, if you can ;)
unless it doesn't matter how long things take
@ReedCopsey perhaps it is still good to show delay in a demo?
@JohanLarsson Yeah, potentially - was going to in my longer talk next month, though I've actually never found a need for Task.Delay in real world code (yet)
This talk's just a 10 minute intro to get people familiar with it, since I'm going to be doing an hour and a half on tips and tricks that goes far more in depth
analogy is +1 btw
@ReedCopsey - The issue is more memory than time. Won't threading just exasperate that?
Guys, how can I detect if a function was invoked? Thank you.
23:31
@l0oky ... Uhm? Set a variable?
@l0oky for a unit tests?
function foo {throw new invokedFooException()}
@TravisJ Yeah, though with simulation, that's likely to be less of an issue
Or use an Action as a callback :)
23:31
Since you just have to walk through the iteration serially each time
something like if(invoked) do this
what Roel said then
@l0oky if you are detecting like in a test scenario, you commonly use mocks
@l0oky What do you mean? If you're in the function, it was invoked ;)
@Reed - The issue I am having with the simulation now is that there needs to be a function to determine if visiting the neighbor is ideal. And I am not sure how to determine that because there isn't just one state, there is a group of overlapping states.
23:32
Im not testing
otherwise you may set a flag like @RoelvanUden said but its kind of a weird scneario
Right now I'm using some inefficent way of calling a function
@TravisJ I don't think you're thinking about it right - in the simulation terms, a "neighbor" is a completely new walk through the graph
not a neighboring node
so you walk through the graph one way, then have a way to randomly shuffle one portion (ie: do a cycle or not)
and walk it (your neighbor)
then "score" each result
23:33
@ReedCopsey But I want to detect it through other chunk of code xD
@Reed - And I need to do that for each possible walk?
@l0oky Run a code coverage tool :)
What's that?
@TravisJ No, that's the point - if making a change improves things, the simulation will start to converge on those "walks", and as you reduce the temperature, the amount of change each time shrinks
so you walk towards the ideal path through the graph
the trickiest part, in your case, will be figuring out how to take a path through the graph and build a neighbor in a pseudo-random way that's a "close" way of walking to the one you did before
Another problem I am having with this is that the object walking has the ability to clone itself.
23:35
and the cloning has what effect?
I need to detect if a variable is changed, invoke a function.
So if a fork is reached, it can just clone itself for each path at the fork and follow all of them then each clone will meet at the end of the walk
Potentially at different times.
Is there anyway to do it efficiently ?
is it some kind of caching you want?
not like a loop and just do it every 100ms
23:38
You should consider using events instead of polling.
That's what I want to do but can someone get me started
I have pretty much no clue how to make a simple event
@l0oky You could always make your variable a property, and implement INotifyPropertyChanged (that's fairly standard)
which would allow you to perform an action any time that property changes
that's a fairly standard way of handling that type of scenario, and doesn't require polling
@TravisJ So that just becomes one of the permutations
Whether to clone or not? I guess that is what I meant by "each possible walk"
So how far do I follow that rabbit hole?
each "neighbor" in an annealing simulation becomes a separate option
so if you ahve a branch from C->D or C->E, one "neighbor" would walk C->D and one would walk C->E
and a third (potentially less likely) option would clone at C and walk both ;)
23:43
@ReedCopsey I could use something like this ? :
private int _myValue;
public int MyValue
{
  get { return _myValue; }
  set { _myValue = value; }
}
@Reed - Yes those 3 situations sound exactly like what I am struggling with.
@l0oky You'd need to make it implement INotifyPropertyChanged - see: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…
The less likely option is wracking my head =/
@l0oky If the code you want to run is inside of that class, you don't have to do that though
I have many classes :D
23:45
I actually have the set of "less likely options" sitting staring at me in the face
@TravisJ so - say those are the three options, and you want to make the likelihood of each vary based on the distance, so B->D is a dist of 10 and B->C is a dist of 20
And I cannot figure out how to decide which are proper and which need to not be followed.
Okay
you might want to set it up so that you do a 30% chance it goes B->D, a 60% chance it does B->E, and a 10% chance it does both (or something)
based on a pseudo random generator
So the chances are chosen similar to a neural net?
yeah - kind of a similar idea
it's almost like a very dumb NN implementation
23:46
ok
I can automate those weight approximations
Hello guys if I have a project that use local database and its working then I need to change it if I want to upload my project to server?
the trickiest part is typically making it move "less' as the temp drops
Is the db going to be on the same computer as the server?
23:49
Then that is going to be a significant issue.
If the code will be in the same class, you can use

set { _myValue = value; MethodWhenValueChanges(); }
You need to migrate your db to somewhere that is accessible by IP
@xoemab At a minimum you'll need new connection strings
@TravisJ So instead of SQL Server Compact 4.0 Local Database I must choose SQL Server Database?
@ReedCopsey I don't like the link you gave me cause it takes time to go through it. So I searched a little bit and found this smaller and easier to understand code.
Thanks by the way.
23:50
@ReedCopsey oh great
@xoemab - That, and it must be accessible from wherever the server is that is hosting your application.
I will upload it to one of asp.net mvc 4 hosting sites
@l0oky The version in the link I gave is nicer if you're using .NET 4.5 and VS 2012, though - it uses the new [CallerMemberName] features to make the implementation cleaner
@ReedCopsey Thank you :)
@xoemab Then the computer that has the database must be accessible via an IP address. It is non-trivial to do this from a development computer.
23:52
@xoemab You'll need to switch to SQL Server Database (instead of local), and then fix the connection strings to match your hosting environment, then debug
if your host lets you connect to the DB remotely (some shared hosts do), and you can do that, I'd move the DB first, fix your app to use it, then move the site up
@xoemab - I would suggest having the host also hold your database and then migrating your data there. Setting up your own database involves a lot of steps.
@TravisJ ef is throwing bs at me, just when I thought we were friends :D
@Johan - EF? nooooooo
@TravisJ @ReedCopsey Thank you guys
@JohanLarsson EF will never be your friend. At best, it'll give you a bunch of beer before it pushes you into the ditch and starts kicking you repeatedly
2
23:54
haha
At which point, if you're like most EF developers, you'll be thanking it for making you feel numb first :p
Do you prefer nHibernate?
Especially if EF's evil sidekick MySQL Connector is around, because he will surely be nearby with the shovel and duct tape.
no, not really
EF's really not too bad nowadays
but I actually use Mindscape's Lightspeed for my work projects - it's just much cleaner to use, and seems to surprise me less often
I wouldn't mind EF so much if I didn't have to pigeonhole it into accessing mysql.
23:56
ok, sounds like it is worth checking out, pushing on the infinite todo list
dont mysql
ef fits quite nicely into the sql server pigeon hole ;)
:(
my db budget fit nicely into the mysql pigeon hole
sql express sucka
sql express is everything you want and more as long as your db is >4gb
I can't have a production server on site nor a hosted virtual machine

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