here's my record Overall record: 0-0-0 Total number of matches: 0 Win percentage ignoring draws: Program Throws DivedByZeroException "Stop fucking divide by zero" Stacktrace: At somestupidCalculator.cs 627 At someCrazyManager.cs At someDumbcontroller.cs At TheDbPasswordIs42.cs
@tweray Yeah. In VS-Online you fight the evil forces of business, wielding nothing but code and a witty mind. Prepare for waves and waves of business demands to attack you, while you and your friends collaborate to fight them off in epic Git-powered collaboration. Coming soon to your PC.
Anyways should I try C# now? Is it cross-platform and mature enough to support working with C, C++, Python, R, and external C/C++ libraries? Oh, and also support a nice web framework as well as passing around graphics as an object.
@VermillionAzure It's in the process of becoming cross platform. It's about as mature as your granny. It can work with C/C++ and external C/C++ libraries, but it generally not recommended. Python and R don't integrate very well. It has amazing web frameworks, probably the best of any language, and sure it supports graphics as objects. Any more questions? ;-)
@VermillionAzure Glueing together languages is just not done all that well in C# without some kind of interop or glue code. Probably in C. Using Lua involves a C wrapper, too. It works fine, but it's not quite as straight forward as using C. The whole charm of C# is not doing any of that crap though. C# is much more powerful than any of those yucky languages ;-)
@VermillionAzure Features, mainly. You don't feel quite as stuck in 1985. From simple things like automatic properties to the incredibly powerful LINQ (to databases, to OData, etc).
And libraries. From ASP.NET MVC and EntityFramework to whatever you prefer. The libraries out there are incredible for C#. Everything Java can do, C# can do better. And I'm not just saying that because I'm biased. :-)
I strongly advice against using dynamic typing in C#.. and on that note, in the C# room you'd most likely find people biased towards C# anyway. Ask in Java and they'll praise Java all the way to heaven. It's mostly dependent on your needs.
@TravisJ Passing around the data as an encapsulated object would be quite helpful for me, especially if I want to reproduce the same graphics and adjust it in different places
The problem I have found with employing ML to solve problems is that it can at times reproduce something which was flat when there is supposed to be expansion.
I had a friend working on converting some sort of DNA algorithms to work on a parallel cluster. He eventually discovered that 99% of the CPU time was already spent in a function that always returned 0 and had no side effects or state changes.
They didn't announce a 1.0 yet, but I haven't had much issues with the upgrade path (didn't actually change any code in a few 'major' versions). Note that I do use TypeScript.
That said, it doesn't move all that quickly, mainly because FB has a massive code base themselves.
@VermillionAzure I've tried backtracking the conversation as I haven't been around, but my observation is that your way of describing the problem you're trying to solve is quite peculiar in the C# world. I think it'd probably sound a lot simpler (to us) described by a C# programmer