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02:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

20:00
i see
doSomething is the convention for java. however this isn't how it's done in c#. There all is written like this DoSomething
It's amusing to me that the Python style guide recommends snake_case.
do_something is more used in C++ so far I know.
Also I don't think camel case is necessarily more popular than any other option
I prefer snake_case for variable names in C++ and not in methods :'D
20:02
@ArthurP.R. I just had to explain this to a colleague last night. He was trying to do the do_something style with Entity Framework lol
I was under the impression camelCase was used for variables and PascalCase was used for methods
The java convention for classes and methods/functions create a clear gap between what a Class is and what a method is
@ArthurP.R. granted I know thats possible, but its a terrible idea given the circumstances that we were
camelCase is used for variables in all languages so far
IMO Hungarian is the ugliest
20:03
I use snake case for unit test method names
AKA Win32 API
as it reads most like english
I habitually BDDify my unit tests now
then_the_result_is_42()
okay.. okay.. the snake_case is more likely to be used in those old C API's
I actually prefer the lowercase-underscore thing usually. It just seems to be rare in C#
I use snake_case for C and C++
20:04
I find it so much more readable
it gives it that... idk... retro style?
@ArthurP.R. In Haskell, it's not a casing convention, it's casing enforced by the compiler
even the URL
Haskell is a functional language. interesting
@TeeSee Systems Hungarian needs to die.
Apps Hungarian has its place.
20:06
@mmf1102 Okay we should admit. We all love this retro style! We feel like super cool programmers if we use such in C :D?
@ArthurP.R. classes and methods don't exist as such, but in this case it's types and functions
@ArthurP.R. Admitted
@KendallFrey Yes of course :) Just starting with F#. God it's like I'm a little child who has new car to play with.
pretty much
@TeeSee I admit too :'D!!!
20:07
A colleague of mine is trying out Haskell. I was dumbfounded. An actual verifiable human being, using Haskell.
@ArthurP.R. Just wait till you try Haskell :)
@TomW lol
@KendallFrey Bear with me but is it still used widely?
I was semi-seriously tossing around the idea of using Haskell for a game project
Because I wanted features of the type system that just don't exist in c#
@ArthurP.R. not for commercial use
@KendallFrey What about using F# :p ?
20:09
I don't think F# has them either
I'm just planning to use a little bit Vulkan (TM) with F#. Testing how much can be done with it
@KendallFrey Ask the god of F# in the F# Channel, maybe you're wrong idk but it's worth to ask!
Basically the idea was to let extensions define properties on a type in a strongly-typed way
Which works with type classes
Anyone have any debugging tips with .NET Core/Visual Studio Code? Ive been working on a Core project and the team is using VSC, so I haven't really been able to use my full VS... But Im running into so many issues that wouldnt be issues in VS. E.G. exceptions with no line # mentioned
I'm really sorry. If I would have more time I would dig into Visual Studio Code. Time is spare :(
Also, I was doing a screenshare with my friend last night and apparently he cant even hover over a variable in debug and get its vlaue
strange
20:13
maybe he's not building it for debugging?
@mmf1102 AFAIK he is because it does allow stepping thru, and it's doing its intellisense stuff that requires the debug
I had an issue with debugging my c# code. It ended up being conflicting project properties
hmmm... Boy if I've learned something from this project its: C# on VSC/cross-platform aint the exact same as C# in full VS lol
Check if /O2 is active in the project properties
(maximize speed)
@TeeSee It's not Java :P!
20:15
@mmf1102 thanks will do
In C++, it's Properties->C/C++->Optimization
btw libsndfile is still nice even if it looks retro.
I'm not sure where it is in the C# settings.
Also, check if a debug file is output (PDB maybe?)
Yes
We do have pdb
that's where the debug info is stored
however, if it's trying to maximize the speed of the program, it sacrifices debug features, like skipping over loops and stuff like that
20:19
Aha
Thanks @mmf1102 be back in a few, gonna grab some coffee.
There aren't that many options for debugging. Actually there is only one option in visual studio for that stuff which could stop the use of pdbs.
Of course, the project I was working on was in C++ so that's where I've done all the research. Don't know about C# in this regard
I just understand C# and know the syntax but I still don't know all. Coming from C++ too. Indeed it's the same. It's just logical that variables aren't available after optimizations.
The thing was that I had the /Od flag set but I put /O2 in the additional compiler options without realizing it, so I was fiddling with settings everywhere until I discovered the mistake
@ArthurP.R. I dont think anybody "knows all" and if they say they do, I see that as a red flag lol
20:25
cough cough January 20th cough cough
lol
some people have very good brains
Oh okay... For me it's a feeling and never experienced the feeling that I do know all about a topic
@ArthurP.R. If someone knows all, it's going to be a person who says they dont know all
Because someone who believes they know all will probably stop learning and thus not know all
42 is only valid. You should know mmf1102 :P
#humblebrag
what?
42 is only valid?
20:27
I do know that I cannot know all so I have research stuff again and again
Ask google this
Oh duh
whats the answer to life the universe and everything
cheers everyone!
@ArthurP.R. Life and the universe aren't questions, thus they can have no answer
Question is an abstraction of the human mind
That's how I see it.
well the quote is
20:28
Just ask google. Google is stupid and gives you an answer D:
the answer to the question about life the universe and everything
well, of* life, etc etc
@ArthurP.R. Google's not stupid, but it was programmed by humans
but still, it's a question pondering the meaning of it all
Hello Travis, welcome to this nice asylum!
@mmf1102 "meaning" is also a human concept... There may be no meaning. The meaning may essentially be "null"
Though pursuit is entertaining :)
20:30
@TeeSee please don't start the discussion which is equal to solving the problem: "What is the exact value of PI"
hahaha
:D
!!wiki life, the universe, and everything
Life, the Universe and Everything (1982, ISBN 0-345-39182-9) is the third book in the five-volume Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy science fiction trilogy by British writer Douglas Adams. The title refers to the Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. The story was originally outlined by Adams as Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen to be a Tom Baker Doctor Who television six-part story, but was rejected by the BBC. It was later considered as a plotline for the second series of the Hitchhiker's TV series, which was never commissioned. A radio adaptation of Life, the Universe and Everything w...
I found out why I don't like discussions about life etc :D
@CapricaSix Cheers!
obligatory !!panini
20:32
I quote someone else. Problem.Solved = True;
or rather
!!panini
May 4 '16 at 14:23, by Caprica Six
Jan 12 at 16:55, by Markus Werner
to all stupid put all "Panini" in your asshole
let solved = true
My brother and I were both taking the same course (at different Unis) in MIPS and I made fun of him with a stupid programming joke
like
Noice
20:33
while (knowledge.whatever) etc
A moderator deleted the original message, but they didn't delete the message where Caprica quoted it
and then I ended up writing out a whole program to do it for me
fellow programmers, whats going on here D:?!
spent an hour doing nothing.
20:33
@ArthurP.R. the exact value of pi is -i*ln(-1)
@TomW yeah there was a whole expedition into the chat history to save !!panini
damn it I need a new example. Beside that, thanks! Nice to know ;D
@ArthurP.R. Asylum?
However the ln must be calculated too ...
20:35
Are we hiding from problems in here? ;)
You just reminded me of that lol
Ah Travis, back in here? Yeah my usual welcome message to people. We're on earth, should be valid I thought... Or anyone up in space?
@TravisJ You said so, not me :P Just kidding ;D
@TeeSee We've done something wrong I'd say...
Just why are people always showing hardware if it's about coding?
As I've learned over many hours of coding, hardware plays a large part into programming as well
architectures, CPU, all that fun stuff
endianness, variable size, etc.
Yes that's true but in such an article an image of hardware is wrongly placed I think.
everything depends on the hardware
what article?
20:43
I won't deny what's fact, don't worry
Can't do this without playing with hardware :)
Look what TeeSee showed
oh the engineering one up there?
yeah IDK because people want to see computer parts. Code isn't "cool"
people are lame
@mmf1102 Haskell code is
20:44
tbf, coding isn't the most exhilerating thing to look at
hardware looks more complicated and impressive
also, when I see words written on a screen, the first thing that comes to mind isn't necessarily "computer stuff!"
but yeah, I'd love to see pictures of code in code articles :)
Can't say I've really ever seen/used Haskell
@KendallFrey That's really nice. Very well :3
I'll see only computer stuff around me ._.
Hey that looks quite similar to SML, no?
With enough abstraction, the hardware is irrelevant.
Read wikipedia about functional languages
I honestly don't care about CPU or endianness when I'm web developing ;-)
20:48
@RoelvanUden well...
Some code hasn't been changed for about 100 years?
When did you imagine computers were developed?
Of course it was only written for functional languages. But they're made that well that a change wasn't needed.
I.....what?
*60
I'm sorry, I had 1930 in my head and I rounded up a bit :'D
However, it was 1950. There is code which has been made for functional programming languages which hadn't been changed since 1950.
20:52
You know what they should use for code pictures in articles?
Why is this only written on the german Wikipedia ._.?
sarcasm LISP
Stackoverflow :p
'Cause that one's easy on the eyes...
Anyway, I've to leave. Good night
20:54
Who knows about Web API, OWIN self-hosting, and netsh http urlacl?
@KendallFrey That's fucked up: youtu.be/_KAb3NBCIXw
I've added a urlacl entry on our build server, but tests are still failing. I don't have much to go on, so I don't even know if I did the right thing
I was following until you got to netsh urlacl
That was when he had a stroke
20:56
Is netsh something only I have to deal with?
@ArthurP.R. Mine's better :P
I just read the Nathvi thread from earlier
I'm dying
21:14
@KendallFrey Whats Arduino use? Python?
Really?
Raspberry-Pi uses Python
Yes.
Ohhh ok. I got them mixed up. I have a TI MSP430, the uncool one :P
I have an Arduino.....somewhere.
21:16
They whole idea of custom programming little circuit boards seems pretty awesome to me
Im gonna have to do some Arduino. My local library has classes free
Played around with it for an afternoon, put it down, never got around to doing anything else with it.
At work here we have over 50 arduino devices that operate through our wifi
I thought it was Python. Not that there's anything wrong with Python, I just am frankly more comfortable with C & C++ at this point so C++ would be fine.
Mostly for environment sensors
21:17
@TravisJ awesome
I heard these "microelectromechanical systems" stuff is taking off and going to get a lot of investment.
Honestly sounds like sensors as usual to me. What are the use cases for this type of thing other than the blindingly obvious?
I believe the popular phrase is the "internet of things" or IoT
Im not super great at figuring out how to put unnecessary devices into everything
lol
Just for the sake of it
Which honestly is how I view IoT. I know Im a jerk
:P
We have a clean room environment here, so the sensors help us ensure that systems critical equipment is working properly
@TravisJ Oh awesome. I used to work at an employer that has cryo-freezers and used some
Today I realized I could possibly use my arduino as a thermostat, by programming it to smack the gas fireplace when it drops below a certain temperature
21:20
I think the industrual usages of IoT are great. But the "Omg guys lets make the toaster talk to the fridge so the toaster can pre-cook itself when you reach for teh bread" type of stuff is pretty funny.
It is also nearly impossible to track heat and humidity patterns without sensors. Sure, you can get an instant view of a wall with a laser temperature reader, but that pales in comparison to a set of graphs.
I have to smack it to get the gas to light sometimes :(
@KendallFrey - lol
Sometimes it just needs some lovin'
Just now I realized two additional things
I wouldn't need an arduino to do that, just a simple breadboard circuit
haha
21:22
@TeeSee - Yeah that stuff seems excessive, but at that point it is kind of like a toy... and people do love their toys :)
and when it gets too cold for the fireplace to keep up, it would get very noisy in here
@TravisJ Even they have the app that starts and controls the Tesla car... My question is... Why??? You're right, it's a toy but I immediately see it as a security hole.
@TravisJ however, I bet it already is anyway even without that capability since the thing is already networked... So meh..
I just don't see the point. Key usages takes no extra time IMO.
it doesn't even add an inconvenience to me
hey lads
I think we need to to ask ourselves "why" in everything we do. Some people dont like that, I dont usually get along with those ppl lol
I certainly wouldn't want my car to be that connected, although I am not sure any of us will have that choice in another 5 years
@TeeSee - Some people use emotion rather than reason to make decisions.
21:25
Im making a compiler rn, im done with the tokenizer. now i need to make the parser to generate the AST
all in c# that is
does anybody here have some experience in compiler design? im asking purely out of interest
That sounds neat
@TravisJ I'm seriously considering dumping a large amount of time into cracking into systems because I think as you said in a few years, so many things will be networked if I can break in and then report the issues to these companies, I'll make a small fortune
It'll be a free-for-all lol
Yeah white hatting is a valid field
i didnt start my cs degree yet, im just testing my skills
@downrep_nation - That is one heck of a way to start
21:27
@downrep_nation just a smidge, never made an actual compiler well, not for a non-trivial language
I know about the theory, but didn't have to make one in my program
ive been programming for about 4 years now
i know my way around c# quite well
i need theory tho.
@TravisJ I think that's gray-hatting
In the 90's they had you make your own compiler, but that isn't really in the curriculum as much any more
@KendallFrey - Oh, hm, borderline then I suppose
i saw in germany some school still have compiler design courses
universities *
well its 90% theory in seemingly greek
my other uni friends didnt get to this part yet :)
i need to generate a binary tree of the different nodes in my language and i cant get behind how the tree should be structured
21:31
why a binary tree?
the grammar is straight forward but i need to attach nodes to somewhere
abstract syntax tree
@downrep_nation - Ever heard of a context free grammar?
Why binary, specifically?
ive heard the term being thrown around
im not sure, i think each node can at most have 2 children
@KendallFrey My guess would be if you crack the system first then inform, gray hat but if you are a contract and receive a contract first to test the system, white hat huh? Either way, if you don't do damage and your intention is to patch the problem, that's what I'm into.
21:33
A context free grammar is part of the logic involved in composing sets of expressions
but that doesnt make sense grammatically so i guess its not a binary one (which is my structural problem)
@TeeSee basically right
CFG's have alot of documentation online
@KendallFrey btw I liked the LED lighting
but ive never seen an actual implementation of it
rosyln is too massive, i cant wrap my head around it
i found lists of CFG's , even for c# public.beuth-hochschule.de/oo-plug/Cis/txt/…
but.. never a stripped down implementation of parsing something extremely simple (not even maths)
i dont want to use something premade like antlr.. it feels like cheating
21:40
You should try making an extremely basic arithmetic expression parser
+ - * / and ()
with order of operations
start with that, then make a parser for my tokens?
sounds like a good idea to me.
just for practice, you know?
makes sense.
thank you
22:44
Hi All ... I am creating an ApiEndpoint that performs either an Insert into the database or Updates an existing record. Any suggestion and what to return from this method?
If it is an insert I would usually return back the identity of the inserted record
However, if it is an Update I would usually return back void or nothing
23:21
@downrep_nation I am currently writing an math expression parser in c# using a mixture of recursive descent parsing and operator precedence also known as pratt parser. The resulting code is well structured and the algorithm can be relatively easy extended for parsing more complex languages.
Mailme if you want to see code, dd-tom at web.de
23:50
I did a compiler course at uni
it was an honours level course and I was still an undergrad. I failed it miserably, but it was really interesting. I wish I had done it later on when I had more understanding.
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