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00:12
posted on January 08, 2018 by Scott Hanselman

Someone gave me an Azure IoT DevKit, and it was lovely timing as I'm continuing to learn about IoT. As you may know, I've done a number of Arduino and Raspberry Pi projects, and plugged them into various and sundry clouds, including AWS, Azure, as well as higher-level hobbyist systems like AdaFruit IO (which is super fun, BTW. Love them.) The Azure IoT DevKit is brilliant for a number of reas

 
3 hours later…
mr5
mr5
03:34
o/
\o
\o/
I want to use System.Lazy<T> to make a Singleton pattern but Lazy requires me to make my constructor public which breaks the Singleton's constraint
mr5
mr5
03:53
nvm. there is this new Lazy<>(() => new T())
 
3 hours later…
07:16
ohayou.
07:34
good morning
no coffee today for breakfast, the machine broke
user8397869
you can eat the beans and fill up with hot water
@HéctorÁlvarez That's the equivalent of workplace bullying, I'd lodge a complaint.
Good morning.
@RoelvanUden Lol I'm starving
I brought a whole pizza from Domintos for lunch today though
I could take a slice
Pizza in the morning? That's hella great.
07:39
I was tipped off a while ago that there's an automatic pizza vending machine near my house.
Which bakes the pizza for your on the spot.
Last night I went out looking for it.
mr5
mr5
ugh this survey is so long
I found it, in a small hole in the wall in a sleazier part of town, surrounded by regular vending machines.
@RoelvanUden I used the 3x1 Domino's code yesterday and ate one immediately
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan wow.... lol
I went for it, naturally. I'm a sucker for culinary experimentation.
There was a group of people who just came out of a nearby escape room who came in to look at the machine, not daring to actually get a pizza off of it. When they saw I was, they stuck around to watch the technological marvel.
It spends 2 minutes just warming up the oven while you wonder if anything is happening .
Then, the countdown begins.
Please continue
also o/
07:46
180 seconds.
Tick by tick.
Faint whirring of fans inside.
Was there a delicate scent, accompanying the dance of the flames over the delicate pizza crust?
There was not.
I actually leaned down to the slot to try to sniff it.
This is better than most movies on theaters
But this is not a pizza you come to for the authentic aroma of wood smoke and freshly made dough. No, this is a pizza you come to for a sterile, alienated experience.
I see.
-3
Q: What is Difference Between these two constructors

MD mohiIn one of my interview i got this question as Employee() { } AND public Employee(int id, string name, string type) what is difference between these two Constructors public class Employee { Employee() { } public Employee(int id, string name, string type) { ...

07:50
This pizza is nothing less than a metaphor for the human existence in the urban center.
That was his interview...
But finally, the seconds passed. The five of us, me and my newly-acquired pizza-expectation buddies, leaned in, and then it came in. Shiny and silver, glowing in the flickering fluorescent lighting.
With the box in my hand, I headed back home. As I stepped outside onto the street, I was stopped by passersby, asking me about the pizza. "Is this the automatic pizza? Have you tried it? Is it good?"
Everyone who passed by has seen the machine. No-one has dared try it.
mr5
mr5
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan -1 no pineapple
None but the drunkest of drunks, I think, would go for it when there's a decent cheap-ass pizzeria just three doors down. A bit more expensive, but hey, you know, not baked in a vending machine.
The drunkest of drunks, and me.
So I took it home. Showed it to my wife. Asked her if she wanted a slice*, watched her skeptical expression, and ate it.

* not a slice, since it did not come pre-sliced. I just tore pieces off.
Hence you, the daredevil, slowly traversing the everpresent darkness. The artifact, right there. Right in your hands. What were your expectations?
07:55
Low.
Very low.
lol that cracked me up
I can't help but to read all this stuff with a deep voice in my head, jesus it was spectacular
Alright so
what's the verdict
From 0 to compiled-first-try-no-warnings
All in all it wasn't too bad. It wasn't very pizzaish. The dough was too soft and stretchy and not chewey or crunchy. It was like a sort of soft pita bread with cheap cheese and tomato sauce.
I got exactly what I expected. 10/10, would wait again.
On a different note, I have recently realized/remembered that a year ago I found 2 out of 4 rams to be faulty and took em out. Since then, I totally forgot about that, and have been wondering why does my work pc feel so heavy
Im actually surprised It can still somehow run with Photoshop, VSCode, Thunderbird, Chrome with 20 tabs and some other little stuff running
Well. How much RAM is left?
mr5
mr5
08:01
I never had more than 1 ram in my potato PC. It's just that I can't open more than 4 tabs in Chrome while I'm doing Android Studio
@RoelvanUden 4 gigs
@KamilSolecki How?! How can you survive with that?!
its... surprisingly working.
although I gotta make a trip to the store
get at least 4 more
I basically have VSCode+Firefox open (... and a VM) and it's sucking 11GB
ye w/o VSCode im running at 69%
08:04
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I did NOT expect that, lol
Morning sharperinos!
@HéctorÁlvarez Most people think that the goal of food is to be tasty. I say, tasty is for the weak-willed!
I'm here for the experience and mild social commentary.
lol my vidya driver just crashed
Tried mining with a toaster again?
Bois we just crashed big time
Reboot!
08:17
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan It's always more awesome to tlel the story of how you contracted hepatitis B from a $1 pizza you got from a shady vending machine
@HéctorÁlvarez Hey, it was a $5.79 pizza!
Oh crap
What would be the average pizza price in a pizzeria?
A slice of pizza is about $3.50
Tel-Aviv is expensive.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan And a frozen Pizza from the grocery?
08:19
That's expensive, even for us norwegians
@RoelvanUden Haven't bought one of those in years. Lemme check.
Given I just bought 3 large pizzas for €19, which is about $22... yeah I call that expensive
$10 for 3 frozen pizzas.
We can get top quality pizza from a great local pizzeria for about 30 pln ($8)
Okay that isn't too bad.
08:21
If anything goes, I could never not have a Frutti di Mare pizza
Mm mm.
@KamilSolecki You won't find those in a grocery store here, or most cheap pizzerias.
On the RAM usage discussion: Using 14.4 of 24, and have 2 VS, 1 vscode, chrome with 7 tabs, couple of console windows running dotnet core apps, onenote, ssms.
A frozen Pizza is $2.80 here. A Pizza from a Pizza store is easily $10 or more.
(Usually $15)
Yeah but them frozen pizzas are just ugh.
@KamilSolecki that's cheap.
:)
08:22
Yeah Poland is damn cheap in general :)
A small personal pizza from a mid-range pizza place - say Papa John's or Domino's - is about $15.
I know. I had trouble spending the cash I withdrew at the airport :p
Also, since we are doing food
(I hit the wrong button)
Only been to Poland once, and hardly paid for anything beacuse I was with family, but yeah, it was pretty cheap.
I'm back there this summer, too.
mr5
mr5
08:24
rich kids
I went to an absolute great fusion korean restaurant
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan hey, we should maybe meet up!
Which city?
@KamilSolecki I have no idea. Again, it's a whole-family thing. My parents, my brother's family, somewhere.
My sister-in-law is Polish, so she decides where we go. :)
I see :P
In 2016 we were in a very nice hotel in a place called.. wait, I remember... Jagniatkow, I think.
TIL such a place exists :D
Seems like its in the mountains
08:28
^^
@mr5 Care to elaborate?
@KamilSolecki Yeah. Not too far from Wroclaw.
If you like beautiful views and XVI/XVII century estates, Sandomierz and its' surroundings are an absolute killer
mr5
mr5
9 mins ago, by scheien
I know. I had trouble spending the cash I withdrew at the airport :p
That doesn't mean that I'm rich you know.
neither that I'm a kid.
psh, people who have money
mr5
mr5
08:34
it's a slang we use to refer to rich people ^^
psh, people who have slang
@WilliamMariager Kids these days and their slang. When we were their age, we were lucky to have words at all!
psh, people
Yeah man. Back in prohibition times, I'd sometimes only have like 1-2 words per day. Kids don't know how well they have it with their gadgets and their internet machines.
i got a dumb question... well kind of dumb. for our js files now we are loading config info from a config url (like url). However there is way to get that url with js as well
08:39
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan We used our fists to get the message through.
which is even simpler
We have some smart peers here at the workplace
2 months trying to get a database backup
they eventually send us a file
What's the question @Proxy?
52GB worth of database... huh I'm skeptical here
so im not sure if i should stuck with loading from the config js or getting it automatically with js
08:40
Why? Is that.. too big?
call the guy, WTF did you just send me, the source code to install a cryptocurrency mining software in the mobo through a firmware breach?
@Proxy Do you need it straight away? Is it big? Any reason for not loading it up front?
i prefer from a config file but i cannot argue against the other way
nah its rather small
I quote: "It's the KVM backup for the machine"
nothing too important, i just like it more with a config file. Further down we may have more stuff in the configuration
08:41
Lol, TIL a new way of sending a DB backup
so then it may be a nicer opetion
but currently it does not have a major effect on anything
I'm surprised they didn't back the whole building infrastructure into a JPG format file
@Proxy: We bundle our config.
I always backup my things into TIFF since no one can open it anyways.
If you're using webpack, I'd imagine you could have your config as an own chunk.
08:43
so far this it is only plain js
there is not that much stuff
Yeah I bundle configs too
goof morning
eh i will leave it in a config file
09:08
Hello every one
GoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOoOd Mornin' neglecterinos!
someone has an opponent
09:20
Fight! Fight! Fight!
@mr5 bloddy womper
09:37
It's simply not possible to simply and consistently replace "tab" with a visible character, right? I have a field that's captured and stored in a DB which commonly contains nothing but a tab, and I'm fed up with staring at whitespace
sure you can replace instances of \t
with whatever you'd like
just depends on where you want to do it ;)
83
A: How eliminate the tab space in the column in SQL Server 2008

KaRTry this code SELECT REPLACE([Column], char(9), '') From [dbo.Table] char(9) is the TAB character

HAVE AT YE, YE LAND LUBBERS
Oh hi @Nerd
how dare you
@scheien Yeah, I meant as simply as possible - as in use a different character that's interpreted as a tab but which displays as visible. If I have to convert to/from a tab every time it;s going to be a pain
09:44
How is that not simple?
I fail to see the problem
then replace tabs on insert, and replace substitute char on read
Does anyone know the relationship of previous Roslyn.XXX Library, and Microsoft.CodeAnalysis Library? Was the Roslyn.XXXX a kind of Beta for that or something, and they hadn't decided on a package name yet?
Yeah, maybe I'm making more of this in my head than there needs to be. I guess I can convert it in the get/set of the property itself
Not sure if there's a similar option that notepad++ has, with view all characters.
09:48
I may have been unclear in that it's critical I keep the tab characters. It's a field delimiter for tab-delimited files. I just want users (and me) to be able to see it.
Then replace it on read
Since it's view only.
Ah but that's part of the problem - it's not view only. There's an option to manually pick a delimiter - so the user can type a "tab" into an input box. That's where this whole conundrum begins because I have to replace that with something like ⇥ so they can see what they've typed. But when it comes to reading/writing the files that result, it's got to be an actual tab
How do you store / make the files? Do you have some sort of export definition?
09:56
Files are stored on disk. There's a worker process that picks them up, loads them into memory & processes the contents, then writes them out again with the process results
If the files need to have the actual tab as delimiter, one could have a field for storing the user defined delimiter, which can be used to replace with.
Yes, that's a good suggestion, thanks. Hadn't thought of keeping as a separate field - seems more complex but it might actually make things simpler in this situation
:+1:
10:14
guys I'm using BlockingCollection in my code. It Adds the data (retrieving it from DB) properly but while Take-ing them from collection i found duplicate entries. I have 1500,000 records in table that has to be processed. But to investigate the issue I created another table having only 100 records. Why is Blocking Collection showing duplicate entries? Link to my code : codepaste.net/v8dw2d
10:37
If I don't specify my method as "virtual", can I not override it then?
Not without being hacky no.
Thanks :-)
11:03
DatabaseContext acts as the data access layer right?
@pluto20010 Jup.
Your implementation of the DbContext
11:43
is CRUD pronunced as "crud"
*crude
Yeap pretty much
but some say as Kr- ud
I always say Kr- ud
kr like kryptonite and ud like thud
both are right?
No idea. Not so important in my opinion :P
11:45
I mean its pretty much the same :P
As long as people don't think that CRUD is the new NoSQL, you're basically fine
some people can nitpick and make fun in meeting
Those people should learn about priorities imo
Good point!
@ErwinOkken If you somehow manage to link those 2 terms somehow, I'll consider you illuminati
12:02
@HéctorÁlvarez Even NoSQL does CRUD.
Where do I get my signet ring?
@HéctorÁlvarez Easy. I can create my own database-type and call it CRUD. Which stands for Create Really Uwesome Databases
Is Uwesome also an acronym?
Would be awesome though
user8397869
Guys, How long did it take to become a good coder?, How many projects have you done?
Unbelievably awesome
@W4y ask me again in 50 years
12:06
@W4y I think you need to rethink your question
@W4y Define a good coder
@ErwinOkken It is HE who doesn't need to test his programs, because he knows everything works 100% from the get-go
@HéctorÁlvarez You talkin' about me?
Awesome, can I hire him?
@RoelvanUden Lol
user8397869
someone who gets whatever project, can easily translate it into code and in a reasonable time
12:08
That guy must be smart enough to ask 2 * int.MaxValue amount in euro's each month
@W4y I'd say anyone can do that, doesn't have to a a good coder, nor a good code output
Whatever project? You gonna need quite some time to learn all the programming languages dude.
@W4y Define whatever project; define reasonable time. Define quality; I think you're asking the wrong question. Or you're joking :-P
user8397869
I am not joking,
user8397869
i see it is the wrong question..... :)
12:09
But it takes like 5 minutes to put the full complexity of a swarm rocket launcher, including micro-warhead slaving to the main node into code
you start with var weapon = new RocketLauncher();
@W4y Look, being a good 'coder'... No, let's call this 'software developer' from now on, because you do more than just hack code. Again, being a good software developer means you have a good~ish grasp of programming languages, you are capable of reasoning logically, you have good communication skills, you know databases, you can work in a team, and have a good work attitude. There's no 'x projects' to unlock said abilities, or 'x time'. It's something very personal.
@W4y I think you want to become a good coder and wonder when you ever will achieve that? You will never. There is always a 12 year old Asian kid who can do it better.
but a good coder will know SwarmerRocketLauncher inherits RocketLauncher, but adds the additional slave warheads
Being open-minded is a huge pro as well. Don't assume your skillset will transfer to the next project. It might not. idem with your programming languages and databases, you might need/should be using something else entirely.
@HéctorÁlvarez weapon.AttachTo(me); weapon.Shoot(new Vector(-1, -1, -1));
12:12
Being a good Software Developer is all about problem solving. Learning a syntax and using it is easy. Making something good and solving problems is work.
@ErwinOkken Shoot is more complex than that, you'll have to define a lot more constraints
Being an awesome problem solver that's incapable of communicating clearly is as good as rubbish. :-P
are you shooting with reference to the normal? Or just vertically stable?
Psh, I'm my own island!
Oh, right. Right!
12:13
Pretty sure Shoot has an overload where you just pass the target and it calculates hte vector for you
But no, you're right, there's additional stuff. But that can be said about any project work.
not at all, you'll need to provide the fire mode, defaulting to semi-auto is a bad idea
plus, you need to reload first
What helped me a lot, is trying to make things more modular. Like, not only making it for my current case but creating it in a way so I can reuse it later. Reuse the code, reuse a whole project, or even make a product/service that you could use yourself or sell. Not saying this is the best option, but it helped me. And I still suck, so.
Once you get down to actually developing software, it's more about knowing how to approach problems, identify the things you need to solve, solve all those parts and then put it back together in working order.
a good coder would be like a good poet for me
12:14
and the target point may not be pathable
I think the rocket.Shoot function will make it pathable ...
@WilliamMariager Indeed. It doesn't matter if you can use that awesome multi-threaded delegated computational matrix if you can't do that.
how about you are in a cave where the rocket has to traverse through 6 walls in order to reach the target, but has not enough rotation to clear through corners
Oh, and try to avoid making assumptions. The bug probably has something to do with X. Finding out 1 week later that it does not work on a Windows PC.
user8397869
My current problem, I know what I need, I can put it in words, but I lack the connection to the actual code
12:16
You should try and identify how you learn best.
@ErwinOkken that's so specific, I take you've had this problem in the past
@HéctorÁlvarez rocketLauncher.getProjectile().setSize(-1, -1);
Now it can make the rotation!
Bug fixed
Personally I'm a tinkerer. If I need to learn a new programming language, I'll take an existing project and modify and pick apart.
@W4y What's the problem? And put it into words how you'd approach solving it.
Some people learn better from books, so finding the right book is the solution.
12:17
@ErwinOkken You can't tweak the dimensions of the projectile physically! :O
@HéctorÁlvarez I've done a lot of assumptions. Learned 1 thing from it. Try not to make them
@w4y I am in a similar stage as you only thing when you learn a topic of a language try to implement it fresh
@HéctorÁlvarez rocketLauncher.getProjectile().setVirtualSize(-1, -1); no?
practicing will make it easier for you
@ErwinOkken the point is you have to make assumptions, but afterwards you have to test them to see if they are real, e.g. we have to test a whole library module every time we pull it from the SNV repo, because nobody knows if it still works (true story)
12:19
I've got my job review in about 2 weeks. I'm nervous. mehh
@ErwinOkken No, no, no, take the Javelin targeting system, you need to be able to see the target clearly, then again you need vertical space or run the risk of killing yourself and everthing in a 200m radius
@ErwinOkken Why would you be nervous?
it's a long process but you learn everything new each day (if you don't quit) along the way and that's where the beauty lies.
@RoelvanUden I put my bet on Insecurity
I was insecure a few years back, learned to assume everyone's a dork and work my way up from there
nothing makes you feel happier on a daily basis than pretending you're surrounded by idiots, even if you know they are the best professionals you'll ever come across
Spoiler: They're not the best professionals you'll ever come across.
12:23
I'm not nervous because I think I will be kicked out or that I'm not good enough for the job. I'm nervous because it's my first review. I have no clue about how those conversations are being helt
I'm working at Quintor, do you know it @RoelvanUden ?
@ErwinOkken Oh. Well, it's often a casual conversation for the most part. If there were problems, you'd know by now. You'll sit down with your boss (most likely) and chat about how it's going, how you felt it went, and what you'd like to achieve. You can also give feedback to your boss. Then you'll shake hands and be on your merry way.
@ErwinOkken Nah, no clue.
Where do you guys normally learn c# from?
@RoelvanUden Yeah I know, but still a bit nervous. Not that I'm shaking or something. Maybe "curious" is a better word
@RoelvanUden Have you been at Techdays 2017?
@pluto20010 Google
@ErwinOkken No :-)
12:26
and from Google -> ?
stackoverflow?
@pluto20010 What is it, that you want to achieve?
@pluto20010 I learn from solving problems. And chat. Chat is inspirational.
@pluto20010 the best way to learn is to just start trying
I learn from solving problems and berating other people and feeling smug and superior. Then someone calls me on it and I actually learn something.
12:28
I just copy and paste enough stack overflow answers together until i get a result that resembles what i want
(Kidding ofc)
(Why are you kidding?)
@Kieran rolls eyes
heh
@WilliamMariager because if that statement were true, i'd never write any code
I made an algorithm that gets all functions/methods from the internet (crawler), then I define some input and define some output. If there is a function that succeeds, I use it. That's how I built Microsoft Word
amazing
12:30
That's almost how stacksort works :P
@ErwinOkken You're familiar with the StackSort sorting algorithm, right?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I think I do
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That's were the inspiration was coming from :-)
Dammit, ninja'd again with the link.
eval. I like
It would appear Avner has met his match
No code is complete without eval.
I've built an eval-chat where you can chat with others and execute code on other people's machine
12:32
@ErwinOkken Also known as the "I, too, like to live dangerously chat".
The most awesome part was that I injected a piece of code in my own chat, that if someone sent me code, I send it back to the sender. :-D
Afterwards they wondered why they all receive their own code. Silly collegues
How about a system that just streams assembly instructions directly into your processor?
I wrote code to encrypt my messages in a chat.
(Not kidding, actually)
I wrote a userscript a while ago that repalced the words "badge" on SO to "badger", which was fun. Then another chat user, who had it on, was editing a wiki page on SO and accidentally edited the site from "badge" to "badger".
@RoelvanUden I think the folks over on the WPF channel have been talking about that recently.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Oh, really? ;-D
12:35
Not necessarily about your code.
But about using encryption to emulate private messages on the public chat.
That sounds rather interesting
Oh, that would work. <Hidden>
Encrypted using another user's ID as the public key.
You'll need a keystore for that. The public key needs to belong to the receiver.
So you'll absolutely need an external key store
Which is not a big deal but it's a server that needs to run
@RoelvanUden the proxy blocked it... dammit, I bet it was some rebecca black shit
12:37
twas a link to nowhere
That, actually, was an encrypted message from my plugin :P
It essentially allowed me to hide long messages that looks okay.
oh well.
funny

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