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12:00 PM
try to reproduce it in a new project
 
12:22 PM
probably a silly question, but I'm curious: any writers in here?
like, fiction
 
I am a writer. A writer of code ಠ_ಠ
 
that's not fiction ಠ_ಠ
 
:o
woaahh I'm also a writer
\o/
 
eyyy!
@Hans1984 you ever write during work? :P
 
yes,code
;)
 
12:27 PM
ಠ_ಠ
 
ಠ‿ಠ
 
no, I was actualyl thinking about writing a book
but i gave up on the thought
im busy with too many other things
and also why would anyone want to read it in the first place
 
aw :(
 
:D
 
what's no way to think about it!
I'd wanna read it
 
12:28 PM
that's why im no writer
;)
right now im reading this
its the saga with all 4 parts in it
i dont read alot of sci-fi these days but this is a good read
 
I wanted to read that
I understand the book was a lot better than the film, though the film made it famous
 
I'm trying to extract the syntax tree of a .cs file. docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/roslyn-sdk/get-started/… appears to do exactly what I need, but requires a ".NET Compiler Platform SDK" that I can't install, because I misplaced my VS installer executable and the Microsoft site won't let me download a new one. Is there any FOSS equivalent of this component I can use?
 
yes best part is that the writer is mentioning inventions 40 years before they were invented
like the internet
and other things
 
I assume the C# language syntax is well-documented, so in principle a parser would not be hard to write... By someone who is qualified in such things (i.e. not me)
 
C# parser is easy
 
12:36 PM
Is it possible that I don't need the SDK to begin with? I don't need any fancy visualizations or anything -- I just need access to Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.SyntaxTree and friends
 
but parsing is the easy job of a compiler
 
no u lemon
 
correct
 
If you're saying "most of the time you don't need to access the syntax tree because the compiler does all that for you", I agree. Most of the time I don't. But this time I want to access it.
 
12:37 PM
I mean, lexing and parsing is easy, linking isnt
 
I'm trying to write a small code analysis tool to calculate some metrics for my classes. Number of methods and properties, cyclomatic complexity, etc
I don't think I'll need to reinvent linking, since I'm really only interested in statistics at the file level
 
linking is required to understand cyclomatic complexity
so, you probably want to use roslyn
 
In that case, never mind, I don't want cyclomatic complexity.
 
@rlemon Deep.
 
speaks to the crumbling society we are living in
 
12:43 PM
@Kevin you should still want roslyn
 
If Roslyn is accessible only by installing the ".NET Compiler Platform SDK" from the Visual Studio installer that I don't have access to, then I'm doomed
If it's available on Nuget or similar, I would be very keen to learn more
I found a "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp" package that looks relevant, but it won't install for .NETFramework Version=v4.6.1. I hope I don't have to upgrade past VS2015 for this.
Maybe I'm not supposed to install that one directly... Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.Compilers appears to have installed OK.
 
@Kevin It's certainly installable via nuget. Check out Roslynpad, a project which uses it, and AFAIK he pulls the Roslyn binaries as nuget.
It's possible it won't build on VS2015, though.
 
@Hans1984 2001 is something I need to read....though I'm sure I'll get to it soon :P
I love the author's picture on Amazon, though xD
guy's got a nice iMac
 
:) yeah it's worth reading
 
*had a nice iMac
 
12:54 PM
but it can be very slow at times
 
looks like it was made before Apple started making everything out of aluminum
kind of like LotR?
 
clark is not the most emotional writer
alot of technical stuff
 
ohhh well I can understand why
 
github.com/dotnet/roslyn says I need Microsoft.Net.Compilers and (or?) Microsoft.CodeAnalysis. I don't see either of those in the Nuget package manager window. Maybe they'll show up if I nuget install from the command line?
 
I have a string "00:03:09". I need to double it ie. "00:06:18" and turn it into a DateTime. Can someone help me with this?
 
12:57 PM
@JoJo make it a string first
and then add it to itself
 
... Not that I'm entirely sure how to do that, since nuget isn't recognized as a valid command by my command prompt. Maybe my path environment variable isn't right, or maybe I need powershell, or maybe there's a .net-specific shell I need to use that I read about once and then mostly forgot
 
@JoJo DateTime, or TimeSpan? This looks like a duration, not a moment in time.
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Ok, this looks useful. I downloaded the .nupkg file. How do I put it in my project?
 
@Kevin You don't need to - that's simply the name of the package, just install it in VS.
Don't manage packages yourself. That defeats the whole purpose.
 
Yes this is a duration. But I have to compare it against DateTime.Now
 
1:00 PM
@JoJo So the way is to parse it to a TimeSpan (check out TimeSpan.Parse), then you can manipulate it directly (check out Timespan.Add).
 
Okay thank you so much.
 
@JoJo How does that make sense? Are you adding that duration to a base/start time?
 
System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object.
   at System.Text.StringBuilder.Append(Char value)
   at System.IO.StringWriter.Write(Char value)
   at Newtonsoft.Json.JsonWriter.AutoCompleteClose(JsonContainerType type)
   at Newtonsoft.Json.JsonWriter.AutoCompleteAll()
   at Newtonsoft.Json.JsonConvert.SerializeObjectInternal(Object value, Type type, JsonSerializer jsonSerializer)
 
I need to make sure a file has not been processing for 2 * it's expected duration
 
pls dont let this be a newtonsoft issue
pls dont let this be a newtonsoft issue
 
1:01 PM
In this case the data i have for expected duration is "00:03:09"
 
@JoJo So something like this?
 
Ok, I won't manage the package myself. How do I install it without usiong the .nupkg file? The Nuget Package Manager window has no obviously relevant results when I search for "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis", and doing nuget install Microsoft.CodeAnalysis from cmd or powershell just gives me nuget : The term 'nuget' is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet, function, script file, or operable program. or similar
 
DateTime processingStart = GetProcessStartTime();
TimeSpan expectedDuration = TimeSpan.Parse("03:09"); //check out specific format strings.
TimeSpan maxDuration = expectedDuration * 2;
if (DateTime.Now - processingStart > maxDuration) { whatever }
 
Yes, just was coding same got to expectedDuration. Thank you for your help I will investigate.
 
@Kevin It looks like your VS isn't searching properly. It should search the exact same repository I linked to. Is your project configured with a different package feed, by any chance?
 
1:05 PM
The "package source" dropdown says "nuget.org", if that's what you mean
 
Hmm, that should work.
I do get results when searching for "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis".
 
I get a ton of results. Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp, Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.Common, Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.Analyzers... But no plain "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis"
 
For me it's the eighth result.
But if you only need C#, I think you get get just the C# package.
Again, though, if you're using VS2015, you might be limited to v1.0 of Roslyn.
 
Now that I search for the third time, I see Microsoft.CodeAnalysis as the eighth result. Very mysterious, but I won't question it. Installed.
 
1:11 PM
well, now that you've completely changed the data my comment looks like I'm a retarded goat herder –
:D
0
Q: Count age within its range in javascript

ValkenswaardHaving trouble lately about counting the duplicate array ang make it object. Now, I'm trying to solve counting age with its range. I have this code snippet to count duplicate age. const age = [5, 5, 16, 5, 16]; const sumAge = {}; for (const datum of age) { let entry = sumAge[datum]; if ...

yy javascript
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan thank you very much for guiding me in the correct direction so quickly. Wow!
TimeSpan.parse was the golden ticket!
 
Ok, with the package installation out of the way, how do I actually use it? Neither of the code samples at docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/roslyn-sdk/get-started/… or blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/visualstudio/2011/10/19/… will compile because the namespaces Roslyn and Microsoft.CodeAnalysis don't exist. Are these tutorials outdated?
 
@JoJo Yup. The Parse methods (for TimeSpan, DateTime, Guid, as well as Int, Double, etc) are foundational. Good to know.
 
I've got a namespace Microsoft.CSharp, but it only contains two members, CSharpCodeProvider and RuntimeBinder. Not sure how useful either of those are.
 
Why only VS2015, and why no VS installer though?
 
1:22 PM
VS2015 is required by manager fiat, and I can't find the installer because when I go to Download older Visual Studio software and click on the 2015 download link, it takes me to a page that says "Sorry, we couldn't find any downloads for you."
 
windows key -> visual studio installer?
 
I don't think VSInstaller knows how to install VS2015.
 
or in visual studio tools -> tools&features?
 
I don't see a "tools & features" menu item in Visual Studio's Tool menu bar. If "Visual Studio Tools" is an application separate from Visual Studio proper, I don't see it when I search for it from the Windows task bar.
 
VS2015 still used the old installer, where you did "Add/Update" from the control panel to add features, IIRC.
It's been a while.
 
1:26 PM
oh I meant the "tools" menu in the toolbar. Where in your toolbar in the extension manager?
 
Also, incidentally, does this "manager fiat" have a reason? There are plenty of good ones. Plenty of bad ones, too.
 
Is there a way to embed text files into a dll (instead of setting them to Content (Copy always/if never)
 
I honestly dont remember, but I feel like VS2015 was the first step to our todays technology
I'm pondering if 'fiat' is a swear word now
 
@erotavlas Check out "Embedded Resource" build type for project items, and this: stackoverflow.com/questions/3314140/…
 
There's an "Extensions and Updates" menu item here. I'm looking through it now.
 
1:28 PM
where?
 
VS2005 was big step
 
It was in the "Tools" menu.
 
Rider was bigger step
 
Just wanted to know ehre it is, because that's where in newer VS's the "tools and features" button is too.
!!votekick Wietlol although J.Doe starts to talk shit too.
 
@Squirrelkiller voted to kick @Wietlol although J.Doe starts to talk shit too.
 
1:29 PM
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan thanks
 
@erotavlas yw
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Mostly boils down to "we don't want to buy licenses again"
 
You may can not remember but VS 2005 was rally big thing cuz of .Net 2.0 and generics
 
Ok, .NET Compiler Platform SDK is now apparently installed, so I got that going for me, which is nice
 
Feel like grandfather when watching how GO will get soon generics
 
1:34 PM
VS2005 being a big thing because of C# is like Notepad being a big thing because of UTF-16
 
I say "apparently" because when I do View > Other Windows > Syntax Visualizer, nothing happens
 
Rider is jetbrains too - does it have similarly shitty git management to Android Studio?
 
I dont know, I use sourcetree for git
 
Oh, here's the window. It appeared on my forever-neglected third monitor.
 
git seems like something you would want to do in a special program
 
1:35 PM
When working on my android app, I open VS to handle the git part.
VS team explorer is also better than sourcetree IMO
Tried sourcetree before I found VS integrated git.
it's nice to have all these big ass buttons and stuff, but the merging and such is so much ebtter in VS
 
I think one of my colleagues uses the Rider internal stuff
we almost never have merge issues
 
I've used Rider's git management
It's fine enough. I still prefer Magit or CLI.
 
we work with a team of 7 on the same code base; when a feature is done, there's usually 3-40 commits in develop we don't have in the feature branch. rebase ftw.
and rebasing is what VS does really great
 
I think python is having a bad influence on me, I suddenly have a mild hatred for camel case and started typing everything lowercase
 
lowercontinuouscaseisthebesteveryoneshoulduseitforeverything
 
user10864482
1:40 PM
good morning
 
sourcetree goes "hey here's the two files with lots of arrows, choose stuff or somethin'". VS has a really nice merge tool that shows you the two changes, lets you choose either or both or none, and shows you the would-be result in a third window.
 
Wietlol switches between JVM and .NET, I imagine they have some strong opinions on method casing.
 
Hello human pony, it is afternoon where I stand.
 
I don't care much for camel case, in particular when my variable names have acronyms. "Ah yes, HTMLParser, the class that arses HTMLP"
 
method casing is not my issue when I switch a lot
 
user10864482
1:41 PM
@Squirrelkiller great. Nice weather I hope
 
I prefer camelCase over PascalCase, but I can see reasons for either
I prefer camelCase for methods because it results in fewer name clashes
 
i feel its so much effort now to hit the shift key
 
especially for properties
 
@Kevin Welcome to .NET, it's called HtmlParser here
 
VS is now installing Visual Studio 2013 C++ on my behalf. Concern.
 
1:42 PM
Acronyms are allowed to be FULLCAPS if they have less than 3 characters.
you mean redistributable?
 
user10864482
nobody are comparing Eclipse to anything? Good, god knows how many problem I had with Eclipse
 
or actual VS2013?!
 
PascalCase is the one true case. I use it regardless of the platform I'm writing in to assert dominance.
 
Of coruse not, everyone knows how muc heclipse sucks
 
Not sure, the install window moved on to something else.
 
1:43 PM
Nah I go all camelCase in java/Kotlin
When in Rome, do as Romans do
 
@Squirrelkiller Lies
 
You mean you don't know how much eclipse sucks?
 
camelCase and snake_case have their uses, but I figure to find the next big thing we have to think outside the box - camels are vicious, snakes are mean. Find the next nasty animal and build a casing pattern after it.
 
I switched to IntelliJ, I hate eclipse
 
1:46 PM
alpacA|casE
 
Lel
Alpacas are camels
 
In the future, each variable name will be a single unicode glyph
 
god
 
So basically mandarin?
 
public DateTime 🎂; instead of public DateTime birthday;
 
1:48 PM
they give this task to generalize a behavior which is up to 99% entirely generalizable with one small and very annoying exception
 
Somebody find that image of that guy's class that is all emoji
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan how about mEmEcAsE ?
 
Visual Studio has a feature where above a function it will list information about the function, like a link to the different references, who last changed it and when. How do you turn that feature on?
This is VS 2017
 
That's an Enterprise feature
 
Oh. Shit.
 
1:49 PM
or Pro
 
For sure.
You sure about that @erotavlas?
 
Yeah, I'm using Express. We had Pro at my last job.
 
This installer has been stuck on the "Enable Graphics Tools" step for ten minutes. I hope this isn't the kind of installer that gives up and dies if the Internet blips out for a second, because mine fails like clockwork every fifteen minutes
 
I'm working in VS 2015 pro right now and have it
 
Fair enough, I'll update my brain.
 
1:51 PM
Community, rather. That's what they're calling "Express" now
 
It's called CodeLens
 
once upon a time, "Express" meant superior, faster, premium
 
can be configured in the VS options
 
now ironically it seems like the contrary
 
Express just means fast
IISExpress is faster than an actual IIS
 
1:52 PM
@Wietlol Is that one upper/one lower, or classic lEEtspEEk where only the vowels are uppercased?
 
in what way is VS Express fast?
 
You dont have to set up stuff, you jsut F5 your application
 
or at least faster than the non-express version?
 
VS Express is fast because yoxu odn't have to buy it first?
 
Installation when you don't have a license
 
1:53 PM
@Neil Fast to set up.
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan one lower, one upper, repeat
 
DevOps is the new bottleneck.
 
That's the context in which it's fast. In comparison to the non-express versions.
 
I am trying to use contains to check a string of extensions, but it is not hitting branch
                var mystringcontains = "ppt, pptx";
                if (item.ContentConversions[0].IncludeAnimations && item.ContentConversions[0].Extension.Contains(mystringcontains))
 
working fast means 'light' nowadays
 
1:54 PM
So they put in less features and it's fast to setup?
great spin :)
 
Pretty much
 
That's the thing though. More features == slower
 
I'm not sick, my immune system is just super performant
 
Like when a candy bar says 25% less sugar, and it's actually 25% smaller than it used to be.
 
@JoJo Are you expecting the comma to allow you to check if it contains either of those values?
 
1:55 PM
@Neil Yes, exactly. Unlike IIS, IISExpress is a developer tool. As such, it's much faster to use.
 
@JonathonChase yes I just need to know if the extension is either
 
@JoJo kinda depends on the input right? do you have an example input? also - mayb capitalization? Extensions.toLower().Contains( ...
 
@JoJo You're checking it the wrong way. You're checking if your extension contains the string "ppt,pptx"
 
Okay, that's not how contains works, unfortunately. It's looking for the literal "ppt, pptx" value.
 
Yes ToLower() is good
 
1:57 PM
var pptExtensions = new List<string>(StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase) { "ppt", "pptx"};
var isPpt = pptExtensions.Contains(item.ContentConversions[0].Extension);
 
I though maybe a List.. okay
 
HashSet might be faster.
 
The recommended approach is not to use ToLower, because that will constantly create new strings and might allocate a lot of memory. Use the StringComparison parameter to do case-insensitive searches.
@JonathonChase Probably not for two values.
 
wow!!
 
Take the high ground, son! Do not ToLower yourself to their level. They will beat you with experience.
 
1:59 PM
HashSet is better than a List if you are storing lots of data
because the time it takes to query it is much more average
 
Yes that makes sense. It is barking on StringComparison
 
List<>'s just keep increasing
754
A: HashSet vs. List performance

innominate227A lot of people are saying that once you get to the size where speed is actually a concern that HashSet<T> will always beat List<T>, but that depends on what you are doing. Let's say you have a List<T> that will only ever have on average 5 items in it. Over a large number of cycles, if a single...

This answer has a good comparison if you are looking for performance
 
If it's a fixed two values, it's probably not going to make a difference as @AvnerShahar-Kashtan said.
 
Yeah, those numbers seem to fit my intuition. A straightforward O(n) scan for a value, for tiny n, will be faster.
 
If you are worried about performance when using small datasets, yer programming wrong
 
2:02 PM
If you're calling bubble sort on small datasets, yer programming wrong
 
It seems that 20 items is where hashing starts to make sense. Strange. I would have guessed that number to be higher.
 
or just Regex.Match(".pptx*", yourString)
 
Ah, it measures add/remove, not lookups.
 
if you have 20 items, you could even use bogo sort
 
if your mouth is producing foamy bubbles while coding, yer programming wrong
 
2:07 PM
if(Regex.Match(@"\.pptx?", fileName).Success)
 
while(!list.IsSorted()) list.Shuffle();
two lines, baby
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan 'The recommended approach ... StringComparison parameter to do case-insensitive searches.' Do you have a source on your mind so i can convince my team?
wait - dont say that seems ridiculously easy to google.
 
@sommmen I have a a link for you if you want. :)
 
I like him
 
Well, I'm heading off home. So if you want a link, now's your last chance.
 
2:14 PM
sure
if you have it nearby ill read it
 
> You should be careful when you use these methods, because forcing a string to a uppercase or lowercase is often used as a small normalization for comparing strings regardless of case. If so, consider using a case-insensitive comparison.
 
Here's a link
 
whats with zelda
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan our architect prefers toLower for some reason, but this may sure turn his world upside down.
 
Maybe he never considered that fact that calling ToLower (or ToUpper, of course) will allocate a new string. Not a big deal most of the time, but when you're dealing with tons of strings and/or huge ones, it can really cause unnecessary allocations and copy operations.
 
2:17 PM
I didn't and I have to refactor all my code now, thanks
 
My pleasure. :)
And now, off home to see how the kid's feeling in her second week of first grade.
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan we'll we're actually going through about a million strings, and comparing them.. so...
 
G'bye, young'uns.
 
bye
 
mr5
o/
 
2:18 PM
bye
 
mr5
Smart is so dumb
 
@c0dem0nkey not zelda dude. That's mario, get it rite
 
mr5
a corporate message of error
 
@mr5 dont tell me youre from smart
@Neil hell no
 
mr5
I wouldn't say they're dumb if I'm working for them
 
2:23 PM
you did
didnt backread enough
 
mr5
that's why I said they're dumb
 
**you did?
 
mr5
 
That whitespace doesnt feel right
 
mr5
I'm more bothered that they wanted to have a reference to the <head> tag
 
2:29 PM
@mr5 id="Head1" implies the presence of multiple heads, Head2..HeadN
 
mr5
Smart be like:
first of all, I wanted to load this bunch of trackers and analytics, await it before displaying the page
 
data > load time
 
lol
HAHAHAH
 
@mr5 You should not be awaiting on analytics.
 
user10864482
2:31 PM
I'm having a hard time with a QA guy
 
@MadaraUchiha thats annoying alright
 
smort
 
@humanpony we all do
 
Also I'm not a web dev...I'm a full stack dev :/
 
mr5
@MadaraUchiha I don't, they did. They put those bunch of 3rd party libs in their fucking <head>
 
2:31 PM
i guess pretty much everyone here is full stack
 
user10864482
@c0dem0nkey it's encouraging to see I'm not alone
 
Time to go home, bye bye!
 
@humanpony its physics.
 
mr5
don't kill squirrel on your way
 
user10864482
@c0dem0nkey I guess it is
 
2:32 PM
@humanpony and it will always be working on our computers.
@humanpony not theirs. ours.
 
user10864482
@c0dem0nkey the QA guy is like; if I do this while doing that it cause a problem. And I'm like; why would someone do this while doing that? And his answer; it's not a question of why someone would do that, it's a matter of someone can.
 
user10864482
I know I must not reply but darn I would like to tell him; should we prevent the user from shuting down its own station at that point?
 
you don't agree with him?
 
lol. thats always gonna be how we are.
 
mr5
are http headers and body a two different response?
 
user10864482
2:38 PM
@erotavlas in absolute term yes, but not while taking the context
 
mr5
When you request a multipart a.k.a download, socket will be kept alive. headers might response a 200 but not body at all so I guess they are two different request
 
user10864482
in absolute term I would love to have a constant background process and monitor E V E R Y T H I N G . But in reality I can't do that; I must limit what I monitor and accept when something is outside my boundaries
 
mr5
@humanpony is he testing mutiple things at once?
It might probably be a valid case you consider. We let our QAs do that as long as it's within the scope of our app
 
user10864482
@mr5 I really don't know
 
we allow our QA to have free reign on what they want to do with our apps, it usually works ok
 
mr5
2:44 PM
like for example, is he pressing two buttons simultaneously, and when he does that, he invoke the unanticipated nasal dragons?
 
user10864482
@mr5 then I would consider it's the user wish to be impaled by nasal dragons
 
mr5
we consider that a legit cases and should be solved. otherwise, low quality
 
just put a liability waiver with the app and your good
 
user10864482
@mr5 I'm working on a legacy system. To some extend I have to chose my battle. There are a bunch of key a user can press on a workstation that can seriously prevent any work
 
I got a bug ticket once that involved clicking an element 23 times. It had to be at least 23 times. I was all over that one. Practical user story? probably not. Still gonna try to fix it.
No idea how the QA found it, absolutely blew my mind.
 
user10864482
2:50 PM
@JonathonChase if it's not practical it's not an issue
 
mr5
lol. just put a click counter and when it reaches exactly 23 times, reload the whole app
I actually don't want a direct comparison of integer when checking for a limit, I always do < or > in case the value fluctuates
 
@humanpony You credit the user too much. If your application can be put into an invalid state, someone will do it if for no other reason than to point at their workstation and say it's broken.
 
user10864482
@JonathonChase maybe I credit user too much. I'm not saying the user is perfect but I'm 99.99999% sure the user wouldn't do this for that.
 
4,294,967,295/22 = 195225786.136

just make it overflow at 23 /s
 
If your QA has done it then one user already has.
 
user10864482
2:54 PM
@JonathonChase you are probably right
 
assume the user is a robot who presses menu items at random in the way most likely to confuse the program
 
user10864482
I just had this urgency to vent
 
A problem with having the strong domain knowledge of being the application writer is that you have trouble thinking outside of what the 'correct' way to use your software is.
 
anyone familiar with automapper?
 
Somewhat, yeah
 
2:55 PM
i actually am a robot who presses menu items at random irl
 
I need to register a mapping but I dont really know how I can achieve this
the mapping is from IMonad<X> to IMonad<Y>
 
user10864482
@Anadactothe despite my momentary frustration I do appreciate what our QA do
 
mr5
@Wietlol create your own mapper
 
what I basically want to register is a mapping that works for any X and Y
@mr5 I almost would
 
mr5
what stopping you?
 
2:57 PM
C#
 
mr5
I was about to try the Automapper but decided not to because I can
 
Well, if you define a mapping from X -> Y with automapper, you should be able to feed it to your monad's bind function, yeah?
 
ye
 
mr5
what is monad?
 
the monad has a Map or Select function
but I need some way to make AutoMapper use it
 
2:58 PM
I don't know that you can instruct automapper to call your object's method with it's map though
That's an interesting question, but I don't think I can help
 
I dont think AutoMapper can do monads nicely
 
You might want to look at how automapper does it's ProjectTo though
 
since IEnumerable<T> is a monad, and it's definitely mapping it's elements
 

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