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12:00 PM
@Wietlol I'm using the official microsoft C# documentation and interfaces comes several topics after LINQ. LINQ are just queries so I should have no problem understanding them without knowing interfaces first, but thank you for the suggestion.]
@Rob I understand everything from:
9 mins ago, by Rob
@MyWrathAcademia The ToList() is throwing you off. Take for example: var numbers = new [] { 1, 2, 3, 4, }.Select(n => n + 1). That n+1 function will not execute until you ask for items from numbers
 
I think ill disagree with MS... once again
 
to here:
7 mins ago, by Rob
And if you were to write var a = numbers.ToList(); var b = numbers.ToList(), that n + 1 function will execute twice for each number
 
on a side note... dont mind me, I am just debugging my application:
 
The only part I don't understand is the lambda expression Select(n => n + 1)but that's because I have not yet learned lambda expressions or lambda functions in a structured/formal way
 
Because it's a WietApp
 
12:04 PM
@Wietlol Good luck with that.
 
its probably Wietbot
taking all that memory
 
because I just hit a breakpoint on a stage where I have an entire sdk in memory in 4 different states
 
the squirrels are too silent today
they ar eplotting something
 
Rob
@MyWrathAcademia n => n + 1 can be replaced by AddNumber... .Select(AddNumber) if you have a function like: int AddNumber(int number) { return number + 1; }
 
I think I have to stop using toString actually because that is where the debugger actually slows down... a lot
 
@Hans1984 its Wietlang
 
Rob
Which can also be written as .Select(n => AddNumber(n))
 
and the debugger just tried to generate a json of the entire Wietlang sdk...
and of every single node inside the sdk
 
@Wietlol why would toString slow down the debugger?
 
because my toStrings are quite... recursive
 
12:08 PM
Good for debugging
 
@Wietlol Do you have your own programming language?
 
Not so good for making a msall string for getting a quick overview
 
> Method threw 'java.lang.StackOverflowError' exception. Cannot evaluate bla.bla.bla.toString()
 
Rob
@Wietlol You're not going with the tried and true [Object object]??
 
EW!
 
Rob
12:09 PM
;)
 
@Wietlol I hoped recursion was less computationally and memory intensive than loops. Is that not the case?
 
not even with this.GetType().ToString()
 
Rob
They're the same They're essentially the same for most use cases. Recursion is 'worse' because you exhaust the stack
 
lol no, recursion is hard on the machine
 
@Rob which is faster?
 
Rob
12:09 PM
Loops
 
loops and recursion are different
 
Rob
Recursion is nice because it's easy to read and follow, usually
But loops are better in every way in terms of performance... so much so that some compilers will attempt to turn your recursion into a loop
 
loops repeat a certain sequence of instructions
recursion delves deeper into a sequence of instructions
@Rob not if you do toString on an AST tho
@MyWrathAcademia yes, I have
 
@Squirrelkiller If recursion is harder on the machine then why do many unix command line tools such as rm and grep use recursion instead of loops?
 
I think it's a different use case? I don't know if they use recursion in their code, and if they do, there's probably a reason for it.
 
12:12 PM
goto is faster ;)
 
because it grants a different set of features
removed toString on my fully linked program tree
 
@Rob Damn. I learned recursion because I thought it would give me some sort of advantage when writing algorithms, now I'm finding out loops are better except when it comes to readability and I'm guessing that's only a problem if you have (many) deeply nested loops.
 
I guess it made a difference
 
Rob
@MyWrathAcademia I mean, not really. Right tool for the right job. Performance isn't everything. Easy maintenance trumps that for most cases
Knowing recursion is a super useful tool to have
 
@Squirrelkiller rm -r deletes files recursively. Many unix command line tools have the --recursive option
 
12:15 PM
That's a different kind of recursion though
Different use case
 
Rob
Go and try to write a fibonacci function with loops, and then with recursion. Recursion is vastly easier, IMO... but will fail earlier than loops will
 
They recurse the file tree
 
@Rob I think fib is easier with loops... but I havent made a fib function in years so my memory might fail on me here
 
@Rob thanks. I'm glad to hear that.
 
12:17 PM
Nice IDE
 
@Wietlol what's your programming language called?
 
Wietlang for the time being
I had an amazing name... only to find out that a language with that name already exists
I then had another name, but it was trash
 
@Rob When you say that recursion will fail earlier than loops will please what do you mean?
 
I havent released it yet, so I can still change the name
 
@Wietlol haha what was it
 
Rob
12:19 PM
@MyWrathAcademia You have a fixed stack size. Every function call adds a frame to the stack. If you recurse deep enough, you run out of space and the application crashes
 
C#
 
NinoLang
 
That's the infamous StackOverflow
Sucks to debug that
 
Rob
@Wietlol Well, it's not hard to do it with loops.. But I think the recursive implementation is pretty succinct. This is probably a bad example, as if I wanted a production-ready fibonacci implementation, I wouldn't use recursion
 
?
@Wietlol Was the trash name another alphabet language name
 
12:21 PM
"Java"
He ditched that one and oracle picked it up.
 
@Wietlol What's the syntax like? Is it a C-family language? or more like pseudo code (e.g. Python)
 
its similar to kotlin
and... typescript
 
Eww
 
Turns out I can't have an index.html and index.Release.html to be built by diferent configurations.
 
Rob
> more like pseudo code (e.g. Python)
Lucky you didn't say that in the python room
:D
 
12:22 PM
and... some more pseudo code (unlike python)
 
@Rob Is that what causes a StackOverFlowException?
 
Rob
Yep
The stack size is... in the hundreds? Maybe thousands? It's large enough that you won't realistically run into it unless you've majorly screwed up your recursive implementation, or you've used recursion when you shouldn't have
It's not super common for experienced developers, but it is super common when you start learning programming
 
I had to find such a bug once. The function usually died in its 609th iteration.
 
4KB?
 
I'd say 1kb
It crashed at ~200 iterations when debugging
 
12:27 PM
The default stack reservation size used by the linker is 1 MB.
 
@Rob Is that what causes a StackOverFlowException?
 
Rob
Yes it is
 
The operating system rounds up the specified size to the nearest multiple of the system's allocation granularity (typically 64 KB).
 
If you continue like this you won't learn programming by reading :P
 
That's a way to learn programming lol
 
12:30 PM
@Rob Forgive me if I any of the following is incorrect but I have not yet learned about a stack, I only know what a function stack is from learning recursion. From what I learned in recursion each recursive function call adds a stack so how come you are saying that you have a fixed stack size when the stack size depends on the number of recursive calls? To me, a frame in your message is what I call a stack.
@Rob So do you mean that every function call adds a function stack to the big (i.e. global) stack?
@Rob thanks for the warning :) What's the Python room like? I've only been on the JavaScript and C# stackoverflow chat rooms and they are super nice and helpful. I remember reading a stackoverflow article about how Python gitbhub repositories have/use the highest number of swear words so may be that's where all the grumpy stackoverflow users congregate?
 
Rob
@MyWrathAcademia Short version of it is, every time you enter a function, the computer needs space to store all the local variables, as well as meta data like the address of the calling function. You only have so much space to store this information. When you exit a function, that space is freed up. So, since recursion doesn't exit until it's finished, you can run out of space
But... that's probably something you'll want to learn C and C++, and a bit of assembly to fully understand
I was just joking, since you essentially said python is pseudo code :)
 
Golang works differently
 
Rob
Never really looked at golang
Works differently in which way?
 
The stack size grow/shrink automatically
 
Rob
Oh, that's pretty nifty
 
currently the name I am thinking of is "Kodian"
 
TypeScript + Kotlin = Tyklin
 
@Rob So a stack is a big space created for a function (more accurately created every time a function is called) . Each function call adds a stack (i.e. called a function stack) to that space and each function stack includes all local variables of the function?
 
Rob
Correct, except there is a frame per call. The stack is the collection of frames
 
@DKDhilip ye... but it isnt really kotlin or typescript
 
Rob
12:40 PM
Implemented as a stack
(Also called stack frames, not function stacks)
 
you can think of it as C with kotlin syntax with typescript union types and some more fun features
mostly focussed on avoiding effort of code
 
@Rob Please can you confirm that "frame" is the same as what I am calling a function stack?
 
Rob
Yes
 
What happens to the stack when you leave the function?
 
Rob
Go check out that link to 'stack'
 
12:45 PM
Is it still the same size? Does it stop existing?
 
Rob
When the function exits, it pops its stack frame and returns executions to the caller
 
@Rob Ok, thanks
It pops the stack frame like popping a balloon? So the stack of frames is destroyed into nothingness?
 
Rob
The image is a good visualization. When a function is called, a frame is pushed onto the stack. When it exits, it pops
The entire stack has a fixed size. When you try to push a new frame without any room, you get the stack overflow exception
You're conflating frames and stacks. The stack is the collection of frames. Each function call gets one frame
 
Name ideas: Unison, Hypo, Opsilon, ...
 
@Wietlol I have updated question. Can you check again? I have 2 doubrsmmmmmm
@Wietlol I have 2 doubts
 
12:50 PM
considering Azure Functions work identical to AWS Lambdas, each instance runs its own application
each application will have to resolve its own services
 
luckily i still got 2 airmasks with filters
i bought years ago
 
the hashcode depends on the object
 
think i ll wear them from now on
 
@Rob thanks. I will start using the correct terminology now. Each function call creates/adds a frame (what I think of as a function stack) to the stack which is the collection of frames.
 
if the instance has no special logic for computing the hashcode, they will most probably be different, but you shouldnt rely on it
 
Rob
12:53 PM
@MyWrathAcademia Correct. And usually, they're called 'stack frames' to make it clear you're talking about the call stack
Since stacks are just another data type, like a list
 
@Rob Since a stack is a collection of frames is it some kind of a data structure and in which name space can I find it. System.Collections.Generics; or System.Collections where non-generic collections are?
 
Rob
Or rather, if you google 'frame', you won't get anywhere. 'Stack frame' will very likely give you information about call stack frames
System.Collections.Stack
 
@Rob thanks. Is it a generic type or non-generic type. Since a stack holds functions not objects what data type does it store?
 
Rob
Nope
A stack holds anything
 
In other words what data type is a stack frame
 
Rob
12:57 PM
The call stack is implemented using a stack. The object it uses is the stuff it needs to give the executing function
 
Trying to understand this:
1 min ago, by Rob
The call stack is implemented using a stack. The object it uses is the stuff it needs to give the executing function
I'm thinking "call stack" means Stack()?
 
Rob
I think we need to back up a bit
I'd recommend reading into stacks first
Forget about the call stack entirely
Go read up (and possibly implement your own stack, not too difficult but still good for learning) about stacks
Once you've fully understood how stacks work, then start looking at the call stack
The call stack could have been a call list, or a call array, or a call linked list. But a stack was the best choice for the data structure
 
Okay thanks, I will stop here. Atleast I know what a StackOverFlowException is and have a good idea what a stack is (atleast the stack that is created for each function call).
 
Rob
Well, it's good you're curious! But I think you're getting ahead of yourself and confusing yourself more than needed :)
 
Or may be call stack means the call of stacks i.e. stack 1, stack 2, stack 3 etc. like a scope chain?
 
Rob
1:02 PM
Once you understand how the data structure 'stack' works, then you'll be able to figure out the call stack. But understanding the data structure (which is completely unrelated to call stacks), is needed first
 
@Rob great thank you. Can I confirm when a stack is created? Is a stack created only when a function is called or does a stack already exist (i.e. is a stack reserved for a function like a table is reserved for a booking at a restaurant)?
 
Rob
The stack is the collection of frames
The stack is created at the start of the application
Function calls add frames to the stack
 
this worth your million words
 
Rob
Anyways, I've gotta head to bed. I highly recommend going through a tutorial about the stack data structure. Implement it yourself, and you'll see how a stack works. Then think about what a frame is in terms of a stack
I promise you, implementing your own stack will be much quicker in explaining the call stack than anything else
 
One stack per thread
 
Rob
1:08 PM
Oh, that's a whole other can of worms
 
I'm having a strong deja vu
There was another guy who wanted to learn all the things but didn't wanna actually code anything
 
1:20 PM
@Rob So there is only one stack, correct?
@Rob alright, sleep well.
@Squirrelkiller if you're referring to me I can assure you I'm a coder not just just a learner, haha.
 
Those don't exclude one another ;)
I just had to think about someone else who really insisted on wanting to read and discuss everything but not actually code anything. Exhausting conversation that one.
 
1:39 PM
I feel like a 300 line long appsettings.json is a little long
 
WHat about 300 lines web.config though
Libs need settings, where else to put them?
 
!~shiba
 
2:11 PM
cute ^^
 
mr5
2:24 PM
\o/
@CaptainObvious holiday yesterday. usually our company move it either Monday or Friday so long weekends :D
 
ohmygoddddd people are acting like the Windows 10X start menu is going to become the norm for all versions of the OS
which is basically a really boring menu with no live tiles
 
mr5
windows menu is shit
I don't find it intuitive
I don't even use it lol
only the task bar
 
wha -- am I the only one?
I always thought the menu was fine
 
I still use win7 start menu
 
user12960916
2:43 PM
hey can someone help me out with a question about list boxes?
 
user12960916
        ListBox mylist = new ListBox();

        myList.Items.Add("Joel Murach|97,71,83");
        mylist.Items.Add("Doug Lowel|99,93,97");
        mylist.Items.Add("Anne Prince|100,100,100");
 
Guys I am loosing items from List. Can't figure out why
 recentDocuments.ToList().ForEach(doc =>
                    {
                        var currentDocument = recentDocumentsToBeUpdated.Where(r =>  r.DocumentNumber.Equals(doc.DocumentNumber) && string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(r.BaseEntityCode))?.FirstOrDefault();
                        if (currentDocument != null)
                        {
                            currentDocument.BaseEntityCode = doc.BaseEntityCode;// count of recentDocumentsToBeUpdated gets reduced by one after this line
                        }
I am not update recentDocumentsToBeUpdated why would i lose items there?
 
user12960916
I have code inside my class but I'm getting an error saying tuple must contain at least 2 elements, I don't understand what this means. I follow an ex. I found on how to add things to the list but I don't understand what I'm doing wrong
 
mr5
I thought you guys are working on the same code and the same problem lmao
@csscoder what is the T of the List<T>?
 
user12960916
variable type?
 
user12960916
2:50 PM
like you could have List<int> intList = new List<int>();
 
Why is desktop outlook so bad at css
 
Guys any idea?
 
3:05 PM
anyone wanna help me re-do the function resolving thingy?
basically... overload resolving
 
@SamuraiJack recentDocumentsToBeUpdated.FirstOrDefault(r => r.DocumentNumber.Equals(doc.DocumentNumber) && string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(r.BaseEntityCode));
this mean you chose the first from list, meet the requirement : DocumentNumber matched and BaseEntityCode is null or space
 
user12960916
I have a question about textboxes is anyone free to help
 
user12960916
?
 
two requirement with the operator && means two statement must match both
so far is good. while you made an update later by currentDocument.BaseEntityCode = doc.BaseEntityCode
which is break the second statement
 
Is there a tool that can analyze a program as it's running in debug mode and show the objects that are being created?
and their relationships?
 
3:15 PM
dotPeek?
 
@SamuraiJack Im not sure what you have try to do, and I have no idea what is BaseEntityCode (this is bad naming i think)
 
or just run the ide and attach to process
 
user12960916
I'm trying to make a score counter so if the user enters number in one textbox like 1 then clicks add button and then 3 and clicks add button then my other textbook displays 1,3 Here is code I have so far
 
user12960916
private void btnAddScore_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
int scores;
score = Int32.Parse(txtScoreCount.Text);
scores += scores;

}
 
user12960916
I don't understand what I'm doing wrong
 
3:17 PM
scores += score?
 
user12960916
I'm using scores variable to display all of the ones entered so I wrote scores = score(the score entered) + the same thing again
 
user12960916
I just want to keep a tally
 
scores += score
you remove the s
so your parsed score can be adding into scores
 
you need to go over all your score(s) variables
I think typos are getting the better of you
> int scores;
 
LOL finished my meeting and had a list of 10 messages from the other project client asking why am I not working in his project
DOOD I am only 50% assigned.
 
3:22 PM
also, just avoid separating declaration and assignments
there is no reason to separate them here
 
!~>()=>{
int scores = 10;
var score = int.Parse("12");
scores += score;
return scores;
}
 
@nyconing uh oh, troublesome naming convention spotted.
 
!=>22
 
user12960916
            int score = Int32.Parse(txtScoreCount.Text);
            int totalScore += score;
 
user12960916
I changed the variable names to make it easier to remember
 
3:23 PM
> int totalScore += score;
here, you make a new variable, but add to it
that makes no sense
you have to move the variable out to a larger scope
since you want to retain the value between runs of this function
 
@csscoder scores here is a local variable in your btnAddScore_Click method. Meaning on every click, a new variable is created.
What you need to do is define it as a class member and add to it.
 
^
 
Also, consider using int.TryParse() instead of int.Parse, which will allow you to handle invalid input (say, if someone writes "one" instead of "1" in the textbox)
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I can understand if they get lost to that explanation, which looks pretty simple, but is actually assuming they perfectly know how to add properties to classes.
 
private int TotalScore;

private void btnAddScore_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var score = Int32.Parse(txtScoreCount.Text);
TotalScore += score;
}
 
3:26 PM
back when I was a total noob (not that I am no longer) I used to get stuck at those.
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan id still consider Parse for that reason
 
user12960916
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan can you please explain why the variable needs to be a class variable and not a local variable? If I understand it correctly then class variables are the ones that are declared outside event handlers and local are ones inside
 
I'm with Avner, use TryParse if not a low level function.
@csscoder a local variable can only be seen within your function. A class variable can be seen whenever you operate with that class.
Say if you want to know how fast a bike can traverse 10000 different roads, you can put a measure device on 10000 roads, or 1 measure device on the bike
 
@csscoder Because every time you click a button, btnAddScore_Click is called separately, and there's no "memory" of previous calls - it's a whole different call, so your first line, int scores, defines a brand new variable every time for that specific click.
Anyway, it's late and I must be off.
 
If you want to know the average speed, you either go check each of the 10000 measuring devices you planted on each road, or check the one on the bike. Which one would you prefer?
 
user12960916
3:30 PM
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan thanks for explaining
 
@HéctorÁlvarez @AvnerShahar-Kashtan ^
using Parse instead of TryParse, you get more information
 
user12960916
Check one on the bike
 
@csscoder the bike is your class, the road is the place where the bike runs
@Wietlol how.
You get exactly the same information
 
you dont get the exception
 
you don't want the exception
 
3:33 PM
you only get if it failed, not why it failed
you do want the exception
 
how come
 
because you always need to know why things fail
 
this is not a SQL query or an async task, you just want to add the number if it's a number, else warn the user it's not a number
 
user12960916
Makes sense now
 
user12960916
Thanks for the help
 
3:34 PM
o/
 
for logging purposes, I would still want my application to always know why things failed
for an int, not much to go wrong, eh?
for a date for example, the exceptions can be very interesting
because even for "valid" dates, DateTime.Parse can fail miserably
 
Exceptions
ArgumentNullException
s is null.

ArgumentException
style is not a NumberStyles value.

-or-

style is not a combination of AllowHexSpecifier and HexNumber values.

FormatException
s is not in a format compliant with style.

OverflowException
s represents a number less than MinValue or greater than MaxValue.

-or-

s includes non-zero, fractional digits.
Those are the int exceptions
literally all of them mean "whatever you put here was not an integer".
@Wietlol if my grandmother had wheels, she'd be a transformer. And her name would be Carmen.
 
and?
the user may think 9999999999999999 is a number
your website most probably does not specify that the number must be below 2.14 billion
maybe the user uses thousands separators
 
I am sure a scoreboard will certainly overflow an Int32 variable any time now
 
ones that are not valid for the number format being used
 
3:40 PM
dude
it's a scoreboard that reads a text file
 
Jon Skeet's rep is only so low because he hit an int overflow
Jack, shrug
 
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
 
Ryan Donovan on February 27, 2020
I recently came across this sketchnote by Tanmay Vora, and it really resonated with me. As a developer it got me thinking about how this might translate into the life of a developer and our happiness. Based on this sketchnote here are the eight factors of happiness applied to developer life. 1. Resentment Harboring resentment…
 
user12960916
4:11 PM
Hey guys, I have a question about transferring data between forms. I have a form that has a textbox and when the user enters a number in that box and clicks enter I want that number to be added to my listbox in my other form. Is a dialogue box the best thing to use here?
 
It depends on what you're using
 
user12960916
Not sure what you mean by using
 
Like are you working on web? Winforms? Wpf? Xamarin?
 
user12960916
oh sorry, im using windows forms
 
Okay. So what would the dialog be for?
 
user12960916
4:19 PM
I have 2 forms I want the textbox input entered in the first form to be added to my listbox in the other form when the button is clicked. Isn't dialogue what you use to communicate between forms?
 
no?
What you probably want is a reference to your first form on the second form.
 
user12960916
I thought since you can use ShowDialouge to open other forms I could use it for this problem so the other form options and the listbox is updated
 
And then on the button press you could do something like Form2.Listbox.Items.Add(Textbox.text);
 
some guy in this server is like "umm WOW I had no idea the original human diet was meat and plants o-o"
like.....wtf did he think we ate?
 
@Freerey What did he think it was
 
4:22 PM
I'm legit asking him that
ok he thought we just ate meat
 
user12960916
so I would put that statement in the form which takes the input correct? since the user puts the input first and then I want to transfer it to the other form's listbox?
 
As long as your have a variable on the second form which contains a reference to the first, yes
 
user12960916
ok thanks i'll try it out
 
ShowDialog is probably not the method you want to use anyway though, you probably want to use Show instead
 
@CaptainObvious there's some misconception that we ate bugs and plants????
did these morons just skip middle school or something?
and apparently this guy is from the US, as am I, so this leads me to believe the education system is even worse than I thought
 
4:34 PM
\o
 
user12960916
4:46 PM
is there a way to access a listbox from another form, im getting an error saying it's in accessible due to protection level
 
4:58 PM
@csscoder change your modifier from private to public
select the listbox control, at the properties, look at Modifier, change it to Public
 
5:58 PM
is there are way to get a random index
 
Has anyone here bought sublime text 3? Is it worth it?
 
so like array.indexof but instead of getting the first just a random
 
Do you feel as if there's enough return?
 
jossie i just use notepad++ works fine for me
 
I just use notepad lol
 
5:59 PM
get notepad++ it is like sublime but open
open source
it doesnt look as elagent but it does the job
 
6:19 PM
wagwan lads
how are we?
 
6:44 PM
not doing so hot cause my friend found out her crush is straight and I'm trying to convince her to stop associating before she gets hurt
not taking it too well
 
7:12 PM
yo yo yo
 
piraka
 
@Freerey as straight as a line or as straight as a circle?
 
straight as a line
 
Wait, you changed names. That kinda throw me off.
 
I'm the only one who responds to your "yo yo" with "piraka" so you know it's me
 
7:16 PM
true
 
even though I'm probably the only person here who knows what that is
 
isn't it Bionicles?
 
yea lol
 
@Freerey Yeah, you're probably doing the right thing. Trying to turn a straight person gay is the same as trying to turn a gay person straight, they'll go along with it as an experiment but in the end will only see the other partner in a fetishized way.
or just straight up rejection
 
7:40 PM
 
7:58 PM
posted on February 27, 2020 by ericlippert

My manager and I got off on a tangent in our most recent one-on-one on the subject of the durability of design mistakes in programming languages. A particular favourite of mine is the worst of the operator precedence problems of … Continue reading →

 
Have a docker container I have made I can see it. But when I start it I get the error: It was not possible to find any installed .NET Core SDKs

Did you mean to run .NET Core SDK commands? Install a .NET Core SDK from:

However I have installed this already and am on 3.1

Any ideas?
I will take a look at my System Environment Variables.....
This is the Dockerfile that is failing
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/dotnet/core/runtime:3.1

COPY app/bin/Release/netcoreapp3.1/publish/ app/

ENTRYPOINT ["dotnet", "app/myapp.dll"]
 
V.7
9:04 PM
@EarthMonster Different things
Does ++ support HUGE files?
>10GB or such?
By word support I mean showing it smoothly
 
Possibly stupid question, what do you mean by ++?
 
V.7
@HéctorÁlvarez Hm. Why MongoDB at the end(just finish though)?
@Chris Notepad++(a question for @EarthMonster)
 
9:33 PM
@V.7 I wouldn't have a clue. But it supports plugins so can support basically any file type?
 
 
1 hour later…
10:46 PM
it supports large files as well, it does some weird trick to do segmentation of the file iirc
 
user47589
10:59 PM
Biggest files are best files.
 
V.7
11:32 PM
@EarthMonster Not a type, but data
@Wietlol Is it smooth while big data is loaded? Does it work on Linux?
 
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