« first day (4609 days earlier)      last day (332 days later) » 

 
1 hour later…
6:03 AM
Good moaning
 
 
5 hours later…
11:11 AM
morning !
 
11:53 AM
@JARRRRG hes about NUTS
 
12:41 PM
KEKW
 
1:17 PM
Fallout new vegas ultimate edition is for free on epic launcher right now
great game
 
Look up guides on which fixes to install. Reddit's /fnv used to have a really good one. I assume they still do.
 
so far it runs fine
but i ve finished this game like 3 times already
10 years ago
 
laughs in GOG
 
so im very familiar with it
its still fun but you can tell its age when playing
 
actually I'm working on mass download for all GOG's offline installers to put it on my local cloud
damn it's gonna take around ~400GB of my server space
GOG being the omegaChad giving us offline installers forever, so you will be able to install it anywhere, drm-free <3
inb4 to coffee or not to coffee
 
1:35 PM
COFFEE
 
rly?
RLY?
RLY?!?!??!!?!?!111111oneoneoneone
alright then, let's go :D
 
;D
 
@Darj Well, there was the time GOG had the downloader. They discontinued it, though. It made downloading these much simpler.
 
1:52 PM
I'm looking into an open source lgogdownloader
Preparing a docker image right now to do that periodically for me ;D
 
2:27 PM
Hello. About tests: I have the following view on nomenclature:
Unit tests are the kind of testes where you have a function ExtractBacon, where there is a function with an entry parameter Pig and a return of type Bacon. What you test, is for the Pig with A, you expect a Bacon with feature X=1 and Y=2. and you assert that what you get when returning from that function id that Bacon with X=1, and Y=2.
Code Coverage tests is the kind you guarantee that you pass the lines of the ExtractBacon. So if we have a function with statements like KillThePig, CutPigInMeatSlices and SmokeTheBaconMeatSlice,
 
[Captain Obvious] Damn I'd love to extract bacon rn
 
Hell yea
With some sunny side up eggs
 
@sergiol [Captain Obvious] go on...
[Captain Obvious] ye you saw that right, I can reply to things
 
oh fml there was more to the message
@sergiol I'm not sure that's right, although I don't know enough about testing terminology myself
 
[Captain Obvious] ooooooooo that's clever
[Captain Obvious] Even @mentions on stack are tagged to the latest message from the person, so it comes through to discord nicely too
 
2:39 PM
@sergiol Unit tests are testing some unit of code. It's not necessary to be "a method". Might be a class or module. It's in some form a cohesive piece of the system. Also, quite importantly, unit tests are almost never 1:1 with the "unit". If you are testing a method that produces bacon, you'd be testing at least few different things: valid input produces valid output, invalid input is rejected in some way, edge cases (what if I supply ham?), etc. These are different behaviours need a test each
As for code coverage, it simply checks how many lines of code are executed. Say you have if (something) { doOne(); } else { doTwo(); } and something always happens to be true. Then the code coverage will show that doTwo(); was never executed. This suggests your tests are incomplete.
 
3:04 PM
posted on May 30, 2023 by Julia Kasper

Boost your developer journey by easily creating front ends for your web APIs. Low-code tooling is becoming increasingly popular among developers because it allows them to create applications faster and with less code. In Visual Studio 2022 17.6 preview 2, you can now connect to the Microsoft Power Platform via connected services and create custom connectors based on your ASP.NET web API. The

 
3:16 PM
the analogy is pretty much correct
one note though, test coverage is not an actually useful metric, it is just a fallback indicator telling you that there might be a test scenario missing from your unit tests
for example, you forgot to test the specific scenario when the pig was still covered with mud and needs to be cleaned
100% test coverage wont tell you that everything is tested, but 50% test coverage does tell you that you probably forgot to test something
if you have a minimum % required coverage, you should be wary of adding tests for the sake of coverage, avoiding the part where you actually sit down and think of what test scenarios you are missing
 
 
2 hours later…
5:04 PM
posted on May 30, 2023 by Grace Taylor

One of Visual Studio’s goals is to help you quickly ‘get to code.’ We’ve recently experimented with Welcome Experience in Preview that helps you get to the code and tasks that you care about, right within the Visual Studio shell. Take a look at the original Welcome Experience design and its motivations in the previous blog post. The post Iterating on your Welcome Experience feedback appeared f

 
 
6 hours later…
10:36 PM
[Captain Obvious] Aaaaa feeds isn't on the ignore list
 

« first day (4609 days earlier)      last day (332 days later) »