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12:00 AM
"I never let my schooling get in the way of my education." -- Mark Twain (source)
 
8 hours later…
7:53 AM
goat moaning
8:06 AM
Morning.
Morning.
 
1 hour later…
9:24 AM
/KAFFEEZEIT
I dont like brain in my coffee
/KAFFEEZEIT
a coffee continent? A cofftinent?
9:27 AM
Hello friends!
Hi, Botler.
@OakBot Gotcha meowing~
@Mr.Squirrel.Downy Hey there, MrSquirrelDowny! How can I help you today? Got any C# questions or projects you're working on?
a coffin
oh wait
9:43 AM
Mornin
caffeine and coffin sounds way too similair
this cant be a coincident
too much caffeine puts you in the coffin
> caffeine (n.)
1817 (as caffein.) Discovered by Irish chemist Richard Chenevix, the name is first attested in the writings of Thomas Thomson. From "coffee" (see coffee) + chemical suffix -ine (2). So called because the alkaloid was found in coffee beans; its presence accounts for the stimulating effect of coffee and tea. Related: Caffeinic.
its even more obvious in german since it basically sounds the same
Coffein Coffin
> coffin (n.)
early 14c., "chest or box for valuables," from Old French cofin "sarcophagus," earlier "basket, coffer" (12c., Modern French coffin), from Latin cophinus "basket, hamper" (source of Italian cofano, Spanish cuebano "basket"), from Greek kophinos "a basket," which is of uncertain origin.
It does indeed appear to be a coincidence
;)
alright sherlock
9:49 AM
and coffee traces back to the Arabic word for coffee which where that comes from is a bit blurry
hmmm
@CaptainObvious That's just what Big Coffin wants you to think.
The funeralcare industry is a scam so that's possisble
But coffee isn't a scam
:puff:
10:17 AM
@Mr.Squirrel.Downy That's what Big Coffee wants you to think
 
1 hour later…
11:35 AM
!~shiba
that doesn't look very shiba
give us the pure breed !
!~shiba
Morning.
11:41 AM
Morning.
!~shiba
yes yes
I love the one first one
 
1 hour later…
12:59 PM
/imagine a shiba enjoying a friday
I'm going to use this prompt instead: A happily relaxed Shiba Inu dog, with its golden fur gleaming in the soft sunlight. It's lounging on a plush dog bed, nestled in a cozy corner of a suburban household. A calendar in the background marks the day as 'Friday', featuring the colorful print of a lively weekend scene. A half-chewed dog toy rests by the pup's side, indicating its playtime before a relaxing nap. The room is bathed in warm afternoon sun, highlighting the pet's contented and ...
carefree demeanor, typically associated with the joyful anticipation of the weekend.
Hello friends!
1:16 PM
@OakBot ah the classic 9 day week
Hey there, everyone!

@CaptainObvious Haha, well spotted! Sometimes these prompts go a bit awry, don’t they? While I leave the image generation to the specialists, I'd be happy to chat about C# or any projects you're working on.
@CaptainObvious well,it's a japanese dog-breed after all
I know japanese calendar is a bit weird with how the years are counted but the months and stuff are the same as the regular gregorian calendar
I was refering to their workaholic mentality
;)
1:38 PM
ah
Hello friends!
Hello friends!
Other than the calendar, it has surprisingly few flubs for an ai-generated image.
don't look at the teddy in front of the TV
Aside from those though yeah it's quite good
Although the dog is suspiciously well groomed
1:56 PM
Also, the dog is way to happy that it's Friday. everyone knows dogs don't know the days of the week.
Why does AI struggle with numbers and letters in images?
/imagine friday
I'm going to use this prompt instead: An image depicting the concept of 'Friday'. It could showcase a digital calendar open at the end of the week, with the word 'Friday' highlighted. Around the calendar, symbols of relaxation and weekend activities could float: a cup of hot coffee, a pair of comfortable slippers, a well-loved book, and a movie ticket. The overall color scheme could be warm and inviting, hinting at the comfort and leisure the coming weekend offers.
It's okay for big words but then struggles with the little ones... "FIIDIY"
FIID\Y indeed
2:03 PM
:D
I've got a table on MSSQL that stores various app settings as strings. Then I have a class that has properties that convert each setting to its appropriate type (bool, string, list). Each time a new record's added to the table, I need to update the AppSetting class. Looking at this as one way to create the whole class dynamically: gist.github.com/arc95/992174a3655b74be9fc980a5ca2d2c2a
But hey there's coffee @hans will be happy
mhhh coffee
Hello friends!
@Alex wat
this screams XY
||xy
2003
Q: What is the XY problem?

GnomeWhat is the XY problem? When asking questions, how do I recognize when I'm falling into it? How do I avoid it? Return to FAQ index Other languages: ES, JA, PT, RU

2:05 PM
It's more of a YX problem :p
why wouid you need to add values to appSettings if your application isn't aware of them
Do you have to ask tough questions this early on a Friday?!
considering I'm currently contending with this, yes
:)
2:10 PM
As I was trying to refactor the app to use an injected singleton yesterday, ran into a custom attribute that was reading the config. We can't inject into an attribute; if we're trying to do so, something's screwy
VS is debugging fine, just can't debug these unit tests which is rly annoying because something isn't working as expected so I have 23 of 48 cases for one test failing but I have no idea why because I can't debug it
And there's a lot of variables so I can't just figure it out by looking at it
:o
Is R# bombing out?
Can you debug the tests outside of R#?
maybe
I reloaded VS and it didn't work
but also it's friday afternoon so my willingness to fix the issue is very low because then I have to actually debug the tests
Understood. Had some unit tests using JSON files for data. Updated the JSON from record on db and it went from 25 broken tests to 45.
I don't like relying on external data for unit tests for that reason
2:44 PM
Hey Guys
Quick question
Requests[37].IsPost
Count = 0
Requests[37].IsPost.Any(a => a == false)? "T":"F"
if I do something like this it return "F"
Do I need to add logic that check is count is 0
any returns false if there are not any
What's the goal here?
so your code will return F if the collection is empty
You could do .All(x => x) and that would return true if the collection is empty
If that's what your aim is.
I am want to make sure all the data has true
IsPost is a list bool and I want to make sure they are all true
if any are false it should return the f
Would all work?
2:57 PM
That is what VLAZ just said
But technically both do what you're asking
You need to be more explicit about what the collection being empty means
If all of them are true, it returns true, if they aren't all true, it returns false. that's the same for both Any or All uses
But if there are none to be true or not in the first place, do you want that to be true or false?
yes if there is none it should return false
do I need to add a where
Why?
3:02 PM
for the empty collection?
That...doesn't answer anything. If you have an empty collection then .Where() is a no-op. Again, why do you propose a .Where() what are you trying to do?
I am trying to get it to return false for a empty collection
Which...it already does
17 mins ago, by Jefferson
if I do something like this it return "F"
IsPost
Count = 1
[0]: true
IsPost.Any(a => a == false) ? "T" : "F"
"F"
21 mins ago, by Jefferson
IsPost is a list bool and I want to make sure they are all true
The result matches what you stated as a goal
None are false, therefore you get "F"
3:18 PM
maybe what I want is all => a == true ? "T" : "F"
IsPost.All(a => a == true) ? "T" : "F"
"T"
the collection empty it should return false
3:35 PM
it already does
 
1 hour later…
4:49 PM
Hello friends!
 
6 hours later…
10:29 PM

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