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20:00
sex offenders won't benefit from those
oh, i thought it was to... force natural selection or something, i was like "i dont think thats going to prevent people from getting addicted to drugs in the future"
C#: Room full of social rock stars who flourish on intellectual conversations- w00t to us mother fuckers!
Most drug addicts are still people, and realise that being born to someone who can't maintain a safe home environment is a pretty miserable lot for a child
@Steve History is actually quite fascinating, this is all history that most people and Americans are clueless about.
As well as the likelihood of brain damage
20:01
drain bamage sucks.
@Steve Yeah, my point of annoyance was that that was the reaction of a lot of people
i am good friends with a drug addict, we used to do pot in our younger years, man, i visited him one day and he was so messed up he thought i was his brother the whole time i was talking to him
@TomW yeah, lol
I suck at threading, is a static field inherently thread safe?
@JohanLarsson thread safety concerns both the type and the action you perform on the type
What's the type of the instance and what are you doing to it?
Short answer: In general, no
Incrementing an integer is not thread-safe, unless you use an atomic or interlocked version.
20:05
private static JsonDeserializer _deserializer = new JsonDeserializer();
i wish i could understand how threading worked at a lower level, because i mean static variables are placed in their own memory segment, so when you start another thread, does it allocate new space for each memory segment? or only the stack? the heap? idk
@JohanLarsson That assignment is thread safe.
I think
but using it is not right?
That's dependent on the class itself.
By 'thread safe' do you mean 'each thread will see the same instance'?
20:07
Not relevant to your question
@TomW I don't even know
@TomW God, I hope not.
PublicFeedMessage<T> message = deserializer.Deserialize<PublicFeedMessage<T>>(new FakeResponse(json));
@TravisJ I'm glad that you did question, I'm also glad that your versed so well in history.
will that explode?
20:07
It looks unsafe at first glance
RTFM for more info
yes true
Always assume thread-unsafe unless specified otherwise.
or just sprinkle locks all over the place
I need to lock on a static field for this to work right?
I shoul probably profile before doing this shit
Don't add a lock unless you know you need it.
Can you lock on the object you're accessing?
20:09
If you're worried about thread safety, you should look at why you're worried.
lock(foo){ foo.bar(); }
Not just try to fix it
I never understood the difference between locking on a separate object and locking on the object
@TomW Yeah, that's 100% valid
@JohanLarsson Locking on a separate object is basically avoiding using the same thing for two things
@TomW is that different from lock(lockObject){ foo.bar(); }
20:10
The functionality is basically the same.
@JohanLarsson No.
I assumed so. Doesn't explain why people do new object(); just to get a lock primitive
if(person.location == "detroit") { lock(everything) { //get murdered anyway} }
@TomW It's 'recommended best practice'
@Steve No search results found for 'suff'. Did you mean 'snuff'?
@Steve if I understand that correctly it just locks on a thing called everything but only locks on doing the stuff
@Greg - My girlfriend has a Masters in history so I had to learn a lot about it with her. I also think history is fascinating.
20:12
yeahh lol
was trying to be funny again, man i suck
The only purpose a lock object has is to be a unique ID.
lock(new Guid()){ ... }
epic fail
No, not like that
lol our secretary is hopping on one foot today. you can follow her around the whole office thump thump thump
@KendallFrey lol
20:17
@KendallFrey She could be doing the dirty
While hopping on one foot? That would take some intense skill.
She is a secretary, can probably do it while sleeping.
I've been writing ugly code all day and now I started to suck really hard on top of that, fuk
Quick question: Does the world need another parser library?
user142019
20:19
@KendallFrey Yes.
depends i guess
Oh dear, not more brony.
user142019
A decent monadic parser library for C# and one for D.
What's a monadic parser?
user142019
20:21
It's a nice way of writing parsers.
user142019
In C# you can even make it looks nice with query expressions.
user142019
Yea.
Looks like a parser chainer. Hm.
I can make a parser look ugly in C#
20:23
What I really need is a parser than can convert a string to an expression tree based on a grammar.
You'd probably need the grammar to be constant though.
:/
I started to write something for serializing expressions, never finished it
@JohanLarsson I can make you mom look ugly in C#. In 0 characters too.
but can you make her look good?
I'd guess 200000 lines and 5 years.
For a prototype.
user142019
Bag over head, problem solved. A hole is a hole.
20:25
ambitious
pony being pragmatic
#pragma tic
user142019
Let's drink!
but why?
room topic changed to C#: We're either time travelling or paradoxical. Not sure which one yet. [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
user142019
20:28
I think I'll cry > code > cry > code... for a while, might need to puke a few times also
user142019
s/cry/drink/g
O.o
I believe the expression is 'tea'
user142019
@KendallFrey Teabagging.
removing, might be flag bait idk
@rightfold haha
20:31
Prison Break.
user142019
I hate URLs with tumblr in them.
user142019
I hate thumblrs with URLs in them.
I hate smart-ass bronies who hang out in the C++ room.
user142019
20:37
Because he's jealous of the C++ room.
pony is the nicest horse I ever met
user142019
He wants more sexy avatars in the C# room.
I'm afraid I don't find ponies sexually attractive, and view anyone that does as a sodomite.
You realize that when you shave your head you can have a pic of yourself, only problem is that the groupie problem on github might explode.
user142019
It seems people click on links you post on Facebook.
20:39
Woah... really?
if I have a static field in a base class and derive from it will it be the same instance in all dervied clases?
user142019
Posted a link and analytics shoot up.
user142019
@JohanLarsson Jawohl!
@JohanLarsson What do you mean by deriving from a field?
@KendallFrey deriving from the class
20:41
static members are not shared with derived classes
user142019
Sealed classes are best classes.
true, oh man I suck right now
I believe you can access a static field of a base class without a qualifier, which is slightly deceptive.
user142019
I wonder what happens when you modify Mono and make System.Object sealed.
you will get some more work, possibly ugly code
user142019
20:43
Speaking of work.
user142019
I'll finally have my job back in a week.
the C# job?
user142019
I'll be lead developer.
user142019
@JohanLarsson Well, sometimes.
user142019
We usually do desktop applications in C#.
user142019
20:44
But we mostly do websites in PHP or Python.
@rightfold Probably an error. What else?
@rightfold nice man!
Hint: you probably meant "good man"
user142019
I can't wait.
user142019
I really need the money.
20:46
Either that, or "nice, man"
user142019
Apartment is about £550/month and I also need to have food to eat and some spare money for fun.
Who needs money for fun? VS Express is free.
user142019
s/VS Express/Vim/
So is csc
user142019
I need beer.
user142019
20:49
And porn.
user142019
Oh wait, the latter is also free.
user142019
@KendallFrey I use msc.
user142019
Well, I mostly use DMD and GHC.
user142019
Jawohl!
20:49
oh
user142019
What do you think? That I use Windows? Haha.
user142019
Gentoo all the way baby!
Since you're in the C# chat room, I'd assume that you use C#, and the vast majority of C# programmers use Windows, so YES, I would assume that.
user142019
Love that video
20:52
@TravisJ Yeah, it is quite neat.
@rightfold how do you feel about the PHP part?
user142019
@JohanLarsson Could be worse, i.e. Java.
user142019
PHP has improved lately. It has generators now.
I should be sentenced to writing java for a full day after how poorly I have performed today.
user142019
Not that I would ever choose to use it myself.
20:54
@JohanLarsson lol
@JohanLarsson Don't beat yourself up about it, bro. Tomorrow will be better.
Provided you aren't hung over.
WOW
KENDALL SAID SOMETHING NICE
WHOA
@LewsTherin Stop it
OMG, HE SAID SOMetTHING NICE. MIND EXPLODES.
20:56
SHUT UP
:P
Figured out how to replicate a particularly annoying feature.
@KendallFrey Ha ha
@ShotgunNinja Did you just say... feature?
So, we have a product page on our website, which has two buttons (Add to Cart, and Add to Wish List).
I've been working on replacing the functionality of the Wish List button and all the code behind it.
All the way down to making it use a database instead of cookies.
So I came across a rather interesting "feature":
user142019
When I have a shitload of money, I'll start a company and post job listings titled "C/C++/C# Programmer" just to troll people.
20:58
The View Product page is divided into three subpages: Detail, Songlist, and Instrumentation.
They all include a second JSP which incorporates the buttons.
@KendallFrey the worst part is that I have been struggling for a very long time to try to avoid repeating three lines of code
JSP? FUCK OFF
@rightfold A C/C++/C# programmer would be valuable for us in the next few years.
user142019
DID SOMEBODY SAY JSP???!?!!!
I lost interest at JSP
20:59
So, the buttons are not supposed to appear when (a) you are on Songlist or Instrumentation, and (b) when Javascript is enabled.
Oh piss off, the story wouldn't change if I said it was PHP or ASPX, would it?
They ARE supposed to appear on Songlist and Instrumentation when Javascript is disabled, however.
And on Product Detail regardless of Javascript.
But they're rendered from the same file, which is included on all three subpages.
So write JS that hides it if you're not on detail
user142019
@ShotgunNinja PHP and ASP are both better than Java.
boom done
user142019
21:01
Fay > JavaScript.
I already did... but I can't help but wonder, is that intentional? All I did was replicate it, not question the logic behind it.
user142019
I wrote part of an assembler today.
user142019
't was fun.
@rightfold Agreed. If you can find me a job as an ASP.NET developer around Milwaukee, WI, that pays interns better than $15/hour and is hiring, let me know.
Until then, I'm stuck writing Java for a Struts/JSP stack with an Oracle db.
user142019
Hahahahahaaaaååååååååååååå.
21:03
Oh, and there's a splash of Grails somewhere.
user142019
Start your own company.
user142019
Write Haskell.
user142019
Win the world.
@rightfold Still in school, otherwise I would.
user142019
Poor you.
user142019
21:03
What school?
user142019
Bachelor in CS? Because I did that and it was a horrible experience.
user142019
I also failed first year. :D
@rightfold Lol why?
Going into my 5th year because fuck my life.
user142019
21:04
> be rightfold
> fail first year of BCompSci
> become lead developer two weeks later
4
@rightfold Where are you from?
user142019
Netherlands.
What part?
user142019
Noord-Brabant.
user142019
I go/went to Rotterdam University.
21:05
Tech town?
user142019
Never heard of that.
That looks so fancy
user142019
What looks how fancy?
Rotterdam
My college started a software engineering program right before I finished my compsci degree. I might have preferred that because of fewer humanities crap.
21:07
green checkmark
Yeah, my school charges as much as an Ivy League school, has a 30% graduation rate, and is virtually unknown even among residents of the city it sits in the center of.
user142019
Perhaps I would have liked school if my classmates were already competent, the teachers had an idea of what they were talking about, and if we didn't have to do so much irrelevant uninteresting bullshit.
3
They pride themselves on being unapologetically difficult and "changing their programs to reflect the changing state of engineering", which ends up shafting anyone who wants to customize their course schedule.
@rightfold I see that pattern way too often.
user142019
> I WANT MY TEARS BACK
user142019
21:09
Great song.
user142019
Especially nightcore edition.
user142019
I mean, at school, we got UML. Almost nobody uses that shit.
user142019
And the companies that do are the ones I don't want to work for.
user142019
And since the job market is kinda horribly humongous in this field, I have a choice of job.
My school has an awesome quality of education, focusing on shit that is relevant in the industry... but they make students work their asses off for their education. The teachers vary from apologetic and understanding to ridiculously hardcore. The student life is terrible. And the costs are horrendous to even live nearby.
21:12
@rightfold Competent would be expecting too much. Especially if you had experience before them (you do, so you expect them to). No, what I would have liked is if they had passion and were willing to learn the shiz. Agreed about the lecturers, stop spouting bullshit and using archaic frameworks!
It's known for producing burnt-out, but extremely knowledgeable members of the engineering industries.
user142019
My Java teacher told us that encapsulation is the use of getters and setters to provide access to private members.
user142019
I laughed my ass off when he said that.
@rightfold vomits
@rightfold Lol
user142019
21:13
I couldn't think of a way to convince him he was wrong though.
@rightfold /ragequit
user142019
Pretty much.
Encapsulation == Information hiding. Getters obviously break that. There you go.
user142019
I visited his class only three times.
user142019
Hopeless.
21:14
I slept through my Software Dev I and II courses, and aced them. My professor was steamed.
Design Patterns was kind of fun, but then I realized that half of them were irrelevant and anti-patterns.
@rightfold that redirected 3 times
at least
SE Tools and Practices remains probably the most useful (if disorganized) course I've ever taken.
user142019
@ShotgunNinja Haha design patterns.
user142019
21:16
If design patterns occur consciously, you're doing it wrong.
In SE Tools & Practices, we played around with a ton of IDEs, design tools, timekeeper software, project management software, and version control systems, and all of the lectures were on best practices in software development.
user142019
I exclusively used Vim in school.
user142019
Even for Android development the last two months.
@rightfold vomits some more
When all you have is a hammer...
user142019
@ShotgunNinja when all it has is a hammer, PHP is still doing it wrong.
3
user142019
21:20
(The first block quote in that article is golden.)
fuck I just pasted row numbers with my sample json, not easy to get that test to pass Unable to cast object of type 'System.Int64' to type 'System.Collections.Generic.IDictionary2[System.String,System.Object]'`
I'm trying to do something like

    public interface IAllowableType : ITypeA, ITypeB, ITypeC { }

    public interface ITypeA : IBaseItem {}

    public interface IBaseItem
    {
        ObservableCollection<IBaseItem> Children;
    }

    public class TypeA : ITypeA { ... }

    public class ClassA : IBaseItem
    {
        ObservableCollection<IAllowableType> Children = new ...;
        TypeA typeA = new TypeA();
        Children.Add(typeA);
    }
And I can't because i'm hiding the type, is there anyway I can work this differently?
I'm trying to only allow TypesA/B/C to be added to a container for one type
and allow something like TypesD/E/F to be added to a contain for another type
I think you need TypesA/B/C to be : IAllowableType
ITypeA : IAllowableType
ITypeB : IAllowableType
ITypeC : IAllowableType
yeah, not the other way around
21:37
I'm getting "marketID": "11" and "marketId": "11" and it causes pain when deserializing
@JohanLarsson Gross. Do you have control over the code which generates this JSON?
no no control, don't love the idea of string replace, will slow things down
Also, you could set up one [XmlSerializable] property with getters and setters which just get and set the other property...
actually I'll do that thanks it is Json but will work the same
oh right whoops
wrong attribute tag
21:43
green dot
@Steve Remember our conversation about jQuery the other day.
22:01
@KendallFrey You annoying gennnnnniuuuuuuuueeh, yield does create a wrapper. I'm not actually sure if it is because of yield or the fact that wrappers are generated on extension methods. Will have to check that later.
Perhaps someone can assist in this issue, so I can add, hide, or animate a 'div'. But as I add a more complex div structure jQuery freaks out. Would it be better to have jQuery loop through a document and alter the site appearance?
@N00B.NET did it work?
@Greg It depends how long it takes to traverse the DOM. jQuery functions are usually expensive
@LewsTherin Well, that sucks- Because jQuery isn't allowing the manipulation of the HTML very well. Would it be better to parse the file server side then force a page-refresh?
What function are using, animate?
22:16
Well, I was using animate to resize- But when it came to re-rendering the page I was having it simply hide and add new Div's to alter layout.
But it doesn't seem to like creating things such as:
<div id="Page">
       <div class="page-container">
              <div class="page-style">
                     <div id="header">
                             <!-- Insert Header Elements -->
                    </div>
               </div>
         </div>
When you start building complex layouts that are responsive, it doesn't like the deep nesting- Which makes the manipulation sort of a pain in the ass and slow.
That looks like a recursion problem lol
Recursion issue with jQuery?
> But when it came to re-rendering the page I was having it simply hide and add new Div's to alter layout.
What happens to the older div?
Still in the DOM tree?
I can get it working fine, when I manipulate parts of the structure. But the structure has to already exists- If I start adding / hiding while I manipulate it doesn't work as well.
It starts breaking up the div structure a bit, or doesn't re-add the div in the proper area.
Why not just update the div instead of hiding and adding a new div? That's expensive.
22:21
Well, then I have to basically do this-
<div class="page-style">
      <div id="header">
            <div class="header-container">
                     <!-- Header Elements -->
            </div>
      </div>
</div>
Mmn, what's wrong with that?
Which makes me have to add additional stylesheet control, when really I could make a single container that holds 'width, height, margin, and etc' without having to make a huge stylesheet addition
Just makes the stylesheet huge-
> when really I could make a single container that holds 'width, height, margin, and etc'
Which I'm not sure if that will be okay.
Why not do that? :P
22:25
Plus, I have to create entire structures in advance.
The goal was to allow the user dynamic alterations to the page.
Yeah, that will require some traversal.
This is why I will never be a web developer ;)
Too much effort.
Yeah, it is quite a dilemma.
You see the issue though now?
No :(
I'm the wrong guy to give you advice tbh.
<div>
  <!--Dynamically add shiz here-->
</div>
Is that it ?
Well, these are what the issue is- If I create more specific element names- Then the stylesheet and code read becomes quite large as the entire structure exists. It's modifying the inner content. The other issue is if I generalize it doesn't like to add particular data nested because it adds / hides divs incorrectly because there are more then one.
Plus it is heavy in the call.
So if you had:
<nestedcontainer>

</nestedcontainer>
<container>
  dynamically add nestedcontainer
</container>
You get problems?
22:35
I don't get problems until I have three or four inner containers- Because though you may not specify sizing for:

     <div id="Page">
             <div class="page-container">
                     <div class="page-style">
                            <div id="header">
                                    <div class="page-container">
                                            <div id="nested-element">
                                            </div>
                                    </div>
                             </div>
what is the difference between class and id?
Oh right I think I see
Because all the container still add "margins" so the goal was to call and add where needed. Where it would be okay. So that would work but would be overkill- Ideally I'd like to be able to add more in conjunction fluid
@JohanLarsson class identifies multiple elements, id identifies just one
@JohanLarsson a Class is an element that can be reused, an id is called once
An Id should be called "once" throughout the page. A truly unique identifier.
@LewsTherin So the issue is if I create the structure and don't use it, then there are gaps in the site because though they don't get used right away they still create margins and spacing.
That is why I was trying to hide / add div's.
Obviously, if I simplify the structure the goal can be achieves but then the designer for my projects will loose customization to the site.
22:39
What if you create the containers only when you need it. So you don't have to hide it.
Not quite following?
You mark elements with class if you want to select a bunch of them at once. Mark them with an id if you intend to select a single one. css and jquery use similar selectors.
Select all elements with class="hello"
.hello
Select element with id="world"
#world
@Greg Whew, Travman is here :P
Yes he is.
I'm on hold :P (so perhaps not for long)
22:40
Perhaps he can assist.
@Greg Quick!!!
Quick what?
Tell him your problem. Y U WASTE TIME?
Although you can just ping him and permalink the question
To save you repeating yourself.
I just pinned it.
22:45
Once he reads it, I'll unpin it-
@LewsTherin In the mean time do you have any other ideas?
Can you reproduce this "Perhaps someone can assist in this issue, so I can add, hide, or animate a 'div'. But as I add a more complex div structure jQuery freaks out." in a jsfiddle?
Yeah, I can- It essentially adds a bunch of div elements unless I start to basically identify everything as a single id.
Then it can do it, but then it forces the site to have a lot of structure prebuilt- Which will affect margins as the divs exists with nothing in them.
Which increases site size, and affects styling.
If a div has no content why add it to the site? Seems like a waste of space?
@LewsTherin That is the problem-
a fiddle would help a lot
22:49
It doesn't need to be on the site until you dynamically add the entire structure.
But when you add a structure like this into the site:
<div>
      <div>
             <div>
                      <!-- Content -->
            </div>
     </div>
</div>
That is where the issue is. Those three divs are identifiers / customizations for designers
So those have to be added for the designer-
When I add that sort of structure it creates window within window of Divs-
Doesn't add them correctly, or hide them all.
What doesn't?
jQuery I think
show code.
Or das fiddlez
jQuery.
22:52
Is it more likely that it is not possible to accomplish that in jQuery/javascript, or that the selection is probably off?
So this works: jsfiddle.net
click save :P
Because the structure already exists-
I have my issue when I begin to append or create new Div's. It either adds them in incorrect order, or adds to many.
Ah, you mean that when you have a selection based on class, and then add more of that class, it no longer has that event?
That is a small scale, obviously the user has the ability to add a lot of changes to the site. So yes, the selection becomes distorted.
If I have the structure, which is empty it's fine- It's when I had five dynamic div's in a row I have the problem.
22:56
Where are you inserting content?
Well, I can insert just fine when I do it within a container. It's when I insert the style, element area (header), container, and content that I have an issue.
user142019
user142019
I find the lack of music in this room disturbing.
@TravisJ Does that make sense.
Try a test with inserting pure data.
22:59
@TravisJ jQuery isn't very kind on parsing a file either then adapting the site based on that layout.
@LewsTherin What do you mean?

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