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15:00
One does not simply insert 'the' at the random intervals.
@KendallFrey may you highlight mine incorrect grammar, please? :)
> Who does know what is the default pattern for the iOS development?
"The pattern which is implemented by default."
> Silverlight and WPF is the MVVM
It's still a fragment, which I'd correct, but I have no idea what you're driving at.
15:02
> this fuck means, the pattern which is implemeting by the default
Is the imperfect present a valid tense in English?
Please don't use the word 'fuck' other than as an intensifier. It is considered offensive in normal English.
@GeloVolro Have you tried Google?
@Billdr Example?
Yea, I'm trying to think of one.
15:05
I was excited about us having a wiki... and then that page went nowhere....
Kyle is a slacker and no longer loves us.
Damn you Kyle....
Why is Reddit so obsessed with Shaq today...
Would that be 'is verbing'?
Okay, I've racked my brain, there is no valid imperfect present tense in English. So stop doing it Gelo.
That's perfect tense.
I hate English.
15:09
Imperfect tense implies a verb that transcends tenses. "Joe was running."
As in, I hate writing it perfectly.
"transcends tenses" I understand that as "was running, is running, will be running"
@Billdr Ahhhhh. So is it wrong to use that?
Is running is perfect present
At least, I think so.
What's imperfect?
15:11
Compile error.
When I get into these problems I just change the whole sentence... "Joe ran last Saturday."
Joe is ran. I guess?
@Billdr That hurt me to read.
Hello programming people
@Kian Hey hey
15:12
According to Wikipedia, 'is verbing' isn't perfect
It may be perfective, though
.... "Joe are running?" shiver
Joe be runnin', bitch.
I'm not sure what perfective is. I read the wikipedia page on it, and still don't get it.
^
same for imperfective
@KendallFrey Sounds right to me.
15:16
Simple English Wikipedia doesn't seem to have it.
English has neither a simple perfective nor imperfective aspect
Well, that may be why I don't understand it.
Lol. And that is why it sucks to learn how to write English.
To the Esperanto!
Plus we have words that are the same, but can be used differently... "read" and "read" is one that I remember hating.
lead and lead
15:19
@Mike Yep
English has one rule that explains everything else; If it doesn't sound right, it isn't. That's really the only thing I know concerning the English language :-)
"He proceeded to lead them into the lead mine"
carrot, carat, caret
That's the only rule that matters, Roel.
vain, vein, vane
15:19
@KendallFrey Well that is spelling lol. I meant spelled the same. We can go all day with those.
See and sea
Then again, I run into a lot of trouble with verb agreement. Maybe there is more to it.
How many triples do you know? huh?
their, there, they're
you, your, you're
that's about it.
@Billdr I hate when people mess those up....
15:20
you is not pronounced like your
We are talking about Homophones
Brain: rightHand.IndexFinger.DoubleClick();
Right index finger: click click click
Brain: FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU
@KendallFrey Lol.
On a completely unrelated note, I think I am a fan of Mary Winstead. imdb.com/name/nm0935541/?ref_=tt_cl_t1
Huh.. eye, aye, and I
Didn't think about that one
15:24
That reminds me of something
Coolest name ever for a hair salon: "Curl up and dye"
@KendallFrey That is amazing...
Hi , I have a using statement that I have to use inside a method and there is a variable that I change inside it, how do I return the changed variable outside the "using"?
That reminds me of something else
@Billdr I am not really impressed with the movies she has been in, except for maybe Scott Pilgrim. She is pretty though :)
A-mazing is the worst pun ever.
15:25
Giovanni can't you just declare it outside the scope of the using statement?
JLott how can you not like Scott Pilgram?
I declare outsite, but its set inside a SQLite reader
@Billdr I did like it lol, but that was really the only one on there.
@KendallFrey More please
15:27
lol
pee and pea
Oh. In which case, how can you not like The Thing or Final Destination 3?
@KendallFrey homophone.com
s/n/b/
ohhh burnnn
15:28
@Billdr Because I love the original The Thing, and I just wasn't impressed with Final Destination 3 :P
jewel and joule... I would say these differently... Silly website.
The original Thing is in my all-time top 5. This was a great prequel, imo. As for Final Destination 3, it's hilarious.
As of Saturday, I can finally say I watched Star Trek.
Which one, Kendall?
The first episode, of course
@KendallFrey Ahh, love me some Star Trek
15:30
I intended to watch the pilot, but it showed me the first aired episode.
Pare, pair, pere, and pear
@KendallFrey It was on that site...
So it picnic and pyknic...
What the flip is a pyknic..
Star Trek First Gen? That series is... not great. Frequently.
what's the image editing site called? piknik?
picnik?
15:32
picasa?
@Billdr Star Trek: The Original Series
@Billdr No.
It's picnik
pyknic: Having a short stocky physique.
@KendallFrey Yep lol
I'm going to start saying that to people, "You are so pyknic"
I keep thinking pyrotechnic
15:35
I got a new license pic this weekend... I look scary and not real.
and imagining pyromaniac
@KendallFrey Calm down.
@JLott Have tried
Have failed?
@GeloVolro What kind of pattern are you talking about?
Kind of confused on what exactly you are looking for.
15:39
huh. Loikkk's profile picture is a black dude. am I the only one who thinks that's weird?
Anyone ever try to use XML Data Binding to store an HTML Page?
@GeloVolro I type "Default pattern in iOS 5" and the only thing that came up was vibration patterns.... sooo... I have no idea what pattern we are talking about.
@Billdr No.
@Greg Are you having problems?
@JLott It helps to use keywords. Remember, we're talking programming here.
@JLott Well, I'm looking to actually do XML Data Binding by storing a series of HTML Pages in an MVC Model. Then I'm dynamically calling the model through Razer; so it renders the entire page. Except- It isn't playing nicely.
15:42
@KendallFrey Psssh. Google should know me.
It does. It pulled up vibrators.
:troll:
@KendallFrey Good job.
Any spec junkies want to have a crack at this? Don't know why the compiler would allow `new int[259] { 0, 0, 0, /* 256 more ... */ }` as an attribute argument, but not `new int[259]` (defaulting to zero-initialised).
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17526838/compile-error-using-implicit-array-initializer-as-c-sharp-attribute-argument
@JLott Are you familiar with XML Data Binding?
I am. But I don't think I have ever tried to do that.
I have used data binding to pull information from an HTML page, but I did not store the whole page.
Well I used code to pull the info and then bound to that..
15:46
@JLott Well, I'm trying to parse this HTML Page- Because I want to parse it so it will dynamically render an entire page layout. Like a template web-site.
@JLott Yeah, I'm trying to bind sections of the page; to particular models.
nevermind
I see. That sounds like what I did. I wonder if I still have that code around... One sec @Greg
@NETscape What are you smoking?
@KendallFrey LOL
15:47
@JLott Awesome!
I wish I could figure out how to use the dang online tfs... I have to re-learn every time.
@KendallFrey why cant you?
Because a List<T> is not a T[]
well then .ToArray<int>()?
That's pointless
15:52
I guess it still doesn't answer the original question.
And will only make the problem worse
int[] isn't T[]?
Enter the Chris.
How is everyone's Monday?
VS... Why you so slow!?
15:54
Enter yet another dinosaur comic.
@C.Barlow Great :)
@C.Barlow Terrible :(
@KendallFrey :(
@JLott Grood.
Well, for a Monday, it's average-ish.
15:54
@KendallFrey Bad. =(
@KendallFrey Also:
That is a cute dino
he's pretty fantastic
RAW... oh, god, make it stop.
15:55
@KendallFrey int[] data1 = new List<int>(new int[259]).ToArray<int>(); won't give you the same as = new int[259] {0, 0, 0, ... ,0 }?
@NETscape No, because it's about as far from constant as you can get.
That looks scary.
ahh, i get what you mean
but back to the @shambulator original question... doesn't it just come down to semantics?
@KendallFrey I am scared to click on that link at work
15:57
@KendallFrey Ha. =)
You still have a chance to be the first person to deobfuscate it.
Maybe if I have a few later today, right now I'm off to REDESIGN A POORLY WRITTEN CLASS THAT IS ALREADY IN PRODUCTION!
(hoorah)
@KendallFrey I don't think I can pronounce "deobfuscate"
THE ROOM IS ALIVE AGAIN!!!
@CCInc Hoorah!
15:59
dee-OB-fuss-kate
Why do you people... leave me... during the weekends..... it makes me cry ;( ;(
@CCInc Because we have lives
@CCInc <3
lives and lives! That is another one!
@JLott Are you trying to imply something?
15:59
Because I can't chat and play Minecraft at the same time :P
lul :D
lawl
@CCInc Nope...
@JLott If you find that code can you email me?
@Greg I am trying to connect to my tfs..
@Greg But yes
16:01
@JLott Thank you.
Hi guys i have a question i use dapper i can do this ?

List<string> Eans = new List<string>();
string QUERY = @"
UPDATE (
SELECT *
FROM PRICE, EANTAB
WHERE (PRICE.ID=EANTAB.id) AND (EANTAB.EAN IN (@Eans))
)
SET PRICE.VA = true, PRICE.SEND = true;";

conn.Execute(QUERY, new { Eans });
@NETscape Can you be more specific?
@enzop92 you can do this?!?!?
Sorry i would say that
you would say that.. but?
16:13
if i execute this return me an error : "Syntax error (comma) in the expression of the query"
it returns you an error, eh? hmm
Cool, I just earned a "Nice Answer" badge on this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/16396350/…
congrads
Hopefully I can hit 25 with it.
@NETscape It comes down to why new int[259] { /* 259 zeroes*/ } is not treated as an array creation expression exactly equivalent to new int[259] for use as an attribute argument. I can find no explanation in the C# spec for the difference in behaviour.
16:17
@shambulator Are you trying to specify the integer byte size, or you trying to cast an array of integers?
@Greg The OP in the question is trying to pass an array containing all zeroes to the constructor of a custom attribute, and for perfectly understandable reasons would prefer not to have to write 0, 259 times :)
new int[259] { /* 259 zeroes */ } is accepted by the compiler, but new int[259] isn't, where the spec is pretty clear that the latter is a perfectly valid array creation expression containing 259 default-initialised elements.
The question again for reference:
2
Q: Compile error using implicit array initializer as C# attribute argument

Bang Jun-youngI've got a mysterious compile error with the following test case: [TestCase(new byte[259], new byte[] { 0, 0, 0, 0, 255 })] public void EncodeTest(byte[] source, byte[] expected) { ... } error CS0182: An attribute argument must be a constant expression, typeof expression or array creation e...

@shambulator Makes sense, seems like a valid request- Couldn't you just create an integer value defined as a 0. Then when you need to reference it you have a zero value- If you happen to need 259 like you mentioned above couldn't you just write a loop that automatically counts to 259 ?
@shambulator I may of misunderstand your request though-
Apologies, OP is using byte[], not int[], but otherwise identical.
@enzop92 That's not valid SQL. You can only have one table or view in the FROM clause.
@Greg Question contains more detail, but yeah, this is specifically in the context of using an array creation expression as an attribute argument; the compiler's perfectly happy with either expression in any other context.
16:29
@shambulator So essentially your trying to create 259 empty bytes?
@Greg Yup.
anyone online here? you guys have an idea how to parse this? rates.fxcm.com/RatesXML
how can I download the xml file using http post rates.fxcm.com/RatesXML?
@Greg Check your inbox. Headed to lunch y'all!
@JLott I love you, and thank you. Enjoy lunch
16:33
@Greg Love you too lol and no problem
Anyone can help me please ? :(
@shambulator I take it you don't want to simply iterate through a loop because you'd have 259 objects with the same name lingering. Which could introduce persistence issues.
@CarloAdap If you google "C# Parse XML" you'll get a ton of questions that accomplish that task.
@shambulator So your solution was to use the array-
It's possible eventhough it's on the website?
*Is it
"I'm going to make the minreq for this site IE8+, is that cool?"
"NO! We don't want to force our customers to use Internet Explorer."
"le sigh"
16:35
@shambulator This is quite a conundrum.
@Greg Well, a more pressing problem is that it's syntactically impossible to use a loop to supply parameters to an attribute.
@shambulator Good catch, didn't catch the attribute portion
Overall it smells like a compiler bug to me, but I could be misreading the spec.
Yeah, that is weird- The array should be storing two hundred and fifty nine bytes at zero. But for some odd reason it fails- I wonder if the CLR shouldn't of let it actually compile.
The CLR doesn't have anything to do with the compiler.
16:53
@KendallFrey Compilers and tools expose the runtime's functionality and enable you to write code that benefits from this managed execution environment. Code that you develop with a language compiler that targets the runtime is called managed code; it benefits from features such as cross-language integration, cross-language exception handling, enhanced security, versioning and deployment support, a simplified model for component interaction, and debugging and profiling services. I thought
the compiler is compiling into the CLR, so wouldn't it have some impact? As the compiler allows it and maybe the CLR doesn't?
The compiler is compiling into MSIL, not CLR.
If the compiler allowed it, it would compile.
If the CLR disallows something, it throws an exception.
@KendallFrey Thank you for the clarification, learn something new everyday.
CLR = Cmmmon Language Runtime
@KendallFrey So it converts into Assembler, which is read by the CLR
the .NET compiler? no
16:58
No, not Assembler. MSIL.
CLR is a virtual machine for the .NET framework and is repsonsible for managing the execution of .NET programs
So Microsoft Intermediate Language?
C# -> compiler -> MSIL bytecode -> CLR (JIT) -> machine code
In the JIT Process (Just-In-Time) the compiled code is converted into machine instructions, that, in turn, are executed by the computers CPU
Okay, so my order was on the reversal side. So C# will convert into Microsoft Intermediate Language, which then is translated by the Common Language Runtime, which is then converted into binary?
17:02
Yep.
If you can call it binary.
I mean, if machine code is binary, then so is MSIL.
But it's only binary if you display it with 1's and 0's.
The CLR is what runs .NET programs
My understanding was that machine code is native electrical signal on / off- Then as it moves further away it becomes easier to understand.
binary is on and off
Yeah.
Then Assembler became like 0x0FF type of reference.
Machine Code:
8020 78
8021 A9 80
8023 8D 15 03
8026 A9 2D
8028 8D 14 03
802B 58
802C 60
802D EE 20 D0
8030 4C 31 EA
17:05
Because it was converting those bit patterns into actual function.
10 BASE = 32768 + 32
20 READ BYTE
30 IF BYTE = -1 THEN BASE = BASE -1 : GOTO 999
40 POKE BASE, BYTE
50 BASE = BASE + 1
60 GOTO 20
999 IF BASE = (50 + 32768) THEN SYS(32768 + 32) : END
1000 DATA 120
1010 DATA 169, 128
1020 DATA 141, 21, 3
1030 DATA 169, 45
1040 DATA 141, 20, 3
1050 DATA 88
1060 DATA 96
1070 DATA 238, 32, 208
1080 DATA 76, 49, 234
1100 DATA -1
9999 PRINT"ERROR: CHECK IF THERE IS A TYPO?"
So Machine Code and Assembler are different?
Yes.
Assembly is text-based, and cannot be executed by a CPU.
Well, that teacher just ruined my education-
Tell your teacher he could be replaced by a 19 year old Canuck from Ontario
17:06
Now, it makes perfect sense.
However, there is generally a 1-to-1 conversion between an assembly instruction and a machine code instruction.
Hans Rudel it seems busy in here, should we choose another room?
@RyanTernier Isn't 'Canuck from Ontario' redundant?
@KendallFrey Perhaps, but that should be clarified to students not representing Assembler as Machine Code.
Not really...
You could be a Canuck from Texas
17:08
Then you're not a Canuck.
if you're born in Canada, you're a canuck
Then you can't be from Texas.
You can be in Texas...
you could be living in Texas
Regardless, you'd still be "from" at that point in time :P
@KendallFrey @RyanTernier Thank you for clarification though.
The only machine code I know is 0xEB 0xFE, so I'll explain it with that.
17:12
@KendallFrey I'd be happy to learn.
lbl:
jmp lbl
That isn't machine code. That's Assembly.
When you assemble it, it becomes 0xEB 0xFE, which is machine code.
Makes perfect sense.
The concept isn't difficult, but the context it was originally presented was simply wrong.
jmp means 0xEB, and lbl translates to -2, or 0xFE.
So that is an error on my part, my apologies.
Note that jmp can represent other machine instructions. 0xEB is simply a relative jump with a one-byte signed parameter.
For example, mov eax, 0 and mov ebx, 0 translate to different opcodes, where the register is encoded in the opcode itself.
17:18
Never imagined I'd see x86 asm in C# chat
cli
hlt
And I am back!
@RoelvanUden I made a remark that was incorrect, due to a misunderstanding from a teacher in school. That mistake is being corrected; so I know correctly now. It's actually quite fascinating.
The assembly line I remember the most is mov eax, FS:[0x30] :-)
@Greg Ahaha some teachers have no clue ^^
Remind me what FS is again? Is it general-purpose?
17:22
The thread environment block, 0x30 is a pointer to the process environment block
I would have used DS and move eax, 0x30
Where you can do fancy stuff with the loader, that was fun
I did very very little assembly in the context of a process.
@RoelvanUden Yeah-
My favorite assembly is xor eax, eax
17:24
First year University, Visual Basic 6. I was using a 3D engine to try and make a little game. I asked my teacher for some help on mapping classes to ini files. He got mad at me because i was off topic.
So i went to his office after school to talk to him, and he got mad at me because i was not following his course outline
some teachers are douches.
@RyanTernier I have problems with professors like that...
He just didn't know what you were talking about lol
@RyanTernier Wow. I'd think a teacher would be happy with motivated students
I had a professor tell the whole class, "Don't worry if you don't know how to zip a file. If you do, you probably don't have a life." I was like... Bitch.
It is the 21st century... everyone in this class should be able to do that.
@RoelvanUden Some teachers don't like to be shown up.
@JLott My mother doesn't know how to zip a file.
17:26
@RyanTernier She isn't in a beginner CSC class either.
@JLott Aye.
@RoelvanUden Aye Aye!
@JLott Yeah, I'd ask him the following question- "How can I take you as a credible source with such a horrible remark."
I have a PS script for zipping stuff...
@JLott Thanks, I got the email of code. I appreciate it, I'll take a look when I'm done writing a few complex SQL Queries.
17:28
I'm glad I haven't had many teachers who knew absolutely nothing.
@Greg She always made it sound like if you knew anything about computers you were a complete nerd who lacked any kind of social skills.
@Greg And no problem :) I hope it helps some.
I always had to endure not pointing out every mistake they made :-D
@JLott Well true in my case.
I just got two laffy taffy in the same package! Today was a good day.
Sounds like a good day. I got horrible news-
:(
@Greg ?
17:30
It turns out that the seller would like the closing date earlier, which is before my wedding. So we have to get married legally before the wedding now :/
Because my VA Loan won't allow her to be on the loan / title without being legally married.
Well... That isn't toooo horrible. Your wedding day is meant to be just about you two anyways. It is just a symbol.
Don't you usually sign the license before the wedding anyways?
Well, we actually have to do a bit more then that.
Because it takes three days after applied to use, then two weeks before it takes affect.
@JLott *Your
I don't know all of the laws.
@KendallFrey Thank you :)
@KendallFrey Jumping back: air, aire, ayr, ayre, ere, err, eyre, heir
Even though... I don't know about two of those lol
17:37
Lol. Make a sentence with those. @KendallFrey
I said NO.
I survived!!!!
Seattle to Portland?
@KendallFrey Please :(
@Pheonixblade9 Well done!
Surface Pro running Final Fantasy 14... people still have the balls to compare it to an iPad
17:42
Aire is just the obsolete spelling of air lol
@RyanTernier They are two different things... I don't know why they are compared.
@RyanTernier People are idiots-
Especially people that do weird punctuation-
Seriously, why do you do that?
@KendallFrey You don't like the -?
@RyanTernier How is the battery life on it?
@Greg No, I don't.
@Greg I watched 3 episodes of Walking Dead, and it was still at 30%
17:46
I'd expect it would have better battery life with Haswell.
@KendallFrey Why?
so 3 hours of video play
plus messenger, downloading Final Fantasy 14 etc.
@RyanTernier That isn't too bad-
I have it set up at my desk - i'll get a full day on 1 charge with just regular day to day use
almost better than my cell phone :P
@Greg Whut if I had a habit of always misspelling the first word of every sentence? Wauldn't that be annoying?
@KendallFrey Nope, because I don't actually care. It doesn't hinder my ability to read your sentence.
17:48
Sure, but why for god's sake do you do that? WHY?
@KendallFrey Simple, because I can-
I think I found a good reason to do it-
@KendallFrey John took a plane through the air to visit his heir who lived on the ayr ere ayre was born. John, however, made an err which landed him in his heir's eyre.
I had to look up over half of those words...
13 mins ago, by Kendall Frey
user image
Oooh, obsolete English.
17:52
@Billdr lol. I doubt that sentence is correct... something about ayr ere ayre...
which is basically (if Google doesn't lie) port before music
@KendallFrey Please don't pop a blood vessel or have a heart attack-
@Greg He is probably looking up the words lol
@Greg ...without putting it on film-
@Billdr haha
@Greg Punctuate, heathen-
17:59
Eventually we will all end up doing that-

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