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20:00
in chat room?
or in pastie
prob in pastie if its long
Sam
Sam
@juanvan link 1 link 2 link 3, link 4 and finally link 5. I could bring up more, but you could probably just google anything else.
@Sam well that will take me till 5 to get familiar with (next week)
6 hours ago, by MRS1367
in Compile time I face with this error:
@juanvan -> it's not long
Sam
Sam
@juanvan lol, anytime.
20:04
C:\Users\Mohsen\AppData\Local\Temp\mex_9uJFCk\matlabInterface.obj:matlabInterface.cpp:(.text+0x68): undefined reference to `mxIsSparse'
mxIsSparse is in a header file
matrix.h
yeah exactly
it's in the matrix.h
ya
whats the state of the array your passing it?
matlabInterface.cpp includes MatlabInterface.h
Is there a way to set `lblCategory.Text` to a string when this line of code defaults:

`lblCategory.Text = enr.Catalog.CatCategory.FirstOrDefault(x => enr.AppUser.AppUserPos.Any(y => y.Position.ProgModelID == x.ProgModelID)).Category.Title;`

Or should I just catch the `NullReferenceException` and set the value that way?
20:07
MatlabInterface.h includes mex.h
@juanvan -> it's not mine codes
ya - can you debug it though set a breakpoint
I'm only try to compile codes
are you actually including matrix.h?
mex.h includes matrix.h
what about in matlabInterface?
20:09
I checked the codes with including matrix.h in the MatlabInterface.h
but it not worked
I googled and find that the problem with extern
The problem is when it defaults .Category.Title will throw a NullReferenceException, when I would rather be able to set a value.
mxIsSparse is an extern in the matrix.h
EXTERN_C bool mxIsSparse(const mxArray *pa);
anyone participating in Imagine cup?
@JoshD coallesce
/* Only define EXTERN_C if it hasn't been defined already. This allows
 * individual modules to have more control over managing their exports.
 */
#ifndef EXTERN_C

#ifdef __cplusplus
  #define EXTERN_C extern "C"
#else
  #define EXTERN_C extern
#endif

#endif
20:12
So whats the const mxArray being set to
@JoshD FirstOrDefault(...) ?? "";
@juanvan -> I can't debug it in the MATLAB with breakpoints
humm
@juanvan -> const mxArray* arg=m_rhs[m_rhs_counter];
if (mxIsSparse(arg))
{
    // Some codes
}
@juanvan -> you think that the problem with mxArray?
@CharlieBrown But I can only put conditions within the FirstOrDefault(). So I have ...FirstOrDefault(...).Category.Title ?? "foo"; Which throws a NullReferenceException if it defaults;
20:16
so the problem is args is prob null
mxIsSparse should be static/shared
so it is not owned to the instance
Sam
Sam
!!Is me bored?
@juanvan -> so, what I must do?
test for null first skip it if it is
wait @juanvan
@Greg now I have your phone number, mwahahaha
Gui
Gui
20:22
hi guys
sorry - delayed away
Gui
Gui
is there a .NET method will allows me to calculate the rentability ? For example, I bought something at $1, and sold at $2, I want this function to take these two numbers and returns me 100, as 100% profit
@juanvan -> u guide me to a new things with:
18 mins ago, by juanvan
ya - can you debug it though set a breakpoint
I never thought about debugging codes in MATLAB with breakpoints
new? Breakpoints?
oh
cuz it's not possible
but with what u said
I googled and find this:
20:27
@gui - string profit = "" + (100 * (( sold - bought ) / bought)) + "%";
now I can test codes
how about that
Sweet
why mathlab does not have a dugger
teach me how to dugger?
I don't know
matlab has debugging built in
20:28
u can't set breakpoints on ur code lines for debugging
might have a watch window
sure can
@TravisJ @Gui Don't forget to handle cases where you bought something for free, if that's applicable.
@CharlieBrown -> how?
20:29
+1 RTFM
@JoshD - Then that would be infinite profit :)
@TravisJ I want to see that on a sales chart!
aha
@CharlieBrown -> tnx
but Charlie it can debug only .m files
I dound this and this for debugging .cpp and .h files with MATLAB
@TravisJ thx for the help yesterday, blog post completed finally
20:34
are not creating .m files?
what are writing the code with?
I'm trying to compile Shogun under MATLAB that has wrote in the C++
under LINUX
I'm trying to compile it with MATLAB by cigwin and MinGW and VC++ Compiler
Shogun has codes for using it in the MATLAB
but developers never test ur codes for running under Windows
I checked Shogun website
does shogun work with windows?
and saw that every one wants to run it must compile it urself
@CharlieBrown -> yes it works
@CharlieBrown - Cool :) link?
developers has written the interface for using it in Windows with MATLAB
but I must solve its problems
tnx a lot for spent some time for help me @juanvan and @CharlieBrown
@CharlieBrown - I actually got pinged by your removed comment somehow the first time.
@MRS1367 you might need to check the compile order then, possibly it gets mixed up
now, I can test the codes under VS with attaching compiler to the MATLAB process
Nice post!
20:39
thanks
Welcome :)
@CharlieBrown and @juanvan -> u with ur right guides, gave me a very good clue
i can't wait to be a full time programmer lol
and place me in the right way for continue easier
tnx a lot :)
20:45
what about for dubstep lovers?
Sam
Sam
I don't have anything for dubstep. I normally only listen to classical.
@TravisJ so do you only listen to dubstep sort of music or do you like other types as well?
I like other types, but dubstep is good for coding. It has a steady upbeat tempo and doesn't usually require much attention to vocals.
one does not simply put the apostrophe in the wrong place in the topic of this room :P
Sam
Sam
lol
20:55
wasn't me, but it is fixed now
Sam
Sam
@TravisJ ah ok
beer:30, Cheers fellas
Sam
Sam
cheers
Just learned you can't define extension methods on Object in VB... interesting...
Sam
Sam
that's strange
21:00
Due to late-binding stuff apparently... stackoverflow.com/a/3228507/945456
Sam
Sam
oh kk.
so what's your favorite music genre?
1 message moved to Trash can
C is not C#.
Learn the difference.
Sam
Sam
basically, ask questions about C here.
@Sam Let's see... sappy-indie-rock, electro-industrial-goth, black/death metal, screamo... kind of a variety, hehe
Sam
Sam
21:16
i see, brb...
21:38
I just listen to leekspin.com for 8 hours a day
user1804599
21:51
@Sam ehm.
user1804599
C++ ≠ C
user1804599
An no it's not a subset and no it's not similar.
user1804599
Rather, ask questions about C here.
My favorite genre is the poptart-nyan-cat song XD
user1804599
@JeffBridgman How about a generic one on T?
Sam
Sam
21:53
@not-rightfold I know, I know. It was the closest room i could find.
user1804599
Or does VB lack generics? :V
@not-rightfold Nope.
@not-rightfold Generic FTW... although I think I misunderstood what that was really saying. I think you can declare an extension method on Object... you just can't call it on an object of type Object
user1804599
Oh, I see. Weird.
user1804599
Object is silly.
22:12
@ShotgunNinja harsh imo
@JohanLarsson Yeah, a bit.
But still, people should learn that this isn't the C room.
fair enough but not a problem imo, if someone spams C while it is busy here I'd agree with binning :D
Well, if there were an actual C room to move it to, I'd put it there.
But there isn't, and hasn't been, for good reason.
As odd as it sounds, C is... too broad a subject for one chatroom to maintain cohesion on.
C# is new, and has a set of well-established tools that most developers use, so chances are, if a chatroom will work for a language, then it'll work for C#.
@JohanLarsson You're too nice :P
@KendallFrey I am here but not irl :D
22:18
C++ is old, to the point that any inferior stuff is barely used, and serves as the seat of quite a few people who are helping focus and sharpen the language for the coming releases.
@ShotgunNinja Are you saying that we maintain cohesion?
@KendallFrey I'm saying the language lends itself well to a chatroom Q-and-A format.
Because... ooh, look! A shiny!
Also, the community is still new enough to not have the festering hatred present in some older languages, and we have the early-majority group.
C# is hardly "new"
22:20
It's newer than Java or C++.
Know your history, boy.
I knew that.
This is a timeline of historically important programming languages. Legend : ( Entry ) means a non-universal programming language : * means a unique language (no direct predecessor) Pre-1950 {| class="wikitable sortable" |- ! Year ! Name ! Chief developer, Company ! Predecessor(s) |- | ~1837 | Analytical Engine order code | Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace | * |- | 1943–45 | Plankalkül (concept) | Konrad Zuse | * |- | 1943–46 | ENIAC coding system | John von Neumann, John Mauchly, J. Presper Eckert, Herman Goldstine after Alan Turing | * |- | 1946 | ENIAC Short Code | Richard Clippinger...
In my books, new is in the last 5 years.
@KendallFrey computers move slower than you think... it tends to be the people working on the computers that change rapidly.
22:21
So we're entering the early-majority territory.
fun fact: C# is older than VB.NET
Sam
Sam
user image
2
@Pheonixblade9 - c# is probably one of the most maintained languages in that list.
Aside from JavaScriptSerializer. That class just sucks. I would like to invoke parle.
@TravisJ the only languages that are anywhere near as maintained as C# are probably Java, C, and C++. Maaaaybe PHP but I wouldn't call that maintenance so much as surgery by bazooka
22:28
PHP is about as maintained as public sewage. If there is a small leak and a little crap gets out no one cares since it happens all the time. But if it is gushing somewhere, they will get to it at some point.
4
Did I get it wrong or wasn't Node the new nerd kid on the block? It's probably more maintained than anything else at this point.
this is a question for maybefold @not-rightfold
user1804599
@JohanLarsson Did somebody mention my holy name?
I did, will bad things happen now?
user1804599
I don't know what question you're talking about.
user1804599
22:34
Node is terrible shit, I don't care about it.
Well, that escalated quickly.
user1804599
Callback-based async I/O is extremely silly.
My company is full of Begin/EndInvoke and Delegates... we're old-skool like that.
Node puts out a new version fairly often. However, I doubt they have the amount of developers that Microsoft employs for C#. Based purely on new versions node would be more maintained. However, based on quality, there is really no comparison.
@not-rightfold what language is currently most maintained
user1804599
22:36
Language support for async I/O or bust. Best is Erlang, Haskell or Go-like, where the runtime handles it and you don't have to care about it.
@not-rightfold do you agree that maybefold would make sense?
user1804599
@JohanLarsson No. :P
user1804599
@JohanLarsson Everything but Java.
centerfold?
user1804599
What would that do?
22:37
it would not be right nor left
user1804599
Fold the right half of the list using right fold and the left half using left fold, then applying the function to the results? xD
user1804599
@JohanLarsson I'd say that C++ is being actively developed right now.
user1804599
New versions are coming in 2014 and 2017, and there's lots of proposals going around.
Node versioning:
Version 10.1.5: Fixed a bug with that for loop thing.
Version 10.1.6: Fixed a bug with that thing that depended on the for loop thing.
Version 10.1.7: Introduced feature to deal with new bugs introduced from for loop.

C# versioning:
Version 3.0: Major new features: lambda expressions, extension methods, expression trees, anonymous types, implicit typing (var), query expressions
Version 4.0: Major new features: late binding (dynamic), delegate and interface generic variance, more COM support, named arguments and optional parameters
user1804599
Though you have to be very careful when changing C++, since there's a gazillion LOC of C++ on the world and the language is such a big unmaintainable mess that you'll most likely break something if you add anything new.
22:41
adding new stuff sounds safer than modifying
user1804599
@JohanLarsson Hah.
user1804599
They added a new feature in C++11 and it broke obscure code.
@Johan - Yup. That is how we approached the JavaScriptSerializer :)
user1804599
struct C { constexpr operator int() { return 0; } };
struct A { struct B : C { }; };
user1804599
22:43
@JohanLarsson bitfield or inheritance? :)
user1804599
Oversight even though it's the result of completely new features.
@TravisJ It was a little like if Vader would have grabbed a hammer and said, I am your father, BANG, BANG, BANG... :D
@not-rightfold absolutely no idea, zero!
Haha. It was a total mashup. At least it turned out to be true! Nothing like managing to overload internal protected code :)
user1804599
@JohanLarsson It's inheritance, at least in GCC. Not sure what the standard-conformant behaviour would be. It's ambiguous.
@not-rightfold reading that makes drinking a cherry beer feel straightforward. (Kriek)
user1804599
22:48
Why?
user1804599
Because you feel lucky because you don't have to use C++?
Sam
Sam
23:01
well, goodnight everyone, it's been interesting chatting for the past few hours, see you all soon...
Goodnight, @Sam.
Sam
Sam
night ;)
23:28
I'm writing a simple API wrapper: it just makes it a little easier to get the data from an XML response by putting it inside objects and abstracting that layer. How should I approach creating a unit test that checks if every XML tag has been correctly parsed? Simply paste a giant string (+- 80 newlines), parse it trough my methods and create 70 asserts?
It's very messy, but since I pretty much only need this test to see if my library works it might not be worth it to try to create a more generic testing environment. Opinions?
not meant at your question, just random pic I found
@JeroenVannevel is this a deserializer?
@JohanLarsson haha
@JohanLarsson I'm not entirely familiar with that term, sorry. I get an API response from the TVDB API (example: thetvdb.com/wiki/index.php/API:Full_Series_Record) and create Show/Episode objects from that.
maybe you can approach it from a code coverage point of view?
turning the xml into objects sounds like deserialising but not important
Test episode and the variants it can have etc.
write syntetic xml for it
@JeroenVannevel Define "correctly parsed". Do you mean, "it exists in my deserialized class" or something along the lines of "ensure my property has been translated according to my expectations", or something else entirely?
23:37
@RoelvanUden The second: when I have an xml entry of <someprop>56</someprop>, I want to verify that my Show object has the value '56' in the corresponding property.
Massive amounts of asserts. :(
tbh I would do both :P, see if you missed tags too
I don't know if it is a good idea but if you use a serializer perhaps a roundtrip string-object-string and compare string before after could be an idea? Not super-nice but lazy
@JohanLarsson If I understand correctly I only have a deserializer at the moment (XML-to-object). There's no serializer. This would mean that I'd have to generate the object-to-XML conversion for this sole test, right?
It sounds a lot nicer than the 70 manual asserts with hardcoded value, for sure. Recreating the XML tree isn't that hard
@JohanLarsson With that I don't have to manually recreate the tree, cheers! Now it's just a matter of creating a Show object, serializing, converting trough my wrapper and checking the values. Thanks, that's a lot cleaner!
23:54
@JeroenVannevel gist with sample
@JohanLarsson Thank you, this will be useful.
@JeroenVannevel also check out restsharp, it is really nice

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