« first day (1089 days earlier)      last day (4086 days later) » 

14:00
you wouldn't have to mess with the %s and strings
where foo like @myparam
then set myparam = "%wildcard%"
I'd use procedures
we are currently changing to sql server 2012 from 2005 or 8 I think
@ton.yeung It still has to figure out which statement you're executing, so that statement is not 100% correct imo :P
i am in the process or trying to learn stored procedures and mvc, currently I cant find a good book
14:05
@ton.yeung Not into performance benefits but to put the data management into the database instead of the project
It is better to maintain a project like that
It is easier to retrieve information and easier to manipulate
Organization my friend.. organization.
@Skullomania Did the LIKE thingy help?
it did thanks bro!
it has been bothering me for 2 days
@RoelvanUden I have seen this book but it has gotten bad reviews on amazon.
but I can get it and bother you guys If I dont understand
bad reviews?
i plan to buy it...i need to learn
and want to
@drch A-
@Skullomania That book is universally liked by programmers. Screw amazon troll rating bots.
14:13
I posted it there
Damn, is there no easy way to figure out how much bytes a method read from your networkStream?
does this book teach how to use stored procedures
I am trying to get away from webforms all together
@Skullomania It goes into ASP.NET MVC4 and EF
I think you might want a SQL book to teach you about deep going SQL concepts.
@RoelvanUden what do you mean re: number of bytes read?
SQL+ODM is pure bliss, screw you and your love for ORMs :P
@drch I have a NetworkStream and I throw it into a bunch of different methods. I want to figure out how much bytes were read from the network in each different method.
14:17
@Roel - Can't you just keep track of the length prior to and after the method? Conversely you could also have the method keep track of the amount
@TravisJ .Position will throw exceptions on network stream :(
Same for the Length
"Always throws a Not Supported Exception" hm =/
@Roel - Is this something just to test or is it going to be placed in production?
@TravisJ Just a test, need to know how much network traffic each func eats to make a decision
@drch i solved part of the group/team problem but not completely
@Roel - In a horribly hackish version you could create a substream of size x and send it off to the method. Start small and see if it all gets used
14:21
That is indeed a bit of a sad way. :P
:P
That is all I can think of though :(
@ton.yeung object relational mapping or Object Role Modeling
@RoelvanUden what id ef?
*is
@Roel - What if to check length you made a copy of the whole stream as a simpler stream and checked the length after?
14:24
@Skullomania EF, Entity Framework, Microsofts prized ORM technology.
but didnt you just say screw ORM
@TravisJ Huh, that's an idea. Write the entire bloody thing into a memory stream and hope it doesn't explode.
Let me try that :)
you guys are killing me...lol
@Skullomania I did, but usually 99% of the people don't agree with me :3
I expect you'll like ORMs like many others.
14:26
RS for the win :-p
I have been learning but I just started with c# about 2 years ago, I like programming. I started back in 2002 with java and old vb6
@Skullomania you doing it to make a living, to have fun ,to make your house run on hamsters?
no...its a living
but i find more and more I need to start learning more deep concepts
@ton.yeung no
lol
i thought efficientcy was one of them
That is a good #1 - I can not tell you how long I look at problems wonder am I doing it right? if it works then your prob doing it kinda right
we are not paid by the line anymore
14:30
@TravisJ Ha that worked. Thanks :)
@juanvan haha!
@Roel - Sweet! :)
im great at troubleshooting. if I cant figure it out then I post it here
there are alot of picky people out there...I asked someone for help the other day and he was going through telling me what was necessary and unnessasary...im like "dude....it works"
lol
true
    public int Read(byte[] buffer, int offset, int count, [CallerMemberName] string memberName = "")
    {
        var bytesRead = this.stream.Read(buffer, offset, count);
        this.CallerBytesRead[memberName] += bytesRead; // Dictionary<string, int>
        return bytesRead;
    }
@RoelvanUden
14:38
@drch That is quite fancy. Let me try that to see what goes where :)
Ya should do it with cartoon style instead
well, the trouble with that is if you are using a CMS like DNN you need to kill it anyway
@ton.yeung And here is why you pay me 100$ an hour
100 is steep...id happily take 35
no I mean to the clients on the web
14:40
hourly?
you got gold out them fingers
how do u find people to pay that
he doesnt
hell I build a website and people think 3k is too much
@Skullomania That must be one hell of a sucking website?
14:42
no
here is one I just finished
=]
@Skullomania well ya did you not see that commercial they make me a site for 50$ a month hosted and maintained
thanks
ur drop downs should color when they hover
;-)
Hi, I got an IEnumerable<string> variable with values like {"ImpactMng.cs", "Something.cs, "Etc.cs"}. How do I perform an operation on it, to get {"ImpactMngr", "Something", "Etc"} ?
14:44
picky picky
for what they are paying me they are glad they got what they got
hey your target aud. is prob over 45~55
this is where I work.
you guys wanna see the old one
www.devkdmc.com
ya whats the clientele like - not bar the scene
Do people still discuss C# or .NET here
lol
14:46
@VenkatRenukaPrasad you could just do `myfoo.Select(x=>x.Split(".")[0])
but it might make more sense to do myfoo.Select(x=>Path.GetFileNameWithoutExtension(x));
in case you had "Impact.Mng.cs" and wanted "Impact.Mng"
I meant to type ImpactMngr.cs missed the 'r'..
Will try that drch, thank you :-)
got a new eat right fad on the way?
@juanvan we cater to 20-55 we need to work a bit on our content though
For a medical center I say its pretty sweet!
@ton.yeung ahh kinda like warm water
@drch thanks a lot it works.. :-)
14:52
will make it a point to read that when I get the mag this month
The gf might love it
Morning everyone
@RoelvanUden earlier you said it was bad practice to place queries on the code behind....why?
actually hour and 53. I had to feed the vampires this mornig
because of sql injection?
blood test
14:54
I had to have a blood test...
@TravisJ Winning
;)
@JLott - Blood type: Adonis
trees???
@JLott - tiger :P
Gotcha @TravisJ
@ton.yeung No, I had to take a pill last night at midnight and then get a blood test this morning
Looks like he is going to some techno masquerade
new peeping tom
15:00
@ton - My friend and I were thinking of getting those remote control helicopters with cameras on them to film tricks on ski jumps
@TravisJ Just don't let it hit anyone
@JLott - They aren't that big (they have to fly).
@TravisJ People have died from getting hit by them lol
@JLott - One person has lol. But that wasn't your average rc heli.. "He flew gas-powered, turbine choppers with two foot-long carbon fiber blades."
@ton - Yeah, frys has one for $180 that looks good. It definitely wont decapitate anyone
You think frys is expensive? It seems pretty affordable there to me, they have discounts and sales all the time
Anyone have experience with the Rfc2898DeriveBytes ?
15:12
haha
@ton.yeung Oh dear-
@TravisJ My Dad bought a gas powered helicopter in Okinawa when we lived there; pretty cheap. It was pretty awesome.
I only ask because the MSDN Article, seems awfully cluttered and not really explanatory. Hoping to get a little extra definition.
@ton.yeung I don't own it, my dad does. This was fifteen years ago.
string pwd1 = passwordargs[0];
            // Create a byte array to hold the random value.
            byte[] salt1 = new byte[8];
            using (RNGCryptoServiceProvider rngCsp = new
RNGCryptoServiceProvider())
            {
                // Fill the array with a random value.
                rngCsp.GetBytes(salt1);
            }

            //data1 can be a string or contents of a file.
            string data1 = "Some test data";
            //The default iteration count is 1000 so the two methods use the
That is MSDN example for Rfc2898DeriveBytes.
Guys can we create an canvas object and pass it to the dll so that the dll can use it and draw something like a circleplz help.....
@Greg yes ive used pbkdf2
I get the whole password, even the salt portion. I'm not sure what the deal is with data1 in the example. Or is the example definition a password key used to cipher and decipher the data; then data1 is actually the item your encrypting?
@drch Then perhaps you can assist me good sir.
@Greg its mixing 2 algorithms in that example
its using Rfc2898DeriveBytes to generate keys, and then DES to encrypt
15:21
Please elaborate.
but youre only interested in password hashing, right?
Okay, so in the first portion it is creating a key- The second portion is encrypting with DES.
@drch I was mostly interested in the Salt, but I'll eventually try to encrypt user personal information when they do particular items so it isn't transmitting in clear text.
Right now I'm focusing on the username and password.
@drch Plus, that code looks like a damn mess.
@ton.yeung I don't want to buy an SSL Certificate. Too much money for a personal project.
@ton lawl "12:45 PM My coworkers’ lunch smells amazeballs. My sense of smell is more acute. Plenty of energy after my Soylent. I feel alert and focused."
@ton.yeung That isn't too shabby.
@Greg
Rfc2898DeriveBytes foo = new Rfc2898DeriveBytes(passBytes, saltBytes, iterations);
var hash = foo.GetBytes(128);
gives you a 1024-bit hash
ezpz
i used that to find out the # of iterations to do. i wanted it to take around 1-2s
15:33
posted on October 09, 2013 by Eric Lippert

On today's episode of the Coverity Development Testing Blog series Ask The Bug Guys we have two posts. I take on the question does explicit interface implementation violate encapsulation? and my colleague Jon follows up on my previous posting about … Continue reading →

15:45
tap tap tap is this thing on?
you guys got all quiet all of a sudden
pffft
12 minutes to wapner
@drch Sorry, I was in a meeting.
That article said the default is a thousand iterations.
@ton.yeung Eh, wasn't so bad.
@Greg the point of the algorithm is that you can change the iterations to suit your needs
ive read rthat the recomended currently is a minimum of 2000
i think i ended up using 4000
Oh really, that article on Microsoft said the default is 1000. What do those iterations do?
increase the amount of time the algorithm takes
So can you elaborate that Console a bit; why did you create a string for the salt and password. So I'm assuming that the example I posted earlier; that test data is actually the content.
@drch So those iterations speed it up or slow it down; which can allow for a timeout effect essentially?
15:53
Iteration counts tend to make sure the algorithm wont run infinitely. I do that too when I am worried about infinite recursions.
well in reality, the salt should be a random string generated with RNGCryptoProvider
and the password is the user's password
So in the example I posted above; what was data1 for?
@Greg iterations is basically the number of times to perform the algorithm
@drch Okay, I got ya.
in what you posted, data was some data to be encyrpted
15:55
So, the password wasn't the users password; it was used to generate the key?
Then in that second stage; they encrypted the data1 with TripleDES?
yeah, theyre showing how you can make a key that is based off a user's passphrase, then used to encrypt a document
so you could password protect your porn for example
I don't get paid to build helos, I pay to have a premade helo built for me :P
@drch That approach seems sloppy though? Am I wrong or right?
@drch - Lol, it is funny that is the example that first came to your mind.
@ton - The class costs money and it teaches you to build a helo. Also, to clarify, premade in the sense of a little assembly line or manufacturing type of deal.
i.e not part by part
@ton.yeung I'm taking: Physics: Electricity and Magnetism
16:01
@ton - The arduino class seems pretty freaking sweet tho
@Greg what part is sloppy?
its kind of a weird example, but in theory, you could store that key once and never have to use the cleartext password again
or you can derive it
@drch Just seems like a bowl of pasta.
the other thing too is that you can take an arbitrary sized input and get an arbitrary sized output
@ton.yeung RiceX University; edx.org
@drch You can control the input and output?
@Greg you control the input and you can control the size of the output
so for example, DES in that example needs a key thats 128-bits
so rather than asking the user for a 128-bit key, you can ask them for an abitrary sized key, run it through Rfc2898DeriveBytes and get a 128-bit key
in reality, you could use one porn vid to encrypt another porn vid
THINK OF ALL THE PORN APPLICATIONS TO THIS TECHNOLOGY
@ton.yeung its just MSDN code
@Greg also, in your case, you don't want to decrypt right? just hash for login purposes
anywho - gotta go to class. ill have intermitten internerts on the subway
16:06
So, if I understand correctly... byte[] salt = new byte[8] that line is calling for a new eight byte value; then when I use the derive bytes class it is utilizing those eight bytes and then encrypting the key to a [16].
@drch I'll eventually like to decrypt it.
I think the byte calls is the part screwing me up.
they're generating the salt via rngcrypto
which is a cryptographically strong random number generator
does the salt have to be secret?
Am I at least thinking of this in the correct order?
nope - salt is not secret. you should create a new one per user and store it with the hash
@greg you are thinking that you need to encrypt and decrypt which I think is incorrect
this is very similar to bcrypt and is managed
and it's 2 lines ;)
rfc2898 is pbkdf2
So would I be safe to say, this is all I need.
public static string Encrypt(string password)
{
     byte[] salt = new byte[512];
     using(RNGCryptoServiceProvider cipher = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider())
     {
          cipher.GetBytes(salt);
     }
     Rfc2898DerviceBytes key = new Rfc2898DerviceBytes(password, salt);
}
16:20
Guys can someone plz help with this
1
Q: Inserting in SQL Server Table based on Different Table

mubiI had these two tables in sql server database for C# application. ---------------------------- table_Items ---------------------------- Item1 | Item2| Item3 | Item4 A | B | C | D E | F | G | Null H | I | Null | Null J | Null | Null | Null ------------------ ta...

I don't really need that second part, because that is encrypting the the key. With the TripleDES?
@user2345661 I'll look at it in a second.
@greg no DES, but you do need to store the salt so that you can use the same one when you are verifying later
@Johan - Heh, isn't that what restaurants use? "secret salt" :P
also call it 'hash' not encrypt ;)
@TravisJ true, think it was made illegal to use it here but not sure.
16:27
@drch Fair enough; wouldn't it be returning the salt so I can write it to the database?
hello everyone
I use a mathlab's dll in c# app but when application runs this error occured, what is that reason and what is solution, please help me:
Could not load file or assembly 'MWArray, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=e1d84a0da19db86f' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131040)
i'm wait please help ...
is there anyone here?
16:49
@programmer1 Try removing the reference and add it back. shot in the dark
@JohanLarsson Johan i do it now, but not work
@greg yep should return salt and hash
@drch So I need to return two things; not just the one?
hey guys

« first day (1089 days earlier)      last day (4086 days later) »