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19:01
<FatBorder /><SkinnyBorder />?
Good, but describe it in terms of what it represents.
<HeaderBorder /><PageBorder /><WindowBorder />etc
that could get excessive
For example, one is a border for a control (a normal Border) and one is a container for content imported from an external file (ContentBorder)
Poor example, but it illustrates the idea.
Do you really have more than 3 types of borders?
damn it, why do I have to like my job so much
19:03
but mostly due to the way wpf works, there isnt much choice in some cases
Surely there should be built-in controls to represent the semantics.
For a WindowBorder, why not use the Window class?
I'm drawing the window custom
You're huh?
The application window, Im not using the default style
So...?
That's no reason to use a Border
19:08
How would you add a border to the window without it?
Without what?
If you set the window style to none, it disappears. you then create a new window style yourself in xaml. to add a border, you use border
Use the ControlTemplate
(for a window border, I'd probably use a path anwyays - not a border...)
19:11
inside that controltemplate you still need a border element (or a path element)
Right, but you style it once inside there
or in my case, its a border with its background set to a drawing brush
You leave the global style to semantically significant Borders
yeah, we covered that above, 1px gray
im not disagreeing with you on that
heres an example of what im doing somewhere else that could be improved:
I have a listview, each element has a different style={} applied to it, but really they are all just labels
i could just use one style and then override the unusual ones
but i would like to define the colors somewhere else so that they are easier to change later if needed
The question is, why are some of them different?
19:15
Different status
yeah - so that's a good case to pull in your colors resource dictionary
I have a global "colors" dictionary, which is used by my "styles" dictionary
so I can just pull in colors as needed for specific cases like that
but still define them in one spot
So just merge the entire dictionary, then i can pick at will
(and - I have my colors RD auto-generate brush resources in it's constructor for each color)
have to run - bbl
Should Dispose on base classes be virtual?
19:19
yes
not Dispose(), just Dispose(bool disposing)
bah, that is what i have
The thing is, there are no unmanaged resources to be disposed, so no full-blown system is required.
why are you implementing Dispose, then?
I don't know, I'm just refactoring.
It's used as a sort of deterministic finalizer. Fires some events and closes connections
19:23
ahh, so it's a factored type, essentially
in that case, Dispose() shouldn't need to be virtual
but I'd often have a protected virtual method that it's calling
anyways - going to be late for my appt - really need to run. bbl
fml
At some point I am going to have to re-migrate this whole db because the new clone I created in order to get away from mysql now has deprecated data.
@KendallFrey label seems to be the styling issue in the app
@Reed - Using empty string instead of NULL worked for the date field.
19:35
and grid
labels often need different backgound/foreground colors and are used for many different purposes
I think it's a sound argument for breakfast beer at work
@ReedCopsey After that result with the Process Monitor; the Data Center was able to fix it. Now the issue works!
Interesting, Microsoft is trying to get Visual Studio to be versionless. So by the time 2015/2016 comes around, there's no version "VS 2015" it's just "Visual Studio"
@ton - If I have a beer in the afternoon it will make me tired. Two is better. But then again, once you have had two beers whats stopping the third :P
19:51
thats how i end up with a $200 bar tab :/
@RyanTernier Amazing
I'm lucky, I don't drink often. When I do it is moderately, could be the fact that I hate loosing control.
losing control?
it took 25 shots of vodka for me to get drunk , first time being drunk in my life. A few beers is nothing :P
@CharlieBrown Yeah, I get drunk quite easy.
19:55
things you might not have known, moustaches and beards let you drink more alcohol than normal. in fact, if you have a beard you automatically get +10 to alcohol tolerance.
Source?
Life experience.
Riiight
Im more into drinking beer because its delicious
bah tinyint!
shakes fist
20:04
Hello people
20:29
No
Yes
Does it vibrate?
LOL
@ton.yeung Interesting, thanks! ;)
20:41
lol
LOL i still have the tab open for that picture
Nope
Only SO mods are.
@ton.yeung Hardly
Lemme guess. You know he's a mod on Anime?
Since I can still easily call an SO mod on you :P
20:45
lol, it is anime
@ton.yeung Really? Seriously?
Why do you think I hang in the anime.se room all day long? :P
Or have links there in my profile?
I figured that a c# property of type **double** would map to the MSSQL type **float** but was incorrect and got this exception:
could not be set to a 'System.Double' value. You must set this property to a non-null value of type 'System.Single'.
Anyone know why I got that error?
JNat mods Anime & Manga too.
@ton.yeung iKlsr mods Blender.
@TravisJ Does float let you set the size? If so, it should be 64 bits
But he's also a regular on anime, so...
20:48
@Kendall - It does. I thought of that as well but didn't do it. I will try that
@Kendall - I changed the precision to 64 but still got the same error.
Actually
119
Q: What represents a double in sql server?

XaisoftI have a couple of properties in C# which are double and I want to store these in a table in SQL Server, but noticed there is no double type, so what is best to use, decimal or float? This will store latitude and longitude values, so I need the most accurate precision. Thanks for the responses ...

It allowed me to update to 64 but didnt save it. It wont go above 53
Yeah, must be that it refers to the significand
20:53
What would the length be for 64? 9?
Ah I see
@Kendall - My c# parameter is actually typed as a float (not double)
@TravisJ wait, what
im sorry guys but we got on a geeky conversation yesterday i need to post this for you guys to see
hilarious!
@Mike - Hm
@TravisJ Huh, that table I linked shows a mapping between SQL float and .NET double
That's what you said failed, right?
20:58
.net float -> SQL ?
I said float and double at first yes, but it was incorrect
It is actually float -> float that is failing
ah ok
double seemed liked overkill, but perhaps that is what I must use
yup
working thx :)
Having to remap things since I tossed mysql to the curb
@TravisJ and @Greg - Glad to hear you both got the issues resolved ;)
@ReedCopsey Yeah, I appreciate the help.
21:02
@Reed - Next I am going to convert my whole repository to use the new Entity Framework async features :)
hehehe
nice
@Skullomania That is pretty funny.
I have a motorcycle
The one about Batman VS Superman is comical to.
@Ryan - I don't always have a mustache. But when I do, I turn into batman!
21:14
This is kind of funny
@TravisJ hahaha
Anybody know if there's a way to make a DbSet from an observable collection?
mmm
you'd normally fill or update an existing DbSet from the items there
what are you trying to do?
Right now, I'm creating it from an Employee class
public class EmployeeDBContext : DbContext
{
public DbSet<Employee> Employees { get; set; }
}
Do your employees come and go so quickly? :P
I need to put empList in there somehow from
EmployeeList empList = new EmployeeList();
21:21
@TravisJ Who are you talking tO/
what is an EmployeeList?
It's an ObservableCollection<Employee>
Is it common for Properties to go directly against the database? That seems SO "wrong"
@Ryan - I was commenting on the need to have the Employees table be an observable collection. But earlier I was talking to you with reference to the batman mustache.
I'm batman
21:24
yes you are
I think it was an Archer reference :P I'm. Batman!
@Nathvi Why a custom class?
Well, originally I didn't have to create it. But I need to load from another database
and I already had that class written, so I thought it might be useful
Also, I don't believe in spelling.
22:12
Those 40 minutes left in your work day when you'll be gone for a week and you still have 3 hours of work to do
@RyanTernier <3 keep your chin up, buttercup
Those 40 minutes left in your work day when you'll be gone for a week and you still have 3 hours of work to do so you spend it in C# Chat :P
@Steve YOU SHUT YOUR WHORE MOUTH, STEVE!
:)
ahaha
gave me a flash back of boot camp
Can I ask a quick question about inheritance if someone is willing to help?
22:19
you can
I have a class and a "child" class. Does the child class need a brand new constructor?
no
This is mostly non-language specific
the base classes constructor would be called instead
ok
how about he new variables?
*the
22:21
if you did define a constructor for your child class, a lot of languages make you explicitly call the base constructor as well
could you elaborate?
That is what is my problem.
In what order are the calls to constructors made.
the child class first
Ok
But...
What if i want to change the class variable in the child class constructor. Like change an int.
that was dynamicly allocated
and doesn't exists when child constructor is called
That is my main problem
so you do something like this

public SomeClass() : base()
{
// do stuff
}
one sec
could you show me what you mean in some pseudocode
sure...
22:26
@Steve
public FuckYourCouch() : base
{
      // Do Some Stuff
      Console.WriteLine("This is stuff, and I hate your face.");
}
Just joking.
lol
I kid, I kid- Monday through Friday, 8 to 2.
its 630
;)
@Greg tip your waitresses well
Class:
int * n ;
Constructor:
int * n = malloc(4) ;
end


Child Class:
//whatever
Constructor:
n = 123 ; //problem if child constructor called first
//how to i set n to some value if it wasn't allocated
end
22:28
@Steve Well, ain't that a real mother fucker.
@Pheonixblade9 I try to.
see, this is what happens and I think you may be confused a little bit:

public ChildClass() : base()
{
// this doesn't get executed until the base classes constructor finishes.
}
@Steve Base class constructor is always called first...
it doesn't call the child constructor then see's the base right after that, finishes the base class's constructor, then finishes the body of the child class's constructor?
@self. Normally, the best way to handle that is to provide a constructor in the base class to initialize the value
@Steve Nope - whether you put : base() or not, you get exactly the same IL
you only need base(...) if you're calling a non-default constructor on the base class
gotcha
22:32
ie: public Child(int foo) : base(foo) {
otherwise, it has absolutely no effect
yep
base class always runs (completely) first, then child class constructor (at least in C# and most other languages I know of...)
@ReedCopsey Ok, tnx
yeah, i recall my professor saying that about java, but just following through with the code it made logical sense the way i described it... apparently i was wrong :)
@self. In general, I'd hide the pointers from everybody
and if you're using C++, don't use raw pointers like that ;)
22:34
What is the keyword for overriding a function of a class, for example to completely replace Class constructor with child constructor, is that override?
base class and child class are named differently, so their constructors would have different names -- no need for override
@self. You can't replace a method
if it's virtual, you can override it
but it doesn't "replace" the method even then
you can new it though...
yeah - in C# you can hide a method
but that doesn't get rid of the old one
(or prevent you from calling it)
(and - it's almost always a bad idea...)
I'm coding oop in c and I'm trying to keep things coherent.
So I don't end with a mix of sh..
22:37
@self. C doesn't lend itself to "oop" very well
The cool thing is I can totally decide what system i will use.
why are you doing that?
OO in C is going to end up being a mix of sh.. - there's no language constraints to prevent people from using it incorrectly
Practice, hacking, exploring...
Currently I have polymorphism, inheritance, dynamic type checking working.
generics, async, linq, delegates?
Unfamiliar with the concepts, can you elaborate?
22:42
Anyone hear about this, engadget.com/2013/10/29/…
@robjb mmm - no, templates would be compile-time
generics are types in and of themselves ;)
Really? Wow.
@self. You're in a C# room - those are C# features ;)
@robjb Yeah - generics are actually a first class type
which is why you can construct them, at runtime, for "new" types
unlike C++ templates, which must be evaluated at compile time
Very interesting, I had assumed generics were like C++ templates, but never put too much thought into it.
that's their main strength and their biggest weakness
(ie: why you can just use List<MyClass> anywhere)
(but also why you can't do anything but interface/base class constraints with few exceptions)
22:44
Heh, I almost banned myself.
Yea that's annoying, would be nice to at least have an enum constraint
@robjb technically, that's possible
just not in C#
Yea I think Eric Lippert wrote something about the MSIL supporting it
I was doing an analysis of where images could reside on SO's cdn server because of a meta post and was going to check a range of 60,000 urls asynchronously with ajax to see if any of them had valid image urls present.
22:47
Then I remembered that would smash their server.
that's Jon Skeet's library to support enum and delegate constraints
Yeea that's what I was thinking of
I've confused Lippert and Skeet several times now ... :/
If you needed to write an IValueConverter for a WPF app that depends on a list of values from a database, how would you provide the list?
Good afternoon, C#
It seems ConverterParameter isn't bindable
@robjb Probably bind to it
you can make a property on the converter, if you declare it inline
just make the converter a Dependency object, and you can set the property explicitly
it's ugly (you have to declare the binding entirely) but allows you huge flexibility
other options - make an IMultiValueConverter
and have the list be one value
(that's more standard)
22:59
posted on October 30, 2013 by Haacked

Today on the GitHub blog, we announced the first release of Octokit.net. Octokit is a family of client libraries for the GitHub API. Back in May, we released Octokit libraries for Ruby and Objective-C. Today we're releasing the third member of the Octokit family, Octokit.net, the GitHub API toolkit for .NET developers. GitHub provides a powerful set of tools for developers who b

@ReedCopsey Yea that's probably what I'll do; I've written an IMultiValueConverter before, and that should allow me to specify the binding in XAML
What would be the advantage of making the converter a Dependency object over the IMultiValueConverter approach?
trying to remember why I've done that
mmm
I think if you want the value to be converted, it doesn't work in IMVC, IIRC
(trying to remember why I had to do that at one point)
Ah well, at least I know the option is there if I run into problems with the multi-value converter

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