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17:00
@CharlieBrown no loop in the task?
no loops, its like when you light a firework, once you light the fuse you just gotta wait it out
but its moving at around 70km/h, so we need a safety stop built in
can you nuke the process?
Not sure
supposedly a new api coming in the next year, but they have said that for a couple years now
I don't have a clue if possible but would getting hold of the thread and do thread abort() work?
unfortunatly the code is inside an actual hardware device, so there is no threads
we use activex over a network cable to chat with it, but everything is fire and forget
ill hack something up, should be fun. at the top of the file, i just put // Dont ask
17:09
What do you think about alias using directives like using sp = MassiveCorp.RidiculousProject.SpecialProject;
love/hate
@CharlieBrown sounds like the job for a PLC again without knowing much
How free is PostGre? Is it free for use in commercial setting?
it is a plc actually, but the .net api is awful
sounds like Siemens
I heard Beckhoff is nice
gotta go back to le Grind now (afk)
@kush - I have a class from a library named task that refers to something other than threading and sometimes I have to use a using alias for it.
17:15
I guess it is nice to have the option
Remember when you all said selling my Kindle for a hundred dollars was unreasonable. I sold it for a hundred dollars!
the syllables dont line up in that song at all
It's a Canuck Christmas, not a Nazi one.
Wait, you know my parents?
17:20
Google Glass is too expensive, who in the world would spend $1,500 dollars on a pair.
Not to mention ugly.
@KendallFrey True.
@Greg You know how mass production works, right? :P
lol @roel
is there a pragma that tells visual studio to not complain about divide by zero?
17:25
Vs isn't complaining, your CPU is complaining
well, I didn't write this code but it actually needs to fail
[TestMethod]
public void RunCount_Failure()
{
    const long countInterval = 5000;
    long countTo = RandomValueGenerator.GetRandomInt(1000, 50000);
    var heartbeat = new hb.Heartbeat(this, countInterval, 0);
    heartbeat.Start("RunCount_NoHandler, countInterval: {0}, countTo: {1}".FormatWith(countInterval, countTo));
    try
    {
        for (int i = 0; i < countTo; i++)
        {
            heartbeat.IncrementCount();
        }
        const int zero = 0;
        var dbz = 1 / zero;
        heartbeat.SetComplete("RunCount_NoHandler finished");
I guess there was a reason for zero to be a var
and not constant
Is it a compiler error?
Or runtime?
compiler
constant folding
17:29
yes
Why not just throw an exception manually?
must it be a const?
Heck, just SetFailed without any exception at all
any good tricks?
interesting
Never heard that one before, but I guess it makes sense.
Deposit -> transfer -> spend?
17:38
@TravisJ no, resharper said I could make it a const when I really can not
how do you make sure you don't accidentally commit your config file changes? (inb4 very carefully)
Credit is largely based on income though. My credit score right now is mediocre, but when I was trading stocks it was insane. I could have leased a ferrari.
Because I was trading on margin it looked like I was borrowing and paying off $50k a day. For a year straight.
@TravisJ creditworthiness is also based on length of credit history
I don't know what circles you are in but I'd assume you are in high 700s which is high compared to the whole population
@TravisJ credit is in the thigh of the beholder
!!die !!!!!!
@kush - Right now my credit score is probably in the 500s. I don't even have a credit card. However, when I was trading it was somewhere in the 920 range.
17:47
@TravisJ I didn't know 900 existed o.O
it takes over 1000 to get an american express black card
Credit is a scam. You just have to understand how to con it if you are interested in getting a high score.
@TravisJ I've never seen a black card in person. I can't imagine how much I'd have to spend to make that card worth the annual fee.
Who said "I'm not in the business of not lending money"?
> temp reporting for duty
No results found for "I'm not in the business of not lending money".
depends on the rating company, FICO goes to 880, i think FAIR goes to 1000
approval to lend is based on the score, amount to lend is based on your income/debts/assets
and of course, what you want the money for
@ton - The ranking mechanism for different places is proprietary. I guess the score I looked at the time must have been associated with etrade.
The standard scale tops out at 850 but there are various other companies which go above that.
that doesnt cover 100% use case im sure, but it covers most modern lenders like banks, credit unions
right, some home equity loans ignore scores as well
17:54
That was also 8 years ago, the model seems to change frequently. I think the rating company was Vantage.
if you have a downpayment, and credit above 640 fico, its easy as pie
i dont know the fha reqs
@ton - Do they still require 30% equity ?
It was 10% before the housing stuff went bad.
@ton - It may be different in CA
Fuck redgate.
yeah, cuz i love paying for part of your mortgage :)
What a piece of garbage application.
17:57
you need 20% equity to avoid PMI, which is sometimes very expensive
@RoelvanUden Yeah, the more they can produce the cheaper the cost. Too bad the adoption is so poor, that the cost will never go down.
which personally i think is just robbery
which still didnt help in the housing crash
@SpencerRuport What application is this?
So apparently it is ok to go to the test and comment out everything within a test case to make it pass
SQL Server Source Control.
18:01
@SpencerRuport I am pretty sure it is against the law to say anything bad about SQL Compare
@CapricaSix Welcome back
Anyone have some good advice on architecture for a Role and Membership?
@KendallFrey she has the prettiest eyes
@Greg It's not even released yet?
@Greg i have lots of bad advice
18:04
How does SQL Server Source Control work? It looks like a wonderful idea red-gate.com/products/sql-development/sql-source-control/…
@rlemon! die
@CharlieBrown Well, bad is better than non.
now why would you go and be mean like that
cuz you're mean?
@KendallFrey is always mean because he has to compensate for looking like a pre-pubescent boy.
18:05
@rlemon Because he just hit puberty and doesn't know how to cope yet.
You're just say that because you're a pedo
I wasn't, until you showed me your banana hammock
May I remind you who showed whom?
you may, however those memories are all over written now with the imagery of you running down the beach in that bad boy
@CharlieBrown So I had a thought, to outline a clear set of functionality of particular permission levels first, that way the task can be validated and displayed correctly. Good bad?
Anyone see the new Amazing Spiderman 2 trailer?
18:15
So many flags ...
Who flagged all of that? =/
Wow... flagfest
I always hesitate when voting on those because it always looks like this:
"SO AND SO IS SOMETHING REALLY OFFENSIVE!"
Valid?
Sorry @10k users.
Makes it feel like I'm agreeing with the statement for a second.
18:18
The closer you get to the end of a contract, the more distant your team becomes, like you are slowly turning into a zombie
@CharlieBrown Yeah - I always hate the times when I've worked somewhere, after giving notice, too... Same type of thing, but even worse
@ton.yeung That's often the case - but it's typically weird, too
oh yeah, the 'Knowledge transfer'
I was in a meeting the other day, and suddenly everyone was referring to me as if I want there
"We will have to talk to Charlie about that later, and get his opinion". Ummm, guys...I'm right here.
@ton.yeung Yeah, but then I charge a lot to come fix it :)
We have it the other way. Ex-employees still have a presence.
We have 2 of their pictures hanging on our scrum wall.
18:30
there is a method in c++ where you pass in a char[] and parse it off based on another list of delims... what the heck is it called, i can not remember
I hate wasting time. :(
@CharlieBrown Like a string.Split for C++? Or do you want something different?
it was something different
each time you called it, it gave you the next match back until it finally returned null or -1 or something
strstr?
is that what you're thinking of?
oh yeah
actually that page is perfect, i pretty much had to write that example in an interview using c#
only i had never heard of strstr before, so i was lost before i began
18:39
That's such a fantastic name "strstr" haha
in the end, i did it correctly, but i think the interviewer was expecting me to write in a few seconds like it was no biggie
Keystrokes were an endagered species in the 90s.
18:53
hey all
@ton.yeung you wouldn't download a HOUSE?
Would that be the best point to start building a role and membership, the permission levels. What each permission can and can't do?
@TravisJ Question for you, master javascript.
return this || that;
Currently there is a application / module within our site; when you click something it refreshes the page and scrolls you back to the top. Is there javascript I can embed in the page to remember the scroll location to go back there?
@ton.yeung idk
19:25
@Greg - You would have to use sessionStorage. Read more here: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/API/DOM/Storage
@Greg - As for the ie7 and earlier crowd, they can scroll back down on their own - they are used to getting screwed.
@TravisJ So I could do it though through Javascript, I ask because I don't have access to this particular CMS Codebase
the ghetto fabulous way is to use anchor tags
@Greg - Yup, you could do it with pure javascript
The issue though, is I don't know what these lovely items will be. As the documents are generated dynamically.
@TravisJ I'll have to look into it then, that is my goal.
tech jobs aren't hard to come by if you're competent
19:35
@ton.yeung Yeah, I'm not that good at programming, and I got three job offers and a job interview for Amazon.
hes prob getting screened out b/c of his current address
@ton.yeung Only one that appealed to me was @ReedCopsey though, because he would help my confidience a bit.
@ton.yeung They seem to venture to Portland, Oregon where I live.
there are a lot of companies who hire anybody in seattle
but they aren't the best work environments
@ton.yeung I would move to Seattle, except my wife doesn't want to move.
@ReedCopsey that's my thing. I'd go work at Google or Facebook, but I see no reason to go work at Amazon or some startup that expects me to work 80 hours/week
19:38
amazon/adobe/etc are hiring everybody they possibly can
@ton.yeung no, its just the horrid programs most hr & recruiters use to look for candidates screens them out
Amazon expects less hours out of you than Facebook or Google will.
@TravisJ Does that link have an example of a pure js way?
@JoshVarty I have a lot of friends who would disagree with that statement ;)
i have as well, so maybe recruiters in that area are more weird
19:40
at Amazon, it completely depends on which division you're working in - but many expect you to be on call 24/7
@Greg- Yup
// Save data to the current session's store
sessionStorage.setItem("username", "John");

// Access some stored data
alert( "username = " + sessionStorage.getItem("username"));
Well I guess we'd just be trading anecdotes. Perhaps the people you know are in charge of mission critical systems.
But you can guarantee Google expects the same out of any engineer in charge of similar systems.
@ReedCopsey @JoshVarty Yeah, Amazon wanted me to be on call 24/7 in three month intervals; eventually to run my own team of guys.
@JoshVarty Not really - but it really depends on the division - I know the devs who work on the APIs don't have much
they've got it fairly decent in terms of expectations
@TravisJ How would I have it store an indexed location though?
19:41
I would move but I enjoy the beach being a 5 minute walk away too much.
@Greg - My userscript does something similar, let me get the code for it
The worst part about Amazon from my perspective is that their entire business model revolves around the idea of frugality. To the point that it hampers individuals who work there.
One of my friends works there are has endless issues with his dev box and the fact he's limited to 4gigs of RAM.
@TravisJ We have a module, they click a Document Folder, it refreshes page- but rather then be focused on that portion of the page; it scrolls to the top. That is what I'm trying to circumvent; anytime it is clicked.
It's just a hassle when your stuff crashes and you get to enjoy waiting for all those instances to start back up.
@ton.yeung how many RAm on your machine?
@JoshVarty I think they wanted me building services for their Cloud Architecture.
@DmitryPavlov I've got 16GB
19:44
But Reed's right, it's almost pointless to compare companies because the variation between teams is likely as great as the variation between companies.
@Greg okay. VS 2012? I'm just thinking about adding memory
Huh? Most people I know of from Amazon work 60+ hours. The people I know at Google/MSFT work 40-50
@DmitryPavlov 2012 on this machine, 2013 on my other.
okay got it.
@Greg -
Set:
sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition",$(document).scrollTop());
Use:
var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
if( prev != null) window.scrollTo(0,prev);
19:45
@JoshVarty lol, not buying an extra stick of RAM for a dev is horribly misguided
I fill up my 12 gigs sometimes
The same guy who was complaining about 4gigs of RAM just clocks his 9-5 at Amazon and it's completely fine. I think it just depends on the person/team.
@Pheonixblade9 Yeah they're not even that expensive.
@TravisJ So, that JS will read the current location when the DOM is refreshed, then uses the new location once it loads?
@JoshVarty yeah, who knows.
@Greg - Attach the Set to the click handler for the document.
Might also want to clear the item when you scroll to it in case they refresh or arrive there by normal means
if( prev != null) window.scrollTo(0,prev);
sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition",null);
@TravisJ I'll input that into my skin, and see if it will fix the issue. Not sure, I guess I'll find out.
19:49
I love the stackoverflow question about being able to make up your <own-tags>. I did not know it was possible
I have a list of items. What'd be the easiest way to throw out all items but one where there are are more than one item with the same int property ID?
@TravisJ So I should essentially just input it as:
sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", $(document).scrollTop());
var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
if(prev != null) window.scrollTo(0, prev);
sessionStorage.SetItem("scrollPosition", null);
$("#documentFolderElementId").click(function(){
 sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", $(document).scrollTop());
});
var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
if(prev != null) window.scrollTo(0, prev);
sessionStorage.SetItem("scrollPosition", null);
@TravisJ That is where I'm concerned, I don't know if I can get the exact FolderId. I might be able to get the EntryClass though
@Greg - Right click on the folder, look at the element in the dev console, determine what the best selector to use for targeting that folder is, and then use that selector. You can test the selector before you use it in the console by setting some other event such as a mouseenter event which alerts hello and then you will know you have the right selector
19:57
hey, can anyone confirm that i need windows server installed to develop sharepoint webparts?
@TravisJ It just stores it as a generic link, I need a better anchor then that.
@TravisJ Didn't work...
Hm...
@Greg - Is it public facing?
No, I'll make it public facing for a bit
mkjulie.mypinkunit.com go to the resources and select one of the libraries
@Greg - It opens a new page which is different and there isn't much room for scrolling
@TravisJ I just noticed that.
@TravisJ Hm, makes the issue even more difficult.
20:07
That looks like by design?
I don't think you need a scroll there
Well, if you open up a lower folder it scrolls all the way to to the top.
This page it isn't as bad as others; but the designer put this module all over the place.
When I click on team building for example, it opens a page with just team building on it
There is really no where to scroll
@TravisJ Is there a way to have the jQuery navigate directly to the anchored area? So you don't scroll all the way down?
Hold on, let me open another one for example that will make it easier to see.
Same area, but it is called Community
rec/community gave me a 404
@TravisJ Try again
And open Education, then a lower folder, and watch.
20:11
So you don't like that the user has to scroll past the banner every time?
I don't care, apparently our designer and customers do.
I see
@TravisJ But the person who developed this module, didn't make it easy to solve this simple.
please can my next project not have so much looping through arrays?
@CharlieBrown Why aren't you just using LINQ?
20:14
@CharlieBrown What would you use then?
i always need the "i" part and its double[,] and double[,,]
Those are tame. I worked with a double[][,] once
its not the complexity, its the endless times i have written for (var j = 0; j < scans[i].Samples.Length; j++)
@KendallFrey I worked with a double ( . )( . ) once
@Greg - Well, you could always look to see if the library link exists and then scroll past the header
20:17
@Pheonixblade9 syntax error
double D; // (_Y_) ;D
@TravisJ You mean the "You are here" or the main Document header?
if($('.link').filter(function(){
return this.innerHTML.indexOf("Library") > -1;
}).length > 0){ window.scrollTo(0,$("header:first").height()); }
You want me to try copying and pasting that, see if it works?
Should I add a $(document)? Or just as is?
20:19
definitely put it in the document.ready callback
Just to be extra safe, you should probably make sure that you don't apply this outside of resources
$(function(){
if(window.location.indexOf("/Resources/") > -1 && $('.link').filter(function(){
 return this.innerHTML.indexOf("Library") > -1;
}).length > 0){ window.scrollTo(0,$("header:first").height()); }
});
Okay, done
It is on other pages, though, which I could modify to later.
it's scary when things work the first time...
It's scarier when they work the second time.
@TravisJ So it will always go directly to the Document Manager, or below the header?
@Greg - It will always scroll to the bottom of the header element when there is a link to a library present
20:23
@TravisJ Hm, let me make a page public facing- This is the page I should of had you looking at
It works on the pages I am looking at
Education menu should be exposed, New Consultant
ok so this one should scroll past the header also?
lol, the intern sprinkled a bunch of Final Fantasy 7 references into the test code
hahaha
20:26
Well, the problem is they want when they use the document manager, to actually scroll to it.
@TravisJ You see how ugly and horrible that is?
ooh way down there
@TravisJ Yeah, I can't have it skip it everytime- Only when something is clicked.
Even if it skipped the header, it wouldn't go far enough to even see the Document Manager.
@TravisJ I swear, sometimes designers make things hideous, unorthodox, and flat out a pain to accomplish a task because it doesn't fall within their design realm.
@Greg one might argue engineers do the same thing.
@Pheonixblade9 At least logic drives our methodology, making one scoped to work correctly makes more sense then, it doesn't quite look right.
Which in turn, to make it look right will break functionality.
@Greg - Try this:
$(function(){
 $('.entryItem').filter(function(){
 return $(this).find('.dmxicon-32-collection-big-gif').length > 0;
}).find('.link').click(function(){ sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", $(document).scrollTop()); });
var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
if(prev != null) window.scrollTo(0, prev);
sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", null);
});
20:35
Didn't work
@Greg - Are you sure?
You tried my original thought, link onto the entryItem id element. It isn't working for me.
I put it on the page, is it for you?
Now it is working.
When you click the menu though box, to go to the root home it doesn't work though.
Can you see what that element is called?
go to the root home? You mean "Home"?
20:39
When you click a folder, those red boxes fill, when you click one of those.
Is that the only place where you use the thumbnails class? You could target it with that and include it in the click binding
@TravisJ Well, unless another developer uses thumbnails for image galleries- which may occur; as that is a generic name.
ok 1s
20:43
Okay.
@TravisJ Thank you.
@Greg - How about this?
$(function(){
 function scrollHandler(){
  sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", $(document).scrollTop());
 }
 var $links = $('.entryItem').filter(function(){
  return $(this).find('.dmxicon-32-collection-big-gif').length > 0;
 }).find('.link');
 $links.click(scrollHandler);
 $links.each(function(){
  $(this).parents('.title:first').next('.thumbnails').click(scrollHandler);
 }
 var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
 if(prev != null) window.scrollTo(0, prev);
Replace previous, or is that need to be added?
Hello, I got a question. what's the best way to open a window and directly draw to it without WinForms/WPF?
@Lucius ...OpenGL?
@Greg - replace
20:50
Doesn't work at all
Sharpe marker
@Greg - there was a slight typo
$(function(){
 function scrollHandler(){
  sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", $(document).scrollTop());
 }
 var $links = $('.entryItem').filter(function(){
  return $(this).find('.dmxicon-32-collection-big-gif').length > 0;
 }).find('.link');
 $links.click(scrollHandler);
 $links.each(function(){
  $(this).parents('.title:first').next('.thumbnails').click(scrollHandler);
 });
 var prev = sessionStorage.getItem("scrollPosition");
 if(prev != null) window.scrollTo(0, prev);
 sessionStorage.setItem("scrollPosition", null);
forgot to close the each callback
@Pheonixblade9 What if I wanted to do CPU-rendering? What do WinForms/WPF do in order to get something to the screen?
@TravisJ Didn't work with the red button again.
@Lucius they use OpenGL in the end. Lots of abstraction, though
you can do OpenGL rendering with CPU or GPU
20:53
@Pheonixblade9 Oh, cool, I was not aware of that. What benefits does OpenGL have on the CPU?
@TravisJ Isn't a class # not a .
ID is # I think.
I don't know that it does. The GPU is better at graphics. There is just enough abstraction there that the CPU can do the work.
@JoshVarty You're right, I reversed em
I suggest you read up on it:
if it's windows, it can use DirectDraw too
20:55
@Pheonixblade9 Thanks, I've been working with Direct3D and OpenGL for some time already.
I was interested on doing something on the CPU only.
I thought there might be some fundamental 'window.SetPixel' method or something.
I think GDI+ has something like that Lucius.
@Pheonixblade9 WPF uses Direct3D, btw, not OpenGL (though same idea)
@Greg - Hm the structure is different on that page than the other one, the selector needs to change slightly
@Lucius GDI / WinForms does most of its work on the CPU
@TravisJ Will it be able to work on all the pages though?
20:59
You can operate on a Bitmap you create and use "SetPixel" on it.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms536299(v=vs.85).aspx
Thanks, I will take a look at GDI. Basically all I want to do is draw some basic shapes in a window and doing it the fastest way possible.

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