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14:00
its just the collection itself
What if I make my collection's read-only state toggleable?
i would do something like ...
have an add method and a remove method that safely locks the collection
then have a get all items method that safely returns an array of the items in the collection
that way the collection is protected
Hm.
What if.
I store the loggers in a separate array too?
@Vercas that's just horrible
Like, one could do whatever they want with the List.
14:01
Though WPF does that extensively I guess
Then they just call a method which locks on the list.
And just dumps all the (current) loggers into that array?
This would mean I never have to lock on a read.
use a mutex maybe?
It's a PCL.
Ideally what you want is to prevent reads and writes while writing, but allow concurrent reading
This separate array idea solves just that issue.
14:02
dont file system objects have this sort of thing built in?
At the expense of a few more bytes of memory.
(4 or 8 bytes per logger object - that's harmless)
isnt that just a copy of the original list
It is.
wont that result in logical bugs?
You could lock normally on write, and on read, try to acquire a lock, and if it succeeds, release it
14:03
you could be logging to a logger not in the collection
Not if I dump the array at every modification.
What exactly are you trying to accomplish @Vercas?
@RoelvanUden Extremely quick logging, yet safe modification of the logging provider list.
Define "logging provider list"?
Literally a List<IObjectLogger>
14:05
Doesn't micorsoft have a provider model for this ?
Huh?
And to log a message you want to iterate through the logging provider list and nudge each?
they used to use it for authentication and such
@RoelvanUden Indeed. That is necessary.
also ... isn't logging a solved problem ... log4net?
log4net lets to you specify various log targets
you can even put rules on them to split log output to different places
14:06
@Wardy As I said before, I took a look at log4net. I find it very unflexible. I mean, just look at its interfaces. Moreover, I need to log more than just messages with optional exceptions.
so i could log errors in 1 place and warnings in another
huh? we find it does just about everyhting
if this were me
@Vercas It makes much more sense to use a producer/consumer (BlockingCollection) with a single consumer thread. That consumer then consumes all the logging messages from the n threads and fires of an event to which your logging providers can respond.
i would go down the route of putting a log manager class in or something
that would contain a list of ILog or whatever
and then i would add rules
saying if condition x was met log to this log
else log to that one
@RoelvanUden What I am doing in the app for which I am writing this library is quite close. Every time an object is logged, I add it to a concurrent queue. Then a separate thread dumps all objects to their respective files.
oh ok
14:08
@Wardy Doable - but I would do that in a logging provider, not a logging manager.
in that case you don't need threading
But what I described above is a provider, not a manager.
it doesn't appear to be time sensitive
oh and log4net does that
Understandably.
we have ours dumping bits to sql bits to log files and bits by email
14:10
It's a very neat mechanism for speeding up the actual logging operations, moving the heavy load to a different thread.
we never wrote a single line of threading code to handle that
since we run all this in web applications its highly threaded though ... at least the file access will be
somewhere
Ah.
I see.
but all we do is var log = DependencyInject(ILog)
then log.Warning("bla");
or whatever
Mine would be
but log4net handles all that even when we load test our servers
14:12
logmgr.LogMessage(MessageType.Warning, "blah");
yeh thats basically what log4net does
out of the box
I didn't see any method that uses such an enumeration.
o.O
It's little things like this that annoyed me.
if you combine that with something like Ninject you can get the right logs to dump stuff to on a contextual basis
and have that configure them correctly
so i can create a "serviceLog" that dumps to 10 files
then a "MVC log" that dumps to db and the web root
Web root?
In plain files, for viewing on the web?
ninject + log4net will do all that with about 10 lines of code
webroot as in a file in the web root
which i could then bolt a web page to read that
14:14
Ah, I see.
and using something like signalR have that update in realtime
as the file is edited
Well, my library is quite more complex.
As I said, it logs more than just messages and exceptions.
this is why im confused that you need to write anything at all in this regard
i thought it was literally a solved problem
Not really.
you know Log4Net logs more than just "somestring" right?
14:15
One thing mine can log, for example, is arbitrary key/value data.
Moreover, a log object can contain more than one payload.
One per type, actually.
(for efficient binary storage)
i dunno how you do it but log4net will take whatever you throw at it
Even arbitrary objects?
and logging objects doesnt mean you rewrite your logging solution
Mine can dump any object at all in the logs.
Well.
You shall see my library.
you can literally say log.Info(anything);
14:17
I'm sure you will like it. :)
although i think we wrote a clever extension to handle the string conversion in that scenario
but it was 1 extension method not a whole library
lol
I shall go and take over the world with my lightweight logging PCL.
Laptop battery's almost out of juice.
NIH seems to be a problem of yours :P
i gotta go anyway
gotta meeting
NIH?
crosses fingers
14:19
Hm? xD
!!urban nih
@KendallFrey [NIH](http://nih.urbanup.com/1973301) Not Invented Here

The German art of humiliating any technology, agricultural product, or (medical) scientific work that has not been ivented or produced in Germany, Switzerland, or Austria.
right acronym, anyway
LOL
Sam
Sam
NIH = non-intelligent human
14:19
I shall go anyway.
"I didn't write it, therefore it's not understandable, therefore it's bad"
Cheers for the discussion.
Jon
Jon
"What's this code I can't read?"
"Take it out, I can't read it, it's bad."
@KendallFrey "I wrote it, therefore it's awesome." - for realzies
Cya.
Jon
Jon
Everything I write makes baby jesus smile.
14:42
Hi i want to encrypt strings in following format 039D54B3BDFF5574924F55CB11F2BBEA
what can i use to convert strings in above type
Jon
Jon
hash encryption?
String.GetHashCode
i dont know the type of encription is this
i suppose its hash
Jon
Jon
128bit hash code
anyways, what is your goal in donig this?
are you encrypting data?
Anyways, look into MD5 encrypting
hey guys a little question i have
Hi @Castiel a little answer we have
14:49
:))
if i have a list of labels, how can i do to set the back color of the random labels from the list to black ?
@Castiel Is this WPF or WinForms?
winforms
i think i should start like:
for (int i = 0; i < listLabels.length; i++)
{
labels[random.Next()].BackgroundColor = Color.Black;
?
}
hmmm
Jon
Jon
listObj[random.Next(0, listObj.Count)].BackColor = Color.Black;
14:51
@Jon That's it.
from 0 means?
Here I was making sure Label had a BackColor property ;)
Jon
Jon
random number between 0 and list count
@Jon haha my code assumed that min and max had already been set lol
i also aint that up with the exact prop names in winforms
been a while
Jon
Jon
:)
14:52
lol ... i was close though !!!
Haha @Wardy I was just shaking my head saying "Have fun with the IndexOutOfRangeExecption" ;)
well normally when i use random numbers i do somethng like ...
thank you guys.
var random = new System.Random(min, max);
Jon
Jon
@Castiel next time come back with a harder question :P
14:53
or has that changed now?
np @Castiel Jon will now collect $400.
Jon
Jon
Well, you initialize a seeded Random object, then use it with the .Next function typically @Wardy
do i get $200
lol
no, yours broke the codez ;)
@Jon ah ... spent way too much time buried in noise functions lol
awww
Jon
Jon
14:55
In fact, if you do something like
for (blah) { Random r = new Random(); r.Next(0,100); }
You will get the same number over and over.
@Wardy you can have some of this monopoly money i've got here
Jon
Jon
Since the random object will be created with the same seed .
It will change once the time tick hits
So rapid code execution here would result in the same seeded random -- try it.
lol @Austinh100
@Jon i thought creating an instance of the random class was always done so using the tick count from the current time or something
Jon
Jon
Yup -- but what if the time seed is the same
thus because it takes at least 1 tick to create the instance it should always be unique
unless you have concurrency
Jon
Jon
14:57
You'd think so, but it is not the case.
there is that i spose
The system clock is only accurate to about 15ms
but when you say "fast" in this context you really mean "soooooo fast" lol
Jon
Jon
The default seed value is derived from the system clock and has finite resolution. As a result, different Random objects that are created in close succession by a call to the default constructor will have identical default seed values and, therefore, will produce identical sets of random numbers.
@KendallFrey thats why i said "tick count"
14:58
@Wardy yeah, and it gets that from the system clock
oh they must be using the ms count then
Jon
Jon
Yup... if you try it, it generates quite a bit of the same values before the timer ticks over
so if you create 2 random classes within 15 ms, they'll probably get the same count
arent clocks still worked out with crystal ocsillators or something
im sure i read about that somewhere
there's something special about quartz or whatever it was they used
Jon
Jon
Yeah -- your bios clock runs on a quartz crystal probably
15:00
yeh that sounds about right
some special properties meant that quartz oscilates similar to a clock ticking or something
bugger knows how they figured that out
Jon
Jon
Yep, when applied electricity to quartz crystal, they oscillate at 60hz
yeh that was it
which is why clocks are only so accurate
Jon
Jon
Kinda makes you wonder if Quartz came first
because anything more accurate is based on multiplying that value
Jon
Jon
Quartz is also extremely abundant
15:02
i remember reading something about ghz+ cpu's having some issue because of quartz
more so than cesium, right? :P
edc
edc
for better randomness, I propose that the seed should be gathered from a hamster running on a mill
and each PC should be equipped with one hamster
@edc heck no. radioactive decay
That's classically 100% random
Jon
Jon
We will get random when we get organic computers
like in existenZe
edc
edc
hamster computer is as organic as you can get
15:04
brain
much epicest computer of all time ever
i really want to get this voxel rendering stuff complete
have a nutty idea for using using neural nets for AI
Jon
Jon
oh, cool
this just makes me want to test it more
EWWW UMBILICAL CORDS
Jon
Jon
15:05
I just added my procedural trees to my engine
needs optimizing
im suffering at the moment
hit a road block ... got a logic bug i cant find a fix for
Jon
Jon
that sucks
yeh
last time this happened i started again
set me back 6 months
Jon
Jon
what's the problem?
My game is stuck because I don't know how to write OO JS
15:06
i seem to randomly get broken mesh info
Jon
Jon
object oriented javascript? what is this?
does js even know what an object is?
Jon
Jon
@Wardy can't make it a feature?
i thought everything just "was" or was considered an array ?
@Jon not really
it results in some really wierd stuff
like holes in terrain
15:07
@Wardy in js? no, only arrays are arrays
or verts linked to verts on the other side of meshes
There are also array-likes, like arguments
Jon
Jon
Maybe you can call it "Currupto-World"
kendall im pretty sure i can do this ....
var something = { foo = bar };
something["foo"];
Jon
Jon
"Can YOU survive the glitches?"
15:08
lol
@Wardy protip to debug: change your random to a fixed seed, so it happens every time
@Wardy that doesn't make it an array
Jon
Jon
- Procedurally generated glitches
@KendallFrey im already using fixed seeds
i always gen the same world atm
good
then debug it
@Jon thats exactly what i have
the problem is threading related
it works fine on a single thread
Jon
Jon
15:10
ah
probably an issue with locking
and unity VS / Unity is crap at threading
you have a race condition
yeh i think it is
but i haven't been able to find it yet
probably accessing the same thing from two threads while it's being written
atomize dat shit
probably
Jon
Jon
15:11
.net 5 that shit
if i was a DX guru i would just use C#
but i cant get my head round that
too low level for me
i struggle with geomtry problems
the math is often way over my head
I need to trim some single quotes from a string, how do I do this
DeptID = DeptID.TrimEnd(''');//incorrect
DeptID = DeptID.TrimEnd("'");//still incorrect
DeptID.Replace("'", "");
@Skullomania incorrect in what way?
compiler error?
@KendallFrey yes
15:16
Yeah it needs a char not a string.
Jon
Jon
heh
'\''
@EvanL spot on
@Jon oh, yeah, that but backwards
@Skullomania Just remember that will replace all occurrences of ' from the string.
Jon
Jon
Yeah, escape char is \
15:20
so is there no way to use trim end. I just need to remove it from the end of the string
'$ hehehehhe
@Skullomania why can't you use trimend?
because I cannot use a string in trim end. long story short I am using it to build a query
DeptID.TrimEnd('\'');
@Skullomania I thought you were just trimming one char
@Skullomania If you're using it to add concatenated strings to a query, you are doing it wrong ;)
Use parameters...
15:24
@EvanL I will use parameters. and probly a string builder
@Skullomania What are you using the StringBuilder for?
I can't really think of a situation where you need to maniuplate strings in order to build a query for SQL. There are tons of tools to avoid that in ADO.Net
Except for IN statements, those can be tricky.
@EvanL to build my string. i will give an example
Shouldn't this bind to a Drop Down?
            using(SqlDataReader reader = command.ExecuteReader())
            {
                drpCategory.DataSource = reader;
                drpCategory.DataTextField = reader[@"SubCatName"].ToString();
                drpCategory.DataValueField = reader[@"SubCatId"].ToString();
                drpCategory.DataBind();
            }
@Greg is it in your page load?
No, it is in a method call.
15:29
@Greg I wasn't aware you could bind to a reader... Since it is forward only enumerable. Wouldn't the DataSource be null after you leave the scope of that using also?
Well, I thought the same thing about scope.
So, I removed the using. The issue still exist though.
Or does the collection get stored in the object when you call DataBind()?
@Greg Can you try using a different type to bind to? Some sort of storage collection?
I'm not binding to a reader, I'm binding to the Drop Down List.
I'm simply binding the reader object contents.
I meant, you are using a reader as your datasource... I don't think that will work. (totally could be wrong).
I'm fairly certain you can, not sure if it is good or bad technique though.
15:32
It smells in my opinion.
Jon
Jon
Now that is an ugly form.
@Skullomania That doesn't help me understand why you need to use string concatenation...
@EvanL because the user will select one or 2 from the listbox select however many from their checkboxes to build their query
So you need to use a WHERE DeptID IN ('someDepartment', 'someOtherDepartment')?
15:38
i have not used an IN() yet
Really just trying to understand how you are structuring the query. Can you post code? A screen shot doesn't help much at all.
string DeptID = string.Empty;
            int countDept = lstDSXDepartment.GetSelectedIndices().Length;
            foreach (System.Web.UI.WebControls.ListItem li in lstDSXDepartment.Items)
            {
                if (li.Selected == true)
                {
                    DeptID += li.Value + "' AND [Department] = '";
                }
            }

            string RoleID = string.Empty;
            int countRole = lstDSXRole.GetSelectedIndices().Length;
            foreach (System.Web.UI.WebControls.ListItem li in lstDSXRole.Items)
That's not a query, what will the end result query look like in SQL?
And where are you actually performing the query?
@EvanL So what would you do?
This was my original idea. to build the string then place the value of it in a query
15:42
@Greg I was reading about the SqlDataReader approach, it looks viable so I take the smelly thing back (even though it still feels weird to me). Not sure why yours would appear empty though, besides the scoping issue. Have you ensured that your reader is in fact populated with data?
Can I use enums in a WPF Binding Path?
It should be, the query is a SELECT * FROM
@Greg Oh I see... you don't need to use the reader index, just a string literal for your text and value fields.
@Greg are you just wanting to populate the dropdown?
so it should be DataTextSource = "SubCatName";
15:45
I did it like this and it still didn't work:
            using(SqlConnection connection = new SqlConnection(ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings[@"ZNodeECommerceDB"].ConnectionString))
            {
                string query =
                    @"SELECT * FROM [SubCatCourse]
                      WHERE ([CatID] == '@Type');";

                using(SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(query, connection))
                {
                    connection.Open();
                    command.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Type", type);
                    SqlDataReader reader = command.ExecuteReader();
If you remove reader.Close() do you get the same result?
Also remove the ' from the WHERE clause. It should read WHERE ([CatID] == @Type);";
Yes, I do.
the SqlCommand will take care of the apostrophes etc... for you.
Currently you are sending it a SQL String literal.
Which will likely yield 0 results.
...? Even though the @Type is an integer value?
string query =
                @"SELECT * FROM [SubCatCourse]
                  WHERE ([CatID] == @Type);";
15:49
So, I more than likely have to do a Cast?
You don't have to cast... you can have integers in a where clause.
Then why isn't it working?
Did you remove the apostrophes from the WHERE?
It doesn't need them. Are you getting a SQLException?
I need to ensure it is distinguished, the WHERE needs to be present, otherwise it won't know the difference between Customer or Employee
@Greg Just try sending the query as I typed it above.
15:53
@EvanL should I not build the user string this way?
or first?
I may have found my issue.
@Skullomania Hard to say without seeing what your query would look like in the end...
@Greg What was it?
Nope, that still didn't resolve it.
According to all the documentation, this should work.
Hm...
posted on June 25, 2014 by The .NET Team

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16:10
@EvanL Have you ever used a DataSet.
If I were to run that SQL Query, how could I pull it to a DataSet. Maybe that approach?
Just discovered something amazing
By a total shot in the dark
The meaning of life?
No, that's 42, everyone knows that
Oh, that makes sense
16:14
hur hur
@KendallFrey Should we start guessing now?
oh, you wanted me to tell you
you can use ints instead of enum values in a binding path
Jon
Jon
probably because the value members of an enum is int
If you have an SQL Query, how do you fill a DataSet. I thought you had to use ` TableAdapter` to fill?
I came across a custom forms authentication and role provider to replace the default role provider classes in asp.net
 public class FormsAuthenticationService : IAuthenticationService
    {
        private readonly HttpContextBase _httpContext;

        public FormsAuthenticationService(HttpContextBase httpContext)
        {
            _httpContext = httpContext;
        }
IAuthticateService has SignIn and SignOut methods
how do i create a instance of FormsAuthenticationService ? i cannot supply HttpcontextBase since the only constructor requires it in Login action
16:38
morning guys
@Greg if you have a DTO that matches it exactly, you should be able to just assign it
if you're using a MerchantDataContext, that is
@Pheonixblade9 Well, I'm trying to get the column assigned to a dropDownList.DataTextField / dropDownList.DataTextValue
Guys how can I arse an email?
MyObject = MerchantDataContext.ExecuteQuery("SELECT obj1, obj2, obj3 FROM dbo.MyObject");

public class MyObject
{
    public int obj1;
    public int obj2;
    public int obj3;
}
something like that?
                DataSet data = new DataSet();
                using(SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(query, connection))
                {
                    connection.Open();
                    command.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Type", type);
                    using(SqlDataAdapter adapter = new SqlDataAdapter())
                    {
                        adapter.SelectCommand = command;
                        adapter.Fill(data);

                        drpCategory.DataSource = data;
Or do I have to put it to a TableAdapter?
@Pheonixblade9 Or more like this:
                using(SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(query, connection))
                {
                    connection.Open();
                    command.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Type", type);

                    DataTable table = new DataTable();
                    table.Load(command.ExecuteReader());

                    drpCategory.DataSource = table;
                    drpCategory.DataTextField = "SubCatName";
                    drpCategory.DataValueField = "SubCatId";
                    drpCategory.DataBind();
Question, who decided the recommended namings, people usually use e.g i, j, k for for loops, <T> for generics and so on? is there an article?

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