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00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

17:04
well, probably theta
but not θ
hmm, the html guys are playing vs starcraft
that game backlog I keep using to justify not buying anything new...it's not getting any better
bought the 2k bundle the other day
Gui
Gui
hi guys
is it o(n) to do .Any() on a hashset ?
good question - one for stackoverflow IMHO
you'll get rep for that
i) test it and ii) look at the reference source to see what it does
not knowing how those methods work internally, I'd expect Any() to get an enumerator, call Next() once, and check whether the result is good or not
Gui
Gui
ok gonna test it
17:20
you guys gotta watch this..hahaha
I would guess that any collections that use an internal array would be o(1) to get an enumerator
no idea how a hashset works internally
@TomW Any checks every item, not just the first one.
even for the no-param overload?
That one would be O(1) I presume
that stinks on the part of the designers, actually. It has a fundamentally different meaning depending on which overload you choose - "are any of these ..." vs. "are there any"
I assume that was what @Gui meant
17:24
Well, using the parameterless version on a collection is pretty useless
Count will almost certainly be faster
really? why? aren't you asking for more information there?
Count, not Count()
with Any() all I want to know is whether the count is zero or not. I don't care how many there are
Gui
Gui
Any() is way more faster than Count(), it stop as soon as it find one element, while count will alway loop in every elements of the list
considering we just wanna know if the list contains at least one element
If there was a box that said "There are 5 balls in this box" and you wanted to know if there was a ball in the box, would you read the sign or actually look in the box?
Count doesn't (shouldn't) need to enumerate items.
17:29
@Gui I'm inclined to agree with you - there are some framework hacks that check whether an Ienumerable<T> is a list, but other than that, all they see is an IEnumerable<T> and I believe they all work by manipulating the Inumerator of that collection. So I guess to run Count() you'd have to keep iterating until you stop. Kendall is talking about Count (the property) which I suppose is driven off the internal state of the collection so I guess that would be faster
assumption: you know the type of the collection, and it's a type that implements Count
Of course I know what it is, it's HashSet.
For a generic IEnumerable, it's a bit tougher
17:49
What is an alternative to enum for standard definitions?
const, maybe, but that just reeks of old C.
What's wrong with enum?
should I know what 'standard definitions' means?
Here's a basic overview of my structure
I have a base Spotter class, which comprises of a BAND enum
protected override Dictionary<string, bool> URL_EXTEND_DEF = new Dictionary<string, bool>
{
// Band by meter
{"1m", false}, // BAND_1m
{"2m", false}, // BAND_2m
{"4m", false}, // BAND_4m
{"6m", false}, // BAND_6m
{"10m", false}, // BAND_10m
{"12m", false}, // BAND_12m
{"15m", false}, // BAND_15m
{"17m", false}, // BAND_17m
{"20m", true}, // BAND_20m
{"30m", false}, // BAND_30m
{"40m", false}, // BAND_40m
<edit>
agh
protected override Dictionary<string, bool> URL_EXTEND_DEF = new Dictionary<string, bool>
{
    // Band by meter
    {"1m", false},          // BAND_1m
    {"2m", false},          // BAND_2m
    {"4m", false},          // BAND_4m
    {"6m", false},          // BAND_6m
    {"10m", false},          // BAND_10m
    {"12m", false},         // BAND_12m
    {"15m", false},         // BAND_15m
    {"17m", false},         // BAND_17m
    {"20m", true},          // BAND_20m
    {"30m", false},         // BAND_30m
Then here is the enum
public enum BANDS
        {
            // Band by meter
            BAND_1m,
            BAND_2m,
            BAND_4m,
            BAND_6m,
            BAND_10m,
            BAND_12m,
            BAND_15m,
            BAND_17m,
            BAND_20m,
            BAND_30m,
            BAND_40m,
            BAND_60m,
            BAND_80m,
            BAND_160m,

            // Band by cm
            BAND_1_25cm,
            BAND_3cm,
            BAND_6cm,
            BAND_13cm,
            BAND_23cm,
You know what, a gist would make everyone's life easier. One moment.
So with the base Spotter class I define basic methods, etc.
The inherited classes will have a slightly different URL_EXTEND_DEF
I'm trying to make it easy to know whether the bands are on/off - with enums to know which band is in which index of the Dictionary
Is there a better way to accomplish this?
Hello @Code-Apprentice
Wonders if he scared everyone away...
18:01
walls of code tend to do that =p
Indeed
Let me try a word explanation.
I have a base class called Spotter. In it, there are a bunch of methods, variables, etc.
Of the variables, there is one in particular that I'm wondering how to implement properly: BAND.
The domain isn't immediately obvious to people reading, it's obviously quite specific
My main issue with enums is that they have no behaviour that describes the notion they're talking about
you have to bury that logic somewhere else, usually quite far away from the enum
That is one of the reasons I don't want to use it
I suppose I could just create another class?
You agree with me then, possibly not so much with Kendall (he doesn't get my almost irrational hatred of enums)
You could consider code generation, perhaps
I do agree, I think enums are not a very nice OO approach
18:07
if those bands never ever change in definition, but the way they fit into your code might, writing one class per band would be tedious as hell
i.e. there will always be a 1m band, a 2m band and so on
I was thinking about that, that is, how there is always a 1m band, etc.
but the logic that uses them changes, then you don't really want to have something that's totally static, but you also don't want to have two dozen almost identical classes you have to maintain by hand
So even though there are the same bands, the strings in the dictionary change depending on the inherited class
is this something to do with radar or surveying, btw?
This is for tracking DX (i.e. foreign) ham radio contacts
I'm basically pulling HTML data from both those websites
18:12
ah ,gotcha
So basically, I have a base URL: http://www.sk6aw.net/cluster/?band=
Then I append to that whatever band I'm checking: 20m
oh I think I see, do different sites have different names for what is fundamentally the same thing?
Yep, exactly
Would there be some way to override/extend the names?
I might be changing my mind to a degree in that case
this stuff is data
Then I need some way to know if they are enabled or not. That is why I was thinking of creating a Band class.
yeah?
18:16
As soon as I twigged that there were multiple systems calling the same concept different names it reminded me of something I'm currently working on
(at work, so I can't say too much about it)
Ah, I understand.
Could you give me a promising direction without revealing details? Code is code. =P
would it make sense to create a Band class?
We use a SQL server database to describe the translations between the definitions used by different systems
I wouldn't implement it the way they've done it, but whatever...
Ah...yeah I was hoping to hard-code this.
I suppose the best thing to do would be to implement the basic definition in the base Spotter class.
You could hard-code certain instances of the class, but it would make it more flexible to add others in the future.
18:18
Then, inherited classes "develop" the names contained therein
You can hard-code a dependency on some rows in a database that you know are under your control and will definitely only change when you update your code
brb, sorry Tom
Some other rows can change when the sites change their definitions, and the database does what a database is designed to do and retains integrity between them
I have the following function to pull out data from a JSON.Net JObject:
private Quote getQuote (JToken jsonQuote)
{
Quote quote = new Quote();
quote.date = (string)jsonQuote["date"];
quote.open = (double)jsonQuote["open"];
quote.close = (double)jsonQuote["close"];

return quote;
}
That would make parsing so much easier
18:20
Now how do I "map" this function over a IList<JToken> in order to convert it into a IList<Quote>.
I guess I could do a for loop...my mind is on functional programming for some reason.
sigh
> Malaria News retweeted you
*Twitter*
What I said:
> @[friend] I'd be upper-class if I was using [gin and tonic] to prevent malaria. And also very, very old.
Gui
Gui
@Code-Apprentice where are you getting your quotes?
Gui
Gui
I do the same
sometimes for some symbol, there're no quote, I switch to google quote
do you have a URL for some docs?
Sorry, back
@TomW Regarding the row-dependency approach, that would be perfect so that integrity is maintained.
Parsing HTML is kind of a pain...
well, it's not magic or anything, I'm envisioning storing a string that represents whatever name that site gives to that band
similar to what you're doing, but not involving recompiling the code when they change their minds
you'd still have to do the work of talking to their site to find the information you need
Yeah
So storing the entire url or some object to store the band strings that are appended to the base url as I was doing?
the latter, I think
nothing stopping you creating more tables to look after the url formats, if those might change
Wondering what would be the best data structure to use, especially since each spotter website has different strings for different bands.
Although I would want to have the Spotter base class keep a constant reference, such as BAND_40m
18:36
I'm going to try and represent database schemas in chat messages. Everyone who has tried this before - and I mean everyone - has died.
Then the string for that band could vary depending on the website.
lol
I commend you for it @TomW
table Sites
[Id][SiteName]
table SiteBandDefinitions
[Id][SiteId][BandName]
bah, y u no code format
Paste, highlight all, and then Ctrl-K
better
thanks
Looks good, np
Hmm
18:39
So I'd anticipate you having a query that takes NameYouGiveYourApplication and NameOfSite
and returns rows giving your name for that band, and the other site's name for that band
@Gui not JSON? ;-(
Ah ok
any row where there is a null means they don't use/show that one (or your query is broken)
Gui
Gui
@Code-Apprentice no choice, you have to parse it
I see that
18:41
@TomW That sounds good
rows associated with the SiteId of your own application would never change unless you change your code
I'll look into that later. Bookmarked for now.
I just realized that when I asked Yahoo for a year of data, it only gave me back to 2014-03-27
So I have never utilized database schemas before - would I hard-code the database content to a file and then read from it?
Gui
Gui
it depends of the symbol
Or use some database class, add the information, etc.
Gui
Gui
18:44
if you query 1 year of data for MSFT, what do you have?
The way we do it is to keep sql scripts in source control that add the necessary rows
those would only be run when the environment is first installed
I've been using GOOG for testing
I guess in your case the names would be hardcoded into those scripts, as they probably won't change very often, but if they do it will be without warning
looks like MSFT gives some god data. all the way back to a year ago
@TomW ok
Gui
Gui
18:49
yeah, google and yahoo have the same problem, for some symbol, you don't all the quotes, so you need to manage the failover between both site.
19:01
hmm
@TomW So basically I just have a local .sql script that contains all the information?
or several segregated by function, but yeah
Excellent, I think this will be a much better approach. It will also maintain the integrity of the rows, at least to a greater extent.
OK, well, definitely devise some test cases that ensure it does everything you need
I don't have a very clear idea of the problem you're trying to solve, you know best
That is a good suggestion
Well, I'm not all "up to par" with OOP concepts and the capabilities of .NET, C#, etc.
So this is good for broadening my horizons, so to speak.
Thanks
19:17
no prob
19:32
anybody here use mono?
once in a great while
i'm having trouble configuring pkg-config for use with gtk
apparently it's meant to point to some .pc files related to gtk but I don't know where they're located
0
Q: On Debian, running mono- error CS8027: Error running pkg-config

barlopI am on debian. I did sudo apt-get install mono-complete I am trying to compile this program user@debian:~$ cat a2.cs using Gtk; using System; class Hello { static void Main() { Application.Init (); Window window = new Window ("helloworld"); ...

 
1 hour later…
20:37
Is LongListSelector no longer available?
21:09
It's avalible for windows phone?
user2985029
22:00
what time is it?
22:42
@KendallFrey you around?
feel like helping me figure out a tough problem?
will you be here in 10m or so?
probably
22:44
cool. I'll go get some stuff set up and brb
:)
class A : B.

abstract class B<T> : C.

How can I pass a generic type to class B from class A? in class A i already know what type I will be using
you mean class A : B<int> ?
Ugh my bad, sorry. Generis just confused me again. I can pass the type to the extending class
thanks
23:01
ok. I have caffeine. Life is good
so this is my problem:
1
Q: Request.GetOwinContext returns null within unit test - how do I test OWIN authentication within a unit test?

Pheonixblade9I am currently trying to unit test the authentication for a new WebAPI project I am writing using OWIN to authenticate, and I am having problems with running it in a unit test context. This is my test method: [TestMethod] public void TestRegister() { using (WebApp.Start<Startup>("localhost/...

basically, I'm trying to unit test the AccountController actions. I'm not sure why GetOwinContext is returning null.
I'm not sure if it makes more sense to actually create the controller, or just do an HttpPost to test the stuff.
Explain to me what I need to know, considering that I know absolutely nothing about OWIN and WebAPI except their names.
OWIN is middleware that lets you do lots of things. In this case I'm using it for authentication. It's nice because you can use it with any OWIN-compatible server, so it removes a hard dependency on IIS
WebAPI is MVC without the V, essentially. A bunch of controllers, routing, etc. that returns XML/JSON/whatever
And what of the unit test?
I see how it's failing, but I don't know why I should expect it to work.
well, I'm trying to figure out why my OWINContext isn't being created
does that make sense?
Well, yeah
But I don't really understand what the code is supposed to do
23:13
which code? the test code?
Well, let's focus on:
return _userManager ?? Request.GetOwinContext()
    .GetUserManager<ApplicationUserManager>();
What does that normally do?
it returns a UserManager object that I can do stuff with - like adding or removing users
Do you know the trigger that's causing it to fail?
23:17
not exactly
I've been reading through this: asp.net/aspnet/overview/owin-and-katana/…
So, am I right that it's working in normal code, but in a unit test it's failing?
think of OWIN like NodeJS or maybe ExpressJS
I'm not sure if it's working in normal code yet.
I can grant you GIT access if it's easier to look through the entire code
I doubt it
23:21
wait I have an idea
nope... damn
I was thinking I might be able to set the unit test project to use IIS Express
so I just tested it
when I am running in IIS, I do get an OWINContext
but no UserManager
any ideas?
23:45
No, sorry
23:59
I'm in the process of creating a .sql script and was wondering if there is any way to embed the file in VS so the user does not see it in the installation files?
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