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20:02
@ton.yeung yeah, that's the only kind of recruiter I deal with
because it's in their interest to get you the most money
before I work with someone, I specifically ask them which type they are
the way you said is a stupid way to do business; the salary should be based on the person, not the position.
Them: The position is entirely in VBA.
You: The center cannot hold.
hahaha
dude I helped a friend of mine write a macro in VBA a few months back
I was just raging the entire time
"WTF HOW DO I VARIABLE"
Yeah, I find it terribly annoying.
user862319
I would do that job for 150K, full benefits, remote work and no defined hours.
I would do that for 0 hours as well.
20:05
I got a request the other day via email: "I saw you did this neat canvas 2d thing, with interactive images.. can you write me this intense interactive website in webGL? ktnxbye!"
@rlemon - Ahh, to have a public email
user862319
There are some truly ridiculous people out there...
when the app he was referencing is like 100 million times more involved than what I did, and really not related at all
@TravisJ yea from the wording, I don't think this was a paying gig. more of a "DO IT FOR ME! I COMMAND YOU!"
I just filed as spam and moved on
@rlemon if you can think of a way to do it without losing your mind, quote a ludicrous figure :)
When will people understand an IT professional != software engineer != hacker
20:07
@rlemon - I saw that you pre-loaded some images. NEEDS MAOR FACEBOOK. This must be done by tomorrow.
@MoonOwlPrince when people say "hacker" I read "script kiddie"
real "hackers" call themselves "software engineers" (from my experience)
or SQA, but that is a whole other conversation ;)
When people use the word hacker in news and television it makes them seem kind of ignorant to me.
What is SQA?
@rlemon check out the job posting above, you interested? ;)
Software Quality Assurance
20:09
@rlemon I call myself a software engineer and get FAR too huffy if people call me "just a developer"
People seem to use hacker as a synonym for thief.
yes, as a software engineer, I develop software, but that's only one of the big parts of my job.
I was an angel hacker for a while
SUPER FUN JOB!
user862319
Software engineer is to developer as electrical engineer is to electrician.
@Bob you got it right
Developers do not have to understand metrics regarding performance
20:10
I do a software everything position right now
Software engineers MUST
(love dev)
They should be answerable
@rlemon - Full Stack Developer
@rlemon same here
20:10
but i'm also the engineer, the developer, the designer, the QA and the business analyst
I know a lady who calls herself a software engineer after six months of Python
ohh and i'm my own PM
I design, develop, gather requirements, write the spec (I'm one of the only people who actually writes specs for my shit)
that is fun
we have a PM but he's not technical enough to write specs :/
he's working on it though
20:11
I write down specs.. on scraps of paper scattered on my desk
BUT THEY ARE WRITTEN DOWN!
@rlemon right - I write down a basic design in the ticket
@Pheonixblade9 people laughed at me as to why I took time to master writing functional specs
or at least on a legal pad next to my desk
I draw lots of pictures and write lots of stuff down
yea I have a notebook (or a few) per project
If you can't produce the spec you can't produce the app
20:12
only other person I see do that regularly is our chief architect...
all specs, testing, notes, etc get written down
Btw @Pheonixblade9 do you recommend any material
Literature ie
user862319
The only time I will write down an implementation-level spec is if i need to interoperate with other developers or teams...
Something by Mary Shaw probably?
I really should follow engineering guidelines for my writing. keep stuff in pen in a notebook per project
20:12
The Count of Monte Cristo
@Bob bad practcie
problem is, I have so many random projects, I'd have too many notebooks
@Bob i've come to terms with the fact that other people down the line might need to maintain shit i've done
Great read
I usually just write down the design and use that as the spec
user862319
20:12
Works for me. Why waste time writing something that will never be used.
@rlemon you got it right
user862319
the code always changes. no one ever goes back and changes the spec.
@Bob you think so
Give me the link to your GitHub repo and let me fork all your projects
I just write it as simply as I possibly can and put in lots of comments. The complicated shit comes later with QA and bug fixes
user862319
I think we are getting documentation and specification confused.
20:13
I write the spec before and get it signed off on as well.
that is teh #1 reason I write them
specification: what it should do

documentation: what it does do
user862319
pushing paper
user862319
exactly.
"fuck you! you can't change this now. it's in the spec"
specs help negotiate away from a creeping scope
@rlemon yeah I write down the design so that later I can look at it and think "why did I do it this way" and have an answer
20:14
Documentation should be left to someone else
I agree, however I don't have a docs team
and no one else in house knows how to use the software as well as I do. so yea, best man for the job gets it. unfortunately that is me.
There many excellent English graduates who are hungry
Well then they do not deserve to work with you then
English majors cannot create software documentation.
I work in a company of 8 people. Technical writers are not on the "to hire" list
They cannot understand the jargon, nor reproduce it.
20:17
Why?
user862319
Software documentation is an integral part of the code-to-screen process... Your repository is your doc and it is the responsibility of developers to maintain that as they work.
^
Well said bob
ofc we should all strive to write code that speaks for itself. but sometimes that isn't possible or feasable, at which point thin documentation and a solid spec help
user862319
The specification can go die on a shitty sharepoint folder somewhere as far as I care.
Maybe specs are less important in certain area's - my major two experiences are with SCADA and elearning
specs are super important for both :P
20:19
@rlemon - Random question, does your company operate in the US?
we don't have offices in the US but we do have dealers - in fact we only have one office
user862319
The way I typically have handled spec/requirements is through a ticketing system.
user862319
or email
@TravisJ the majority of our sales are into the US tho
user862319
"hey we need this feature" - go make a ticket
20:20
we sell internationally - we have product everywhere
user862319
ticket # referenced in commit
We should strive to write documentation like Microsoft
but the majority of sales are in USA/Canada/China (USA being the biggest)
And not like Oracle
user862319
Oracle documentation isn't that bad.
20:21
@rlemon - Nice, that sounds about right.
I don't like it
Documenation should contain little to no marketing
user862319
Go check out some IBM stuff if you think Oracle is business/marketing heavy
Oracle documentation is terrible! It clearly states what their product fails at, repeatedly and in bold face :)
user862319
20:24
well there's a reason this URL exists... bad.solutions
lol
motherfucking.codes and there is a reason this url exists...
user862319
user862319
yeah that looks like a developer-friendly meeting right there.
@Travis I remember that episode
it was an excellent episode
I didn't like the IT crowd at the beginning, but it grew on me
20:26
In general, documentation for a language must not refer to other languages
@MoonOwlPrince unless that language is a compile2 language (think CoffeeScript)
user862319
I prefer to write all of my comments in spanish.
@Bob I worked with a co-op who put all exceptions in Russian and all comments in Russian
the team lead working over him did no code reviews until after he left
he was tasked with fixing it all, he was pissed.
20:27
Yes
I hate the Python docs
His own stupid fault for not running code reviews
deserved what he got
user862319
that sounds horrible
totally
the rest of the dev team thought it was hilarious
the co-op was hilarious guy tho
"Dima" was his name, and he did nothing but crack jokes
@MoonOwlPrince The Python C API docs are worse :p
especially when they forget to tell you whether a return value is a borrowed reference or not
@ton.yeung Just write it from scratch instead of porting ;)
@ReedCopsey exactly
20:30
@ReedCopsey - Can F# be used with vnext?
I do not want to write such documentation in my career. Technical Communication and Literature 101 taught me Python docs suck
user862319
What's wrong with the python docs?
You think they are okay???
user862319
yes
@MoonOwlPrince - You may want to consider taking some of your lecturer's advice with a grain of salt.
20:31
@MoonOwlPrince if they suck so bad, go improve them
@MoonOwlPrince - It isn't exactly MIT over there.
@TravisJ Yes - though support isn't 100% (*yet)
but it works reasonably well
user862319
But then they have to be at least good enough
Like GCC for example
sorry miss ping
@ton.yeung - Cheez Wiz U
20:32
GCC has been around for decades and is much more heavily used than Python.
it's also much simpler.
user862319
gcc and python are two completely different things
user862319
hey lets talk about uranium-235 and the color red in the same context like it makes sense :D
@Bob - Red was gold, uranium was more of a yellow.
user862319
What have I done
@Bob - That is why yellow tinted glass from pre 1950 was slightly irradiated
20:36
Hi there. Does anyone know how I can annotate a WCF service method to limit it to the role of a domain admin only?
@John are you thinking by analogy with [Authorize] on MVC controller actions, for example?
user862319
something like... [PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Role = "domainadmin")]
Huh. So you actually can. I wasn't aware of [PrincipalPermission]
Can haz ggl
20:39
I fail at typing
Guys I have a question. If the limit for a C# object is 2 GB, happens when .NET runs on a 1 GB Vista machine at a 2 GB C# object is instantiated
I don't really think that happens
Elementary, my dear MoonOwl. You throw the vista machine off of the tallest building in your area.
There must be a hack Microsoft employed to split the object
What really happens is that virtual memory will create pages on the hard drive, and the operation will run very slowly.
user862319
^
20:44
@TravisJ thanks
turn down for what?
@Pheonixblade9 .js
best freaking script ever!
@ton.yeung turn down for... what?
!!tell ton.yeung google turndownforwhat.js
20:49
@Bob yeah, that. But is the role "domainadmin" or something else?
user862319
whatever you configure in your role provider
@TomW It's like this <PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Role:="everyone")> but not "everyone", I
@TomW It's like <PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Role:="everyone")> but I
@TomW Can't friggin type. It's like <PrincipalPermission(SecurityAction.Demand, Role:="everyone")> but I'm looking for domain admin
user862319
Whatever that returns for your app
20:50
whatever your domain admin role name is
@ton.yeung <3
user862319
I would just set up an interactive session and invoke that method to get whatever ASP thinks the available roles are.
@Bob It's not hosted in ASP.NET, it's hosted in WinForms
standalone
20:51
We should have .NET applets
user862319
same deal
@Bob Do I need to import system.web DLL?
@MoonOwlPrince - Why? IE allows developers to run code straight from your machine, it will even install apps without clicking and modify the registry without you knowing :)
@TravisJ Is that not IE4
user862319
20:54
@John I actually have no idea in the context of winforms...
@Bob Alright thanks though. I'll see if I can tool around with figuring out the calling user's roles.
@MoonOwlPrince - That is IE 11
Or, if you prefer Mosiac+
The idea of including hooks for every single transfer protocol was interesting at first, but now having them is a terrible liability.
The technology that IE sits on is terribly outdated and needs to be replaced not updated.
How much work do you think it would be for them to rip out the rendering engine and save that, and throw everything else away?
It makes no sense for users to constantly worry about losing all of their work because they clicked on one internet link. In my opinion this is Microsoft's greatest failure.
Based on no insider knowledge at all, I mean

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