@jth41 - 1st off, that wreaks of obfuscation. Second, you need a type to represent the units being passed to your method in addition to the type that is representing the result.
@jth41 - VolumetricFlowRate flowRate = new VolumetricFlowRate<DistanceTypes.InchesCubed,VolumetricFlowRateType.InchesCubedPerSecond>(flowRateAsDouble);
You are treating 50 meters per hour cubed, 50 miles per hour, and 50 meters per second cubed as the same. As a result internally they are being miscalculated.
> "We need to put foreign keys on auxiliary tables in order to enforce the relationships between primary and secondary data." We don't need foreign keys in the database; they slow everything down and make it harder to delete stuff. We'll just keep everything straight in code!
> No, keep writing tests. If we have enough of them and it becomes too cumbersome to change it all, the users won't be able to make changes to this iteration of development, and it will all get pushed to version 2.0!
@ton.yeung pub Commonly used shorthand for "Public House". Pubs are non-membership bars serving all sorts of alcoholic beverages. Most commonly found in the British Isles or Eire.
@CharlieBrown I know there is a lot left to be desired in the library, to be honest we have only been using Force and Distance up to this point. It's most useful feature is its equality
@jth41 - Okay, so here is what I would suggest. Take, for example, Inch. You could make type Inch internally have a power property, and as inches are multiplied together they return a new Inch with a higher power property. This would solve the problem of having to track the prefix values. You could also make an enum for the prefix values, and pass them as part of the constructor for base units, such as Inch or Meter, and the set the power property with the correlating 10^n value.
It would allow things like new Meter(5,3);// 5 km or 5000 meters new Meter(5,-2);// 5 cm or .05 meters new Meter(5,PowerScale.Nano);// 5nm or .000005 meters
@JohanLarsson The main difference with this library is the attempt to solve equality at the same time as unit conversion. In the particular industry I work in anything less than 1/32 an inch should be considered equal
@KendallFrey - How would you solve it? I think doing it like that would allow a lot of calculation to occur without needing to worry about specifying useless InchesSquared types for your example.
Ok. So now I want to save this section in chat by copying a URL and pasting it into our issue tracker as a todo for my codegen. Is there a nifty way to save theses specific chat logs
Is is possible to have a regular expression that accomplishes the functionality of "(someOptionalSubstring)?" without creating an additional capturing group?
can anyone point me in the right direction for something in .NET that will allow me to await some Boolean condition with a timeout? Im testing async code in a unit test, and want to give it time to finish without resorting to crude Thread sleeps
there is no reason I cant do it that way, so I suppose I will. I am used to JUnit, and in JUnit I use a utility called Awaitility to await conditions for async unit tests
(in general, it sounds like the function you're trying to test is pretty nasty/impure, and should be refactored to return Task<bool> in the first place :) )