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15:00
I then validate everything server side and produce fault messages if it went bad.
@TravisJ yeah, what you said doesn't make sense
@KendallFrey - Ah, kids :)
@TravisJ yeah. Squishy.
Basically I don't trust anything the client does.
boogie on down? no, boogie on dew. boogie flip table.
15:00
@KendallFrey we're saying that "submit button gives you all your errors at once" sucks, so you validate on the client ANYWAY.
Yeah don't wait til submit, that is 90's style.
@TetsujinnoOni can i simply lock the whole Bitmap , then do the work on it, and then fully unlock it at the end? or do i really have to lock/unlock areas on it only?
I will submit on blur or delay.
If the server is going to be hit from validation, I usually provide a localized interface to deal with a cached set.
And then validate against that set, fallback to server, and then validate again once it gets to server from submit.
What kind of rules?
if you're willing to do partial model posts in AJAX? everything can be validated all the time.
Stuff that can't be validated client side shouldn't be client side imo
15:04
@ton.yeung that's requirements, not guidelines
oh, okay
@ton.yeung - tenant identification
@ton.yeung when you say client side, do you mean it must purely javascript and not a single touch of the server, or it is fine for using ajax
@ton Foreign relationship enforcement
@TravisJ wouldn't you attach that to the request based on the auth cookie server side anyway?
@TetsujinnoOni - My point was it shouldn't be client side at all, they should be entirely clueless of that parameter :)
15:06
@tweray yeah, that's kinda where I was heading. How "client" is the client (and I'm not assuming we're in JS because mobile....)
@TravisJ agree. (getting my brain wrapped around that for a complete redesign of a system to multitenancy is 'fun')
@TetsujinnoOni - I do it in two places. Once in my generic repository and once in the request.
@ton.yeung - For example, if a domain entity is exposed via client side, and they enter an erroneous foreign key value, that value both should not be available, and should not involve client side validation.
Can you explain what umbrella you are using for "entity uniqueness"?
@ton.yeung sounds like you're trying to write an internal policy of what not to send down to the client to validate?
@ton.yeung you can do interaction with server before the final form submit through ajax but keep user on the same page, in which case everything can be validated "on client side", but that also means, it's not purely client side activity since there are http request hitting server
@ton.yeung - So you are not worried about checking for existence? You are purely worried about new insertions?
@ton.yeung - The way to solve the foreign relation would be to check what the existing values were for the entity and ensure they are not changed / are re-used.
@ton.yeung - I have client side validation that hits the server. For example, for unique name checking I have an ajax request that runs in the background and the provides client side feedback. With the right knowledge it could be disabled.
it's a rabbit hole to chase unknown unknowns
15:11
@ton.yeung - So you are worried about validating an entity that is brand new in the table?
"what don't I know that I don't know?"
@ton.yeung - Here is my issue with that. Does it work with js disabled?
@ton.yeung yeah.
@ton.yeung - People will disabled JS to bypass client side validation.
Okay
So then it isn't purely client side :)
I know but your use of that word confused me for a second
It is kind of hard to show tone online. I was more confirming that was the case than chiding.
I think the question is better stated as "what kinds of things can't we validate on the client for early feedback"?
15:15
Hi all, can anyone help me with a simple trouble I'm havin with some binding in wpf?
So, assuming that the client behaved, and followed all the rules, and it gets back to the server, and your uniqueness checks pass, we have reached the unkown part of what else do I worry about right here?
I'm not used to a useful editor being present in chats ;)
@ton.yeung - At that point I think the only worry would be business logic.
I apparently spend too much time in primitive chat rooms.
@TravisJ @ton.yeung yeah, that seems like actual business rule application is what you're starting at that point. "This is in the right form, we can apply our rules."
15:18
@ton.yeung Something that involves checking metrics of a corpus at submission time to route
@ton.yeung - That would depend on what type of business logic you use :) Multi tenant rules should be the same as single tenant (as your uniqueness already handled the multi tenant issue).
anything that involves routing decisions, really.
@ton.yeung - For example, if you were using some sort of scheduling, it may make sense to ensure that there is enough time/space for the slot being inserted.
@ton.yeung if you have a decision in the business rule, and the decision may involve examining state that isn't inherent in your request. ('routing' the request in a messaging model)
@ton.yeung - You may also want to make sure that while the submission occurred, the requirements for the assumption did not change. As in, there was an order for part A, but part A was just ordered, so now it isn't needed.
@VenkatRenukaPrasad it seems the "don't ask to ask" starred question has fallen off. we're waiting for a question that even remotely inspires a response.
@ton.yeung - Hard to make generic inference to business logic as a genre :P
@TetsujinnoOni what does that mean man?
Nice bit of WTFery today
@ton.yeung - I know, but it is really hard to not be generic without anything specific :(
15:23
Hey guys, Newtonsoft is barfing on UNC string being sent using JSON.stringify form ajax call
JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<ExtendedObjectProperty>>(jsonExtendedObject);
.sqlproj projects, if you create a user in your project, silently generate REVOKE CONNECT for that user when they publish. This means the user you've just created can't do anything at all.
@ton.yeung the part ordering example Travis cited would be a good one. Assignment of work to a specific facility based on the work's properties and facility availability metrics.
@ton.yeung - Trying to think of more
@ton.yeung yeah, you're out of validation and into business rules at that point. I'm having a hard time pinning down an example of something on the validation side of that boundary.
@ton.yeung authorization checks that are data-sensitive?
@ton.yeung - I think once you do client side, server side, uniqueness, business logic, it gets to the point of exception handling, error reporting back to client, success reporting, etc.
15:28
@ton.yeung API where a user can spend up to X on category A but requires an enhanced authorization to spend up to Y....
@ton.yeung - Ah! found one :P
Although, not sure now.
@ton.yeung It's the only example coming to mind of business logic that might straddle the 'validation' border. prior approval code must be present.... which seems like an existence check that could be handled client side and falls under your uniqueness umbrellla.
@ton.yeung - Perhaps some sort of throttle test to make sure the user is not modifying the insertions at too fast of a speed.
@ton.yeung nah, that's just a workflow saga, right?
@ton.yeung - For example, if a user books 100 times in the past 15 minutes, perhaps that should raise a red flag.
15:31
@VenkatRenukaPrasad My point was: So ask your question already, stop trying to get our attention with null value statements.
@ton.yeung - That was also the "not sure now" part. But on submission prior to validation could get returned.
Guys are there any ways in C# codebehind I can trick JsonConvert.DesrializeObject to handle backslashes in unc path: \\\\uncpath\\here\\there\\everywhere
And then perhaps the booking was just in progress for most of that and they really only booked like 5, but it took 100 due to reasons. Dropped packets, drunk, old people fighting UI, etc.
would I search google for "uri class"
possibly
15:35
erm can anyone just explain me what is exactly the BytesPerPixel in this answer please? stackoverflow.com/a/24702215/3916429 I assume here it is 8bytes * 4 channels (R/G/B/G). So if no Gamma, 3*8? no?
lol
you ever watch that show? so funny
@user3916429 you're out of APIs I'm normally using, but it looks like it'd be stackoverflow.com/questions/1126967/…
@ton.yeung reasons to love my life: that movie was a perfect date movie for my wife and I....
thanks @TetsujinnoOni
15:40
@user3916429 - That metric seems to be calculated elsewhere. Perhaps as a result of varying due to some external logic. We can only guess at what its value is. It really depends on the color depth and transparency, which plays into the color.
@travisj that answer seems to be using 32bpp based on the lockbits call
yea so for a RGB only image, 3 * byte type per pixels, means it would be equal to 24. ok thank you
... make sure you use the right pixel format in your lockbits if you're a 24bpp image.
@TetsujinnoOni - Yeah, as a result of the pixelformat. But what the value of the variable is we can only guess at :P
yea i will use sourceImage.pixelFormat
15:42
agreed, we can guess intent, but we can't guess value.
@user3916429 - If it uses RGBA then it would be 32 as Tetsujin notes (8 bits per)
yup what i though. haaaaaaaaaaaaa i love SO lol
there are sooo many variables in this answers that are out of the actual code. its getting annoying while trying to understand it. Since i dont know LockBits at all yet
There's very little I enjoy less than debugging a behavioral issue from a framework.
those offsets comes from nowhere lol
can anyone explain me what those strideOffset and tileOffset are seriously? i guess it will be my last question about that code... i hope so
@SpencerRuport - I very strongly hate it when I end up having to manually patch third party framework via nefarious means.
15:55
What are those?
Ohhh no I do not have one but I think I want one.
@TravisJ - Yep. And you never know for sure if you found a bug or some obscure behavior of the framework due to some magical and terribly under-documented setting.
@SpencerRuport - By the time I am manually editing it, I know :P And am usually pretty fed up lol
Writing bug reports with full documentation that I know will take like 10 months to patch =/ ugh
I really hate framework bugs
"When an automated task has to be run manually"
And OS bugs. My secondary monitor won't turn on when my system comes back from standby.
Even if I unplug the dock and plug it back in.
o_o
I think I'm looking forward to the inevitable takeover of linux for desktops.
I've seen that bug. It's a graphics driver issue. It's probably never going to get resolved.
Yep. Come to expect that kind of thing.
Fixing issues isn't profitable anymore.
16:08
I'm glad .Net is becoming more open as a framework
dfsdfgsdfsd
then again it's always been one of the most robust stacks
Database projects = buggy as f
haha
@Squiggle - Yep. My theory is MS is doing that in the hopes that cross platform support of .Net will translate into more Windows Mobile apps.
16:09
hmm interesting codebabes.com
Their Desktop OS revenues are drying up. People are replacing desktops with phones.
@SpencerRuport yeah, and Win10 upgrade revenue = 0....
@SpencerRuport I think there's a longer-term strategy there.
Windows mobile is a pretty long term strategy.
yeah, but there's nothing to be directly monetized from getting a .Net stack on Linux.
16:13
It's getting the .Net stack on everything. Linux, Android, iOS etc.
It even means linux-based 3rd-party hosting for web applications. No Windows licenses to pay...
yeah precisely.
@SpencerRuport FreeBSD, MacOS ports were both really active in the CoreCLR repo last time I looked.
they want .Net everywhere, and personally I'm OK with that. I like .Net way more than I like Windows :)
OpenBSD hardened kernel + NetFX is conceptually an attractive stack
Right now when a .Net developer wants to make a mobile application they use Java. Getting .Net to run natively on Android means that .Net developers, even if they're targetting Android will have no trouble porting to Windows Phone.
16:15
@ton.yeung small VPSen are still cheaper without the OS tax
I'm a .Net Server/HTML5 UI kinda guy, so I'm like whatever
@Squiggle that seems to be a common pattern in here
I'll be happy to get the .Net web stack on whatever OS is most convenient.
Yeah a lot of mobile apps seem to be going back to web applications with a lot of responsive design but there's still a lot of development that benefits from not using a browser.
Games for example.
doot de doot. Home time. Sunshine and beer are waiting for me.
16:17
Latez
@SpencerRuport what about WebGL?!!
right. Really going now.
I haven't looked at it but graphics aren't the only aspect to it.
I actually enjoy WPF MVVM dev, so... ambivalent.
I don't know if you can use a bluetooth controller in a browser for example.
@SpencerRuport have you looked at the Age of Ascent puff piece on MSDN?
16:18
Nope
posted on April 09, 2015 by Visual Studio Blog

Have you attended a Connect(“Live”); event? What? You haven’t? Well, then, here’s the details: These events are 1-hour long, informal, live-streaming chats with the product teams, providing you an opportunity to ask questions and share feedback. Every few weeks we’ll bring a new team for an open mic Q&A session. Recently, on the 26th of February, we held our fi

!!google Age of Ascent MSDN
@TetsujinnoOni - That looks cool
I wonder what Star Citizen is planning to do for servers.
@SpencerRuport it's definitely a cool piece to show for MS.
16:23
Indeed.
Argh. amCharts why you no have a UI built for managing your themes.
I'm more interested in the decentralized movements of late but this is one area where a centralized cloud can really demonstrate it's capabilities.
@SpencerRuport Yeah, Apprenda HQ is across the river from my place, so I'm starting to follow what they're up to more closely.
Would it be overly redundant, to have a class that accepts an int then convert to string to reparse as an int. For some additional model validation.
A warrant canary is a method by which a communications service provider informs its users that the provider has not been served with a secret government subpoena. Secret subpoenas, including those covered under 18 U.S.C. §2709(c) of the USA Patriot Act, provide criminal penalties for disclosing the existence of the warrant to any third party, including the service provider's users. A warrant canary may be posted by the provider to inform users of dates that they have not been served a secret subpoena. If the canary has not been updated in the time period specified by the host, users are to assume...
16:39
there was a bit of a kerfuffle a few weeks ago about someone's warrant canary
oh?
I've always wondered if those things actually work.
most of the time, yeah
Windows Mobile has always sucked though
sorry the chat just updated, that was a response to a comment from half an hour ago
when do referenced assemblies become loaded assemblies?
I'm trying to work out whether I should search all referenced assemblies for views, or all loaded assemblies
in the case of an MVC website
Well, referenced assemblies may not be loaded and vice versa
Specifically, if you never use a reference, I think the compiler discards it.
hey guys
16:53
so all referenced assemblies once compiled could be loaded, but not all referenced assemblies could be loaded at that moment in time?
@ton.yeung like a marketing poster, I suspect
do I need to load an assembly to get the resources it contains?
also that codebabes website is wrong, it says print is a function in PHP
print is a language construct in PHP
@Bonner No, if you never use a referenced assembly, it won't even be compiled as a reference
I'm not sure if referenced assemblies are lazy-loaded, but I would guess that they are loaded immediately on startup.
I might be able to test this so with what you have said I'll do a bit of testing and see what the results are

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