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17:02
@ton.yeung - Updating the canvas render.
Ok, this feels like a dumb question but here it goes. Directory.Delete has an overload that specifies a bool indicating to delete the subdirectories or not. How would you NOT delete subdirectories if you delete the parent directory? What would happen to the subdirectories?
@BrandenBoucher /shrug
@BrandenBoucher Why ask when you could easily write a test case to find out? (Throws exception if there are non-empty subdirectories iirc)
yeah, throws IOException if the condition (directory not empty, recursive == false) See msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/fxeahc5f%28v=vs.110%29.aspx
I am using this XAML code but the data is not getting displayed. I can see only the column names without any data. <DataGrid x:Name="employeeDataGrid" AutoGenerateColumns="False" EnableRowVirtualization="True" ItemsSource="{Binding}" Margin="668,188,25,10" RowDetailsVisibilityMode="VisibleWhenSelected">
@ton.yeung it means extrapolate :P
about what
17:13
@Bonner Yes.... how would you utilize an assembly without loading it?
!!wiki interpolation
In the mathematical field of numerical analysis, interpolation is a method of constructing new data points within the range of a discrete set of known data points. In engineering and science, one often has a number of data points, obtained by sampling or experimentation, which represent the values of a function for a limited number of values of the independent variable. It is often required to interpolate (i.e. estimate) the value of that function for an intermediate value of the independent variable. This may be achieved by curve fitting or regression analysis. A different problem which is closely...
well I'm not sure fully what is considered a resource but I would have thought that resources are static so could be read without loading the dll
@ton.yeung I believe that's a case of "extrapolate and then adjust when updates are received that change the 'reality' versus 'extrapolated' to appear smooth"
@ton.yeung yeah, extrapolation
@TetsujinnoOni that's a whole new ball game
17:16
@KendallFrey but I believe that's what they're talking about in the context of the article. Or should be.
@TetsujinnoOni - What don't you like about windows mobile? I have a windows phone and I don't get the hate.
That's not what it says in the quote ton posted
@Bonner Yeah, you should probably define what you mean by "resource"
a view
Thats compiled code, so unquestionably the assembly would have to be loaded
17:18
in which case would be a HTML file, which is later built using the MVC build manager
@SpencerRuport mainly the lack of Ingress on it and price point, at this point. I've got a nexus 5 that serves quite nicely
Ok, still part of the assembly though
a xxx.cshtml file is compiled when the assembly is compiled?
Look at the output, but I wouldn't be surprised
Basically, if its part of the DLL, you have to load the assembly
if its not, then its just a file on the filesystem, so clearly you don't have to load it
I know when you compile a website, the views are not included, unless you specify to embed them, but I think they are compiled on the fly and cached
17:20
though if it compiles and then depends on the assembly, it will be loaded
that makes sense
I'm not familiar enough with MVC to say for sure how it does that
@Bonner there is a setting to compile the views or not
@bonner you might want to look at the code for ThinkTecture IdentityServer, they do some interesting things with embedded views
17:23
@Pheonixblade9 yup I have one project embedding them and one referencing the project which has them embedded but contains it's own views on the FS
I've been using VS to pick which view to embed using the file properties, but that project setting makes it a lot easier than having to select each one, thanks for that
@TetsujinnoOni looking now thanks
good afternoon!
my name is steve
can i haz halp, i needz 2 convert 2000000 lines of C++ to C#
good afternoon!
my name is Jennifer
in 2 hours, do it plz
lol jen
17:28
i am 18, i swear
lemme see an id
oh you don't hvae one? guess i'll shoot you in the back
18/f/grand rapids
I'm just going to shoot myself
uh oh, whats wrong
17:31
@TetsujinnoOni - Lack of ingress? I don't follow.
my wife has put me under so much pressure to get this new job, that I'm having to learn so much in such a short space of time
@SpencerRuport my social gaming / exercise motivation app is on ios or android, not WinMo.
she started a business, that was going really well, then she couldn't be arsed and now we can't pay our bills, so I'm having to bridge the gap and the pressure is getting to me
Lack of apps.
17:32
@SpencerRuport Specific app, in this case.
No argument there. I was talking specifically about the OS itself. It's stable, clean and easy to use.
wanna swap? I'll do the c++ conversion you can have my wife lol
@Bonner aw :(
Lack of apps is a different problem.
sorry dude
17:33
@SpencerRuport I was a fairly happy winmo user on the old HTC Tilt and Tilt 2 devices.
I have a nokia lumia 521
!!google galaxy s6 release date
Have any of you ever tried pair programming?
@SpencerRuport yeah we do it ALL the time
17:36
@SpencerRuport I silently use techniques from the XP description of it when I'm mentoring the particularly hard to get through to
my boss likes to do it
very annoying
I'm pretty sure he doesn't do it right though
mob programming is something we've been talking about trying but haven't
is that like pair programming but with a hundred people
@KendallFrey 3+
that is a hundred
17:38
a hundred would be overkill, but yeah lol
3 is overkill
@SpencerRuport yes, love it
we set up two 60 inch tv's in our collab room, so we could mob program
@KendallFrey depends
17:38
I've had very limited experience with it but it was with a junior developer. I enjoyed that. I wonder how it would be with a peer.
@SpencerRuport it's iffy, it's hard with people watching you, but once you get over that, it's not too bad, if you're 'driving'
@SpencerRuport pair programming is most effective with a junior/senior IMO but there's definitely some value in doing it with a peer for sticky stuff
I wouldn't do pair programming for super simple stuff, but for anything mildly complex it is very helpful
I have a feeling it requires the right group of people
yeah, doing pair programming with a bunch of construction workers would be a disaster
17:44
its not so fun when youre not driving, it gets boring
but it's easier to think as a group and bounce ideas off of eachother
@Pheonixblade9 yeah, that has been my experience as well. XP would have you do it all the time.

@SteveG XP practice says the driver should be changing organically every few minutes
Few minutes??
thats easy to say, harder to do, especially when you're trying to figure stuff out and not actually programming
@SpencerRuport yeah - if it's really pair programming, the theory is that who is driving should shift back and forth as each person in the pair sees the next curve in the path
I think it would take me a few minutes just to adjust the IDE to the way I like.
17:45
@SteveG yeah, see the big weaselly "theory" in that statement ;)
That part sounds like a theory by someone who hasn't spent a lot of time programming. :P
@SpencerRuport Have you read XPX, XPX2, and XPI?
"what do you look like in your dreams?" "i got a big afro, and a wooden leg" @KendallFrey
17:47
@SteveG XD
gotcha
@SpencerRuport They were experimenting with turning some recommended practices up to "as hard as you can". It seems to have worked out for them but turns out to be hard, hard, hard to implement that level of discipline across the industry.
> turning some recommended practices up to "as hard as you can".
I don't understand what you mean there.
few minutes can mean anything from 5 to 30 minutes
I'm reminded of one of my CS professors and his lecture approach where he would write code on the board and ask random students what the next line of code should be
17:49
@MikeAsdf i like that
And then at the end point out the edge cases we missed and why our linked list implementation would fail
yeah, we had a good professor who did that too
or
he would throw a bunch of code on the screen, and we'd go one at a time, saying what the next line 'does'
I'm kind of curious if computer science courses have changed at all since I was in school.
anyone ever check this out codingame.com/games
2
@SpencerRuport idk, all of our classes were with c++, so probably not so much lol
17:55
@SpencerRuport The XP notion is that "code review is good, so if we pair program, we're code reviewing all the time. Unit testing is good, so if we don't write any code without a unit test that should help us when we.... Refactor mercilessly, because it pays off technical debt immediately..."
turn up the priority of all of the "good software development" practices to "all the way".
@Spenc
@SpencerRuport The biggest barriers to these development practices are cultural
@TetsujinnoOni - Ah I getcha.
Where I work we have a code-review tool in place (crucible). I set it up and maintain it. Myself and my other colleague pair sometimes and always review. Either we look over eachothers shoulder or use crucible
We are also the only ones. My boss says "oh, yeah, unit testing and CR are what we want. Everyone: Start doing it"
Then, they don't and he says nothing. They check in crap, break it or, better yet, COMPLAIN that our unit tests are too rigorous!
@juanvan - That's a cool site.
Start with your own team when rolling out CR or pairing. It's got to grow organically
18:01
does seem like a place I could lost a month
@ChristianBongiorno start with yourself. make it valuable. pair promiscuously.
Promiscuously huh? Eyes programmer next to him "How you doin'?"
... if you're going to go down the pair programming road, rotating pairs is how you move knowledge around the team
If a bunch of people are going to be touching my keyboard I'm going to need protection.
Wouldn't want to catch something.
18:08
Those are too small.
Yeah, promiscuous pair programming makes your sick leave policy want to be "stay the HELL HOME" .... with the manager telling you you're not a hero, you're a bastard for coming in while sick.... (mitigating circumstances and all apply, but generally....)
EventHandler handler = null;
handler = (s, e) =>
    {
        // stuff
        Event -= handler;
    };
Event += handler;
Is this a legit pattern?
or is there a better way?
Is handler likely to be changed afterwards?
the variable? no
18:16
Then you are probably OK. Though it breaks my rule of lambdas
The use case I have is running a continuation on an async operation
which has only an event
1 line => Lambda
2 lines => Maybe lambda
3 or more => Named method
@BradleyDotNET it's only 2 SLoC
So I'm maybe good
@BradleyDotNET - You would love my 37 line recursive lambda then :D
I'll bet
18:17
Javascript version:
@KendallFrey yeah, you should be fine. The closure won't break you
recursive lamdas are terrible in C#
nonsense
gotta use that temporary null
@BradleyDotNET closures have bitten me pretty hard before
18:18
is there a way to recurse the lambda without naming it?
me too. That said, I've used them to do some stuff you totally shouldn't be able to
@ohmusama I don't think so
okay, I didn't think so
It is possible to recurse in lambdas without assigning a garbage value first though
it's just not pretty
Not too much trouble to do = null; name = () =? {}
Func<x, y> f = null;f = (x =>{})(x);
18:27
Oh, C# has lambda? I didn't know that
since 3.0 I believe
I don't write C# much. I have been writing Java but Thinking of how to tryout C# without a pricy MSDEV license
Lambdas + LINQ = awesome
In 2007
but thats 3.5 IIRC
18:29
.net 3.5
c# 3
Java just got lambda in 8
@ChristianBongiorno You can always use the community edition
and the express editions have been free since at least 2005
And, I agree with previous posts. They can get out-fo-hand
How well does mono work these days?
I should give it a go then
about as well as it did before...
which is :)
?
18:30
@ChristianBongiorno Xamarin Studio and the Community Edition both work well
suffice it to say I'm happy to see .NET Core come out
Mono sucks
@BradleyDotNET Really? How long has it been since you've used it?
The question is: can I run C# code on non-windows?
I am total noob on this
It's improved dramatically in the last couple of years
@ChristianBongiorno yes - I know many developers who work exclusively on Mac - and do nothing but F# and C#
@ReedCopsey Last time I used it the WCF support wasn't that great, and obviously it still doesn't work with WPF (granted, .NET Core won't either)
And it still hasn't caught up with .NET 4.5 yet IIRC
18:31
@BradleyDotNET yeah - WPF is really a purely windows tech
Ok, then. How to get my hello world app to run on, say, Centos?
@BradleyDotNET It's caught up with 4.5, though;)
@BradleyDotNET and WCF doesn't work well anywhere :p
i'm watching CoreFX and CoreCLR eagerly.
mono = sucks?
Well, the last time I used it was before it caught up with that :(
18:32
@ton.yeung yes, WPF is not on the current open sourcing schedule. Xamarin.Forms seems likely to fill that niche. :/
Xamarin.Forms is pretty neat. It's about time
@TetsujinnoOni WPF will probably never go cross platform
I'm very glad all my target systems are windows
makes life... simpler
@ReedCopsey Seems unlikely to me too but I really am fond of XAML MVVM.
@TetsujinnoOni Xamarin Forms ;) it's pretty decent, and getting better every day
but, to be fair, you'll probably never get quite the same style experience when you're trying to support >1 platform
unless you're willing to give up all sense of platform specific controls
18:34
My target systems are either Linux or Windows. I never know which
user862319
Why the hell does Jira think it needs 2 gigs of ram on a default install?
crap, what the hell was my kickstarter pledge supposed to break down to in add ons....
Thanks for input guys
user862319
Yep it totally just cratered a t2.micro
How do you handle dependencies in C#?
18:37
@ChristianBongiorno as in Dependency Injection?
it's a bit older, but I think it's the same basic talk
No, as in "my app needs (lib-something v2 ) and (someotherlib v4). But, (someotherlib v4) depends on lib-something v1
But, dependency injection is a good question too
Nugget
Nuget, nuget -- it just sounds brown, arm and chewy :)
warm
What's the standard on dependency injection?
user862319
I like to pronounce it nugget
@ChristianBongiorno there are quite a few options
and it kind of depends slightly on how you like to approach it
user862319
18:41
and if it's purely for extensibility, MEF is pretty decent, but it's not really full DI
(but its nice that it's in the framework directly :) )
Alrighty then. Thanks
@Bob the people who create it don't pronounce it that way ;)
user862319
MEF is not intended to be used as DI...
18:41
Time for lunch. Input is welcome
@Bob Hence my comment - it's not really DI, but it's great if you're only after extensibility
user862319
DI assumes you know about all of the components, MEF assumes you only know of the interfaces.
user862319
I use both :D
user862319
Unity+MEF is magical
@Bob not necessarily true (in either case) ;)
@ton.yeung me neither
user862319
18:43
@ton.yeung Looks like its time for our quarterly DI framework argument
then again, I'm getting to where I like DI less and less ;)
user862319
lol what. DI is not some fad you can throw away like its a javascript framework.
@ton.yeung DI solves a problem that shouldn't necessarily exist in the first place - it's often really a band aid over OO hell
@Bob - I wouldn't just disagree with Reed out of hand. I did that once. :( My ego is still healing.
18:45
not saying it doesn't have a place, but it's way, way overused
Kinda like WCF. cough
@ReedCopsey THANK YOU!
if people just did proper functional programming, DI would be unnecessary
instead you have a ton of stuff being injected into your classes that isn't always necessary
@ton.yeung okay - so, testing - I assume you're using DI for mocking mostly?
:D Know Mark Seemann ? Wrote the book (probably the best one) on DI for C#... manning.com/seemann
he did a great talk recently - worth watching on that subject: gotocon.com/aarhus-2014/presentations/…
@ReedCopsey - I like that book a lot, even if I am not a fan of the pattern in general.
@TravisJ to be honest, I'm pretty sure Mark's not a huge fan of the pattern anymore either ;)
mocking is almost always only required because of mutability and state being poorly managed
since mocks really only make sense (mostly) if there are side effects
which pretty much means - make your code clean, and you don't need mocks
user862319
18:50
@ReedCopsey That book is amazing. I have it sitting right next to me.
which means you don't need DI anymore
user862319
Changed how I thought about software development
so, mass deleting things from a db is bad for performance if you don't follow that up with rebuilds... just FYI
@ReedCopsey - I saw the slides but couldn't find the video in your link
user862319
@ohmusama I have had to drop indexes during deletion and then recreate afterwards
oh @Bob took 30min to download the db and 5min to process and 5min to delete what I wanted
user862319
I told you lol
@ReedCopsey - Thanks I see it there
not 22 seconds, but close enough
user862319
not 22 days.
18:52
indeed!
@ReedCopsey I'm using mocking in my tests to replace API calls with a static response
user862319
Seriously this performance is bad... Anyone have experience with Jira?
now for some reason I've got a perpetual 13 database level shared locks for insert/updates that are taking forever to resolve
@Pheonixblade9 And mark's new approach would be to replace the API call with it's signature, and just pass a different function ;)
@ReedCopsey via interfaces?
18:53
@Pheonixblade9 no - delegates (though he's using F#, so it's just a function)
but even in C#, it's far, far simpler
can anyone explain why one would use f# over c#?
@ohmusama lol - sure ;) how much time do you have?
45 min
18:55
@ohmusama it's really good if you're developing code for someone who is willing to accept change :)
it's not so good if you're working for a bank/insurance company who is like "whaaaaa? you mean COBOL is difficult to maintain???"
the two things that sold it for me were algebraic data types and full support for working with them
(note I am being sarcastic)
"so it can do virtually everything that C# can do."
and the fact that the language syntax is so much cleaner
@ReedCopsey - Kind of like js's callback functions
18:56
js's callback functions? ewww
you mean everything that jQuery stands for?
@ReedCopsey - Maybe I misunderstood you
I'm not saying I regularly write C# in a functional style, but..I am frequently aware that I should.
javascript callback functions do provide a functional approach - which is much easier to use in a functional style
but I like my strong typing and safety- I hate waiting until runtime for things to blow up
I write C# in a functional style as often as possible, but many times (for example, when you require a mock) it is difficult to do so
or if you have coworkers that insist interface based programming is the bee's knees (rather than domain driven design)
user862319
This blog proves it is now too easy for people to setup wordpress.
As I hammer out my designs, more often than not I end up with classes which maintain no internal state, have one public method of any interest which is idempotent, and take dependencies as interfaces which never change and act basically as policies
@Bob hahahahahaha
@Pheonixblade9 drop the mocks, and just pass a function instead ;)
18:58
It's quite a small step to replace that class with a delegate
@ReedCopsey unfortunately I am not really allowed to change design on this project. So I do it in small chunks where I can.
@TomW which, if you used a different language, would basically mean you'd have to maintain 1/100th of the code for the same design
Yep.
algebraic data types are the thing F# has that C# lacks when it comes to LOB dev, though
once you get used to working with them, it's really, really hard to give them up
because of the level of safety you get

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