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21:01
it supports https
@KendallFrey ohhh i didn't know that!
neat, now on https
browser says the connection is unprotected
not sure what that means
ah, right, cause there's http content on the page
ping
ping me someone
yep, chat contents are encrypted as well
@ton.yeung I thought MITM was impossible with SSL, without a browser warning
I think you usually get a warning with any decent browser.
I need some makeshift cable clamps, suggestions:
@KendallFrey - What kind of cable
@KendallFrey - metal coat hangers, paper clips?
21:12
game controller, mainly
oh
probably the paper clips if you have any then
maybe couple with some tape
not without providing their own cert
unless they know the private key I guess
@ton.yeung right, and that causes a browser warning
> their computers all have the internal CA pushed out via Windows Group Policy & log-on scripts.
ahhh
I'm guessing you could check that in control panel somewhere
you can
Probably easier to use mmc, and just select the certificates snap-in.
21:55
@ton.yeung - Chat is probably not allowed?
o/
22:21
Hello hello
Anybody can help me here?
I've got a problem that I really need to fix :(
then fix it, duhhhh
whats up
Wish I could
Trying and trying
did you try cycling power?
It doesn't make sense that it's not working
well ask... you're making me anxious
22:28
I tried
Tough luck though
It's in VB.Net but as I didn't find a specific room for that... I figured C# would be the right choice amongst all the others
Any luck?
@Pheonixblade9 We should go riding some time.
@Pheonixblade9 I'm getting into it, I ride to work everyday.
@Pheonixblade9 Yeah, I do about 50-100 miles every week.
@Senerio that doesn't make sense
it can't be over panel2 and off of panel2 at the same time
I just noticed I mistyped something
I removed the Not on the first if
22:38
To some degree, I am beginning to feel like class-oriented programming can lead to blindness and a masturbatory process where you over-abstract and over-engineer stuff if you are not careful.
its called enterprise application Moon
You mean object-oriented programming?
and ^
Object-oriented programming is fine
Class-oriented programming <<< I am referring to
"okay class, lets open our programming books to page 312"
22:40
opens all of my programming books to page 312
Index out of bound for book(2)
@MoonOwlPrince that's... not a thing
We got a problem
@Senerio all you need to do is use the MouseEnter event on Panel2, no?
I would yeah
but in this case not
because there also is a mouseleave event on panel1 that needs to be use
what is Control?
22:42
which sets the panel background to nothing
ahh system library
?
Good question, rather new to it myself
but yes
You get a bunch of system properties with it
such as mouse position
sender.controls that doesn't look valid
It's System.Drawing
sender.Controls you mean?
22:44
Hum
@KendallFrey I like differentiating prototype-based programming, class-oriented programming and the idea of object-oriented programming viewing the former two as paradigms that can be used to implement object-oriented programs
There is controls and there is Control
I assume you don't get into the If because ctrl As Object
controls is list of controls in sender
sender being the Panel1
you're casting it to an object, object has no sense of location
22:45
Same if I cast it into panel
sender.controls doesn't exist either?
hard to believe an object contains a controls property/collection
The code is valid
There's no bug
Object is like variant
the system knows what to make object into
Have you ever written ten classes and realised you could have easily avoided writing them
I've only written 4 so far
So... no...
I have calls like
Downloader.Download(url)
22:48
it does?
Converter.Convert()
vb is dumb
do you have breakpoints set in both methods?
Download simply transfers data via ftp
It is an abstraction
aaaah
Got it!
@Senerio so what is sender's type?
22:49
Someone hinted me in the comments
sender's type is the type of the control
that the event is called from
oh. yeah. that would do it
in this case object is converted to panel at runtime
right... and VB isn't case sensitive?
You have to cast sender as the type of the control
sender.controls would not compile in C#
22:50
It is not
that's absolutely disgusting
Well I'm sorry about it
don't use VB, and don't use WinForms
I didn't design the language
in my personal opinion
22:51
What's your opinion then
you should be using C# or F# and WPF.
What's the difference
WinForms sucks
But I have always wondered something about event-driven programming since I was a kid fooling around with Windows Forms and VB6. What is the use of event-driven programming outside of situations were you have interrupts
WPF is the "in" thing
WPF is still being improved
22:51
WPF stands for?
!!wiki WPF
WPF may refer to: WebSphere Partition Facility, an IBM facility Western People's Front, a political party in Sri Lanka, active in the Western Province Windows Presentation Foundation, a graphical subsystem for rendering user-interfaces in applications using Microsoft Windows Wolf Preservation Foundation, an international non-profit organisation Women's Pro Fastpitch, original name of Women's Pro Softball League, predecessor to National Pro Fastpitch World Population Foundation, founded in 1987 in the Netherlands World Pump It Up Festival, an annual competition/event on the dance game Pump It Up...
!!google WPF
@NETscape Use C#. It is used for programming for Nintendo, Unity AND it is the language Microsoft has in mind when they develop their API's
22:53
or you can use F# and talk directly to the person that develops the F# WPF library in this very room.
VB.NET is a bastardised version of a RAD language derived from a bastardised language for beginners that accidentally ended up being used by professional developers
@MoonOwlPrince I like how Microsoft is third on that list, and Nintendo is first
lmao
I suppose that probably seems normal for you
What's Nintendo anyways. Do they have anything these days?
22:55
Anyway thanks for helping
right. i never witnessed someone have such a strong love/hate relationship for something
if you wonder PointToClient is called from the sender
So it's implicitly Panel1.PointToClient
I have a (girl)friend who who only enjoys games that you find for Nintendo
Thus in the 2nd if within the for each I just had to add ctrl.PointToClient
Sorry I bothered you with me VB </3
@KendallFrey When asked about C#, I will talk about cross platform development using Xamarin and Eto.Forms
22:58
if you only like games based on the manufacturer/developer of the game, then you suck
or I mean, a specific platform the game is played on*
I only like PC games
it's like saying minecraft is awesome on xbox, but sucks on PC
cause all the other ones don't work on my PC
I will discuss how Mono and Unity can be used in combination to develop for iOS and Android. Also, how the SIMD extension access in Mono is good if you are going to be dealing with processors that have them
@NETscape That's a perfectly legitimate thing to say
23:00
the gameplay doesn't really change, does it?
There are a number of differences
so you like games based on the controller you use to play the game?
That's perfectly reasonable
I will also discuss how Facebook uses C#
I like racing games with a wheel, less so with a gamepad
23:01
its still the same game
I will discuss C#'s history going all the way back to C, Pascal, Lisp, Delphi, VB, C++ and Microsoft Java Virtual Machine
the gaming experience may change, but the game doesn't change
yeah, but a completely different experience
that sounds like the worst conversation ever to non-aspiring tech people and professionals
hang on whut
> Microsoft Java Virtual Machine
23:03
lol
whhuuuut
didn't you know, virtualbox mannnn
The Microsoft Java Virtual Machine (MSJVM) is a discontinued proprietary Java virtual machine from Microsoft. It was first made available for Internet Explorer 3 so that users could run Java applets when browsing on the World Wide Web. It was the fastest Windows-based implementation of a Java virtual machine for the first two years after its release. Sun Microsystems, the creator of Java, sued Microsoft in October 1997 for incompletely implementing the Java 1.1 standard. It was also named in the United States v. Microsoft antitrust civil actions, as an implementation of Microsoft's Embrace, extend...
virtual box was written in C# (maybe), therefore Java was written in C#
jesus that was 15 years ago, and no one used it
wtf
23:04
1 min ago, by NETscape
that sounds like the worst conversation ever to non-aspiring tech people and professionals
in the meantime, i used periscope for the first time yesterday... pretty neat
MoonOwl, you should use periscope.... i'll listen to you talk about C# all day
I use Windows Phone
@ReedCopsey you around?
23:31
In the US, do you really need an engineering degree or license to be referred to as an engineer. I ask because I know that if you are an engineer, your title can be engineer. For example, Engineer Frey. It seems to me that being an engineer in the US (from what I am seeing online) is reading a 21 day textbook on dynamically typed Language X and ranting about how Language Y is is verbose because statically typed/
@MoonOwlPrince the only relevant "engineering" title in the US is professional engineer which is a title conferred by each state and overseen by the NCEES. You take an 8 hour, 2 part exam, typically near the end of undergrad in your senior year. That earns you your "engineer in training" certification (EIT). Then 5 years later, with more engineering experience under your belt, you can take the Professional Engineer (PE) exam which confers the PE title.
@Pheonixblade9 So why are programmers (women especially) calling themselves engineers after 21 days of Ruby
You'd list PE after your name. It's somewhat similar in stature to PhD or MD
@MoonOwlPrince what does them being women have to do with it?
0
Q: DotNetZip Extract Folder & Contents based on folder comment

JABFreewareI have some code that adds different directories to a zip file. Its important that I know each folder based on its comment, during the extraction process. Here is the zip sample code: foreach (string folder in BackupDIRS) { string Source = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFold...

anyone have experience with DotNetZip?
and anyone can call themselves whatever they want, professional engineer is a very specific certification.
23:35
@Pheonixblade9 I have observed that the female bloggers are the biggest offenders who think they are engineers off Codecademy
@MoonOwlPrince well sex is not really relevant, it only distracts from any argument you might have
@Pheonixblade9 You are right
I really don't give a fuck what other people call themselves. I went to engineering school, I understand more about computers than 99.99% of people. My skills speak for themselves. If people wanna call themselves engineers after a coding boot camp, fine. Let them fail on their own merit
@Pheonixblade9 how do you figure 99.99%?
@Pheonixblade9 the next thing you know: dietitians will start calling themselves doctors.
23:39
Is it possible to use ThreadPool.QueueWorkerItem() with an embedded using() statement?
@JABFreeware he knows more about computers than the both of us. Trust me on this one
@JABFreeware That makes for up to 100,000 people that know as much about computers as he does. I say that's reasonable
Travis J has made a change to the feeds posted into this room
Keep in mind he did electrical engineering
Sorry, that is going to spam this in a second.
23:40
@JABFreeware 300M people in the US, 83,300 computer hardware engineers
oh. that
it is the SE blog
yeah that would help @KendallFrey
I went to school for computer engineering. I've designed and built my own computer from the silicon up. I'd say I know more than most :)
Which reminds me, I guess I'm going to be doing a talk on low-level analog circuitry
23:40
Or at least, there is the probability it will
nice! where at?
JS room
God help you
@Pheonixblade9 for real?
23:41
@JABFreeware yep, lemme find you a link to one part of it
please, I'd find it interesting :)
this is the ALU portion of it. Never arsed myself to put the RAM or anything else up
so anyway, did you do anything with transistor-level circuits or lower @Pheonixblade9?
keep in mind, it's a very simple computer, of course, but it's a functional computer that I actually laid out
@KendallFrey yes, I did physical layout of silicon using MIT's 0.25micron ruleset.
A bit obsolete, but fine for learning on
I reckon you know more about the logic circuitry than me
23:42
Haha, maybe four years ago :)
I do know how a transistor behaves though
I fail at some of the basics these days, but I do recall a decent amount
well, there's lots of different kinds of transistors...
I am already lost lol. I have no knowledge of this area. Does it help you in coding except like assembly etc?
they never really let me use idealized transistors :P
23:43
except the ability to track logic
@Pheonixblade9 - 101 A+B 1001 1010 0011 1 0 0 1 <--
Stack Overflow!! :P
@JABFreeware not really, I never implemented an ISA or compiler or anything like that for the architecture
the only compiler work I ever did was a very very basic Java > JVM compiler
I implemented most of a computer in Logisim lol
23:44
@JABFreeware Do not question the usefulness of lower level knowledge or you will be struck by the curse of ignorance.
It could only handle very basic stuff like while loops and variables, haha
Understanding lower level stuff is really nice when you're working in resource limited environments
I don't
but I have and was hurting haha.
Like... "why is this SQL query taking so long to run?" "because your file system is causing seeks to take a long time on the HDD"
@Pheonixblade9 I dont consider that low level, just intermediate sql
and understanding interrupts and event-based programming
23:46
Jon Chan on May 27, 2015

Jon is a web developer and heads up developer evangelism efforts at Stack Exchange.

When I think about the impact that Stack Overflow has had on the world, it’s tempting for me to think about numbers: how many active users we have, how many questions are answered in a day, how many jobs get posted on our Careers platform. These are things that I, as a developer, think about on a daily basis to measure how we’re helping programmers around the world grow. But I find that these numbers are hard to wrap my head around: it doesn’t quite give me a feel for what our work is doing. What is the quality of our impact? What does it feel like at an individual level? …

Gabe Koscky on June 04, 2015

Há mais ou menos 2 anos nós fizemos uma descoberta avassaladora: nós percebemos que a maioria das pessoas do mundo não fala Inglês. E, se isso é verdade, significa que existem programadores que, pasmém, não conhecem o Stack Overflow. O choque inicial foi grande, mas depois de um copo de água com açucar nós decidimos fazer algo a respeito disso: abrir novos sites sobre programação!

Criar novas comunidades onde mesmo quem não fala Inglês possa se expressar em sua própria língua, à sua própria maneira. Afinal, ter a resposta para todo tipo de pergunta sobre programação é só metade do que faz do St …

Tim Post on June 11, 2015

Some time ago, we hired a Russian-speaking Community Manager named Nicolas Chabanovsky. He works remotely from St. Petersburg (we’re pretty sure it’s the one in Russia). In the past Nicolas was a software developer, and participated in the development of DLNA-stack at Motorola, webOS at LG Electronics and many other notable projects. What we found the most interesting about Nick is he’s one of the founders of the most advanced clones of Stack Exchange we’ve ever seen, which was ХэшКод, otherwise known as HashCode. …

Shog9 on June 15, 2015

Long-suffering readers may have noticed that, as we’ve expanded Stack Overflow into strange and exciting territories, we always start by hiring a new community manager. These intrepid souls act as emulsifiers, enabling and promoting communication between the company and the growing community. This role is just as critical for our 140+ English-language sites, where our small team works to ensure that requests and concerns are addressed in a timely fashion (6-8 weeks, give or take). Whenever possible, community managers are hired from within the community itself – after all, who knows its needs better than someone who has been a part of it? …

Abby T. Miller on June 16, 2015

Welcome to the Stack Exchange Podcast, episode #65, recorded Tuesday, May 12, 2015 at Stack Exchange Headquarters in New York City. Today’s podcast is brought to you by the Association of Airline Mile Programs and hosted by the usual suspects.

We’ll start off with the extremely important and community-relevant subject of why Joel hates frequent flyer programs. It’s a fascinating story and I can’t do it justice in summary. But I will say, for those of you who find it TOO ENTERTAINING AND DRAMATIC, that this story ends around 7 minutes into the show. 7:16 to be exact. …

Many people don't realize that modern computers are fundamentally event-driven
a ha!
@KendallFrey very true.
@KendallFrey Please elaborate
23:47
@MoonOwlPrince interrupts
@KendallFrey But I thought that is the way it has always been
understanding interrupts and traps is a pretty important part of being a fully educated software engineer
yup, interrupt for keyboard input, for mouse input, to cause display updates
IO is all interrupt driven
(everyone always excludes traps, they just say interrupts :( )
@MoonOwlPrince There have undoubtedly been many CPUs that didn't have them
@Pheonixblade9 remind me, what's that?
23:48
these days interrupts are all cascaded, lol
@KendallFrey So wait... without interrupts how did they...
In computing and operating systems, a trap, also known as an exception or a fault, is typically a type of synchronous interrupt typically caused by an exceptional condition (e.g., breakpoint, division by zero, invalid memory access). A trap usually results in a switch to kernel mode, wherein the operating system performs some action before returning control to the originating process. A trap in a system process is more serious than a trap in a user process, and in some systems is fatal. In some usages, the term trap refers specifically to an interrupt intended to initiate a context switch to a...
@KendallFrey a hardware exception, essentially
it's how debugging works
@MoonOwlPrince how did they what?
23:49
when you hit a debug point in an executable, you are hitting a trap
yeah but that is basically examining the flag register at a very low level
@KendallFrey I'm confused. I thought interrupts were fundamental to digital electronics
@MoonOwlPrince not digital electronics, no
interrupts are fundamental to non-deterministic operating systems
remove interrupts and you still have a fully functional logic processor
interrupts are mainly useful for IO
23:50
This is the kind of stuff that tends to give my mind orgasms when I study it
don't let anyone interrupt you then
with no interrupts you would need a card system and vacuum tubes :P
I actually saw some code where instead of some basic checks, they ran the entire script via exceptions in a mess of cascading catch statements.
Also there is a kind of a loop technique that my dad once told me about that was employed where you would iterate until the error was small enough to not matter
That is annealing
!!wiki simulated annealing
23:52
Simulated annealing (SA) is a generic probabilistic metaheuristic for the global optimization problem of locating a good approximation to the global optimum of a given function in a large search space. It is often used when the search space is discrete (e.g., all tours that visit a given set of cities). For certain problems, simulated annealing may be more efficient than exhaustive enumeration — provided that the goal is merely to find an acceptably good solution in a fixed amount of time, rather than the best possible solution. The name and inspiration come from annealing in metallurgy, a technique...
Apparently the one box didn't like the querystring
end of the day, o/
It got me thinking about the condition in the for loop

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