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14:00
@TomW Stateful sevices, man
Stateless is like zombifying
Joan, are you really Joan?
Those are orthogonal concerns
@JoanLeaven You must be one of those few people that doesn't like change for the better. Good for you :P
where do you see the better in that ?
JS MUST DIE!
14:02
making a "trend" from the crappiest language ever
js is COOOOL
Best IDE for JS?
uhhhhhh and this?
11 mins ago, by Joan Leaven
JS is the shittiest language
morning peeps
@SebastianL probably Visual Studio or Web Storm
never used web storm. I hear its quite nice
14:04
@JoanLeaven Stateless is easy to reason about. Your issue is primarily with the loss of the data structure, so just produce the structure and you're golden. That's the WSDL part of SOAP. Those are called JSON schemas in the JSON world.
@JABFreeware I've been using RubyMine and I'm assuming they are pretty much the same thing. It is what Eclipse should have been.
@CuddleBunny I go back and forth about Eclipse. I love it one day and then when something goes wrong its like my worst enemy
@JABFreeware I associate Eclipse with Java so that doesn't make me like it more. I do like Netbeans, even though it leaves little .netbeans folders all over the place =.=
hehehe
it does
netbeans isnt as good at android dev
granted, vs2015 started leaving .vs folders all over the place. Just as annoying as thumbs.db.
14:07
not even close
But I'd use VS or Xamarin Studio for Android dev.
oh get this i saw a file name that was like this:
??????????? ?????. ??? ????? ????????.doc.LNK
because Java.
no joke
Sounds like every day Windows to me.
14:08
sadly
@CuddleBunny Xamarin Studio is too expensive for me. DO you know of a ummm....uhhh... affordable place to ummmm buy cough it?
well... I COULD buy it, but... I dont like spending that kind of money
Should I work for a firm whose product is mainly salesforce integration?
Will that suck?
It will suck
Hm. I suspect you'd say that about everything
14:15
I wouldn't. But I would say it about a job that involves mainly working with obnoxious third party APIs that have existed for a good 10 years or more.
Anyone more optimistic? (Kidding, peace bro)
they only use salesforce in hell
google has come a long way, but i wont be happy until it understands the search "rugs that are not ugly"
Rugs? Like rugs on the floor?
Step ure googling game up, man
i seem to only find rugs that look like my grandparents would own them, or stuff for little kids
rugs suck
14:24
rugs are like JS, they need to disapear
@JABFreeware i havent tried intimate relationships with one
@CharlieBrown that could be potentially painful
need a new one for the floor on my boat to protect the wood
what kind of boat?
u have a boat?
is it a yatch?
???
14:28
Could someone here give me a brutally crash course introduction to pretty much everything involving unit testing.
@JABFreeware there is the starter edition
For the person who was reading Effective C#, should I buy a copy?
@JoanLeaven What about concrete floors?
@Griffin, use NUnit?
They should rename this c# thread to "talk about boats." Seems like it gets brought up a lot.
14:30
@Griffin Don't :P
;/
Team was just like "time to write your unit tests" and I ask questions and they use words I dunno and I just sit there and cry.
@TomW It will suck less if they let you use Azure: azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/app-service/api
I've tinkered with that and it is pretty awesome.
@Griffin, what kind of terms do they use? Like Assert?
@Griffin Plan 0 hours 0 minutes and 0 seconds. Reasoning: Fuck unit tests.
14:32
@RoelvanUden ^ this
fuck testing
Btw, if I were get to a copy of clean code or agile principles which one should I lean to?
No. I don't know what they were. Harder to remember words you don't know. Assert was one. But they use interfaces a lot I guess and I don't really touch them. They showed me an example of where they used unit testing I was just like "i dunno what's going on here"
I think they want me doing dependency injections too. I just have no clue what's going on.
A lot of blabla about decoupling dependencies, mocking, asserting, unit testing, test driven development, inversion of control, etc.
It's not worth it.
Well, almost never.
This company, and our team specifically, deals with filing legal documents.
14:35
If I want to implement IEnumerable<T> would I have to use reflection to resolve the type?
if u dont need it dont do it
or if u dont know how to do it, dont do it
They want me to do it (I kind of completed what they want me to do a little early I think and they're just like welllllll you can do this)
@Rusty Who you speaking to?
Griffin
I'm an intern. I don't have a choice.
14:37
you should do unit testing
I also work for a company that needs testing
for legal matters
I don't work on the unit testing for my project
It's a good thing to know how to do regaurdless.
but there are a tons of good resources online
if u have some cash for online subscription, i can suggest pluralsight
I think I learned a little bit about unit testing in C# with NUnit
and maybe the google testing framework?
or just google unit testing in C#, etc...
it has pretty detailed stuff on unit testing, dependency injection...
14:38
you should find good resources
if you have questions, just post them on SO or coem here
@Greg no, you dont need reflection
we use xUnit.NET
cool, never heard of it. is it good?
I think our company provides a subscription. I just don't have headphones today.
14:39
I would recommend that one if you can use it
requires .NET 4.5
var list = new List<int>() There, just implemented IEnumerable<T>
ah ok
mstest works just as well
I'm using .NET 4.0 for my project lol
But you do not need to implement IEnumerable<T>
14:39
it doesn't
have you tried writing data driven tests in mstest?
every day
oh yeah, griffin, look into mstest
One of the most terrible things about non-video online resources, especially for microsoft languages, is that all the sites seem to be made in the last 90's.
and visual studio testing framework
My team uses NUnit.
14:40
that's the one I learned myself for testing docs
then you would know how bad mstest is at that
NUnit is fairly easy
I wrote unit tests back when I was a just a QA tester
works pretty good for me, we have thousands of integration tests written with it
MsTest works fine for me if i ever want to do unit testing
even more unit tests written with it as well
14:41
I think I should figure out how to implement Interfaces here first. Interfaces were one of those things school kind just said "hey these things exist. Now lets look at something else"
part of depends on how your data achitecture is setup
tests that have dependencies? yuck
;)
Here's a big concept. They were talking about avoiding doing certain things. To dumb it down for me they were basically like "try to avoid using the new keyword". Why?
^ b/c some people say dumb things
Only gurus can tell
14:44
I think it has to do with using interfaces. I think I'm supposed to build a factory.
You only need to write the following members for you to be able to use the iterate pattern over your collection class:
System.Boolean MoveNext()
Current { get; }
no, you shouldnt
Why no factory?
architecture astronuts are the only ones who advocate starting with a pattern first.
write your code. refactor to patterns
See this is why I'm confused.
14:45
if a factory fits, then use it. but most of the time, YAGNI
@Griffin It is pointless to use the new keyword unless you are writing extension methods which should not be done in most cases unless it is necessary to do so
if your building an extendable api that can be distributed, you might need factories. if not, you might need DI... and I stress might
@Griffin the general gist is that if you're using `new`, that implies a couple of things:
- If the constructor signature changes, everywhere that you call that constructor will break
- Everywhere that uses that constructor is forced to use that exact type, and can't substitute another type with the same interface
- The caller of the constructor has to explicitly find or create every dependency that the constructor requires
@MoonOwlPrince craziest shit i ever heard
14:46
Just focus on YAGNI, KISS, DRY, and SoC. Patterns? That'll come later.
All of the above might be fine. They're not bad
@CharlieBrown But he thinks like my team .... I think?
nothing wrong with using the new keyword, where do people get this crazieness
@CharlieBrown I read it from Mark Markelis and Eric Lippert's Essential C#5.0
i think you misread, or took it out of context
14:47
It's not that there's something wrong with it I think. It's more like if you're using it, chances are there's a better way to do it.
in some scenarios, maybe. but most of the time its a normal part of the language
@CharlieBrown Okay, was trying to think of how to implement IEnumerable<T>
The only real thing I think you should remember about constructors is that they should not have any real logic in them. They just construct something. Don't fire of threads, hit databases, etc. That'd be weird.
you would have to make your application purposely complex to achieve not using it. and good applications are not needlessly complex
One problem that I encounter a lot is that the constructor does too much
14:49
@ton.yeung touche
constructors are very useful, they can and should be used for DI
Are we talking about constructors or extension methods?
pretty sure I just wrote "constructor"...
Hm.
if you write a constructor that does anything more than initialize fields from constructor arguments, you're giving it too much responsibility
@RoelvanUden Wait wait wait. I think you're getting at where
One second
14:51
@MoonOwlPrince you brought up extension methods. What does that have to do with anything?
that includes initializing fields using the new keyword
@StevenLiekens right, thats all they should do
so in that sense, you shouldn't be allowed to use the new keyword there
@TomW The only case where the new keyword is not recommended is when writing extension methods. Other than that there is no other reason to not use it
Okay so I have a model with more like... processing stuff kind of.
Because it goes out and hits an API.
14:52
var k = new Unicorn(magicalPlayland){ _playland = magicalPlayland; }
Maybe the problem is more about how my model is set up.
public Horse{
_carrots = new List<Carrots>();
}
I think I'm using my models and stuff wrong then...
ugh, need more coffee
I didn't play with REST before I came here so I think I'm doing something wrong there.
14:56
class ThisIsTerrible {
  public ThisIsTerrible() {
    Task.Run(() => Console.WriteLine("This is terrible"));
  }
}
var a = new ThisIsTerrible(); // Creates a task, writes stuff, BAD
So like property getter and setters, constructors should be lightweight right?
exactly
constructors are basically setters

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