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18:00
that sounds like a load of bollocks
@TomW nope
@TomW there is a nice r# plugin that shows boxing, heap allocation viewer
nice for microoptmization :)
@KendallFrey You're right, it is bollocks:
> A call to IDisposable.Dispose on a struct is generated as a constrained virtual call, which most of the time does NOT box the value.
using isn't too special
of course it isn't
and the wording implies that MyStruct myVal = new MyStruct(); would box as well
18:16
good morning!
afternoon
evening
@KendallFrey Hm? No...
well, fuck you guys too ;)
@SteveG O_O
user47589
hi steve
@Codeman did you get new glasses
hey amy
18:20
I truly don't understand Windows security
@JohanLarsson @KendallFrey what do you guys use for viewing IL? ILDASM?
In soviet russia, Windows security don't understand YOU
I'm tired of ILDASM, there must be a better tool.
> You don't have permission to view this folder.
> "Continue."
> You have all the permissions you like.
any help is appriciated...
18:20
@Nick depends what I'm looking at. ILSpy or LINQPad usually
@AccountUnknown what does 'cant access' mean?
@KendallFrey playing with ILSpy now. I'll stick with it. Thanks.
use of unassigned local variable...
@SteveG soon!
@AccountUnknown assign it first
18:22
its is assigned in top... why cant is use it?
i
solved...
@AccountUnknown it's declared. It's not assigned.
i am embarrased
thanks...
user47589
if no rows are returned, final won't have any value at all.
@Nick I don't look at IL much. Dotnetfiddle can show IL btw.
@JohanLarsson Oh, that's pretty handy.
18:27
how do I make a copy/backup of a sql db?
i want to try deleting it, but don't want to permanently fuck something up
@KendallFrey SQL server, I imagine.
I know how to do so with PostgreSQL
what is the advantage of delegates over just passing a method to a method. I understand delegates involve an object wrapping a method and the object can then be instanatiated with a methodX and that methodX will be run. But why have an object to do that.. Why not lik with javascript or C, let a function just be passed to a function?
@KendallFrey too late, you're already using SQL
@barlop You can't "pass a method to a method" without delegates
unless you mean delegates vs function pointers
why would c# have that limitation.. what's the advantage of using delegates over the more traditional way used by javascript or c
well, javascript would let a function be passed to a function probably without pointers.
18:32
@barlop it's the same thing. C# just makes you say what you mean.
how is either of those approaches "traditional"
delegates are new
if it's in C, it's not new.
traditional=not new.
JS has first-class functions, a popular feature among functional languages
high order functions.. functions that take functions.
delegates are adding another layer, it seems an unnecessary layer..
C# has delegates, which are intended to be much like first-class functions, although there are a few minor limitations
C has function pointers, which are also similar but not very safe
18:33
JS : function foo(bar) { bar(); } what is bar? might that be an object?
@barlop How are they adding a layer? They're just the C# way of doing it
barlop is angry :(
a delegate object wraps a function X and you create the object and pass in function X. Then you pass the delegate object to whoever wants it
seems a very roundabout way of doing things rather than passing a function to a function
@barlop A function pointer also "wraps" a function
so does a function object in JS
I'd guess that there is no language in existence that normally passes functions without some form of wrapper or reference
well, I guess you don't generally pass the wrapper function around in other languages but perhaps you do in c#?
18:37
@barlop No you don't, not usually
@KendallFrey what would even mean? 'pass a function'? A function is not data. It has an address, which can be data.
I'm agreeing with you, by the way.
learn javascript tom.
user47589
you can pass functions if functions are first-class objects in the target language.
The premise is not sufficiently clear to have this conversation
@TomW In theory you could pass a function by value, i.e. the entire code for that function
18:38
someMethod(x => { var y = x+x; return y})
Hello all you lovely people.
tom, you're the only person not understanding the premises. Everybody else is understanding things
or something like that
but that's stupid, hence my thoughts
@KendallFrey that's what an anonymous delegate is in C#, no?
18:38
@TomW no, completely unrelated
@barlop er, no. Nobody agrees with you. That implies that they understand it and you don't. Anyway, you were the one asking the question
I mean at runtime, passing code as data
they may not agree with me but they understand what i've asked
you don't use delegate in c# unless you have to, so settle down, this conversation is going nowhere
you say you can't pass a function tom and that's incorrect
18:39
@barlop Actually, I don't really understand what your question is.
@barlop I didn't say that. I said the statement is not sufficiently precise to have any meaning.
after all what conclusion are we going to make? c# sucks?
"why isn't C# haskell"
doesn't it?
@KendallFrey well, here's a question.. In c# does one tend to pass the delegate?
18:40
"why isn't C# C++"
"why isn't C# C"
"why isn't C# jabbascript"
just use whatever language you want
@barlop why do you think it's different to the other examples you've given?
@barlop If you want to pass a function as a first-class citizen, you use delegates, of course.
C# has a nice clean feature set that makes it good for a lot of common problems
@KendallFrey i'm asking, in C# do you normally pass the delegate, i.e. pass the wrapper?
I SAID YES
18:41
@barlop show me that they're different and not just different syntax for doing fundamentally the same thing
just like every other language I know of
@KendallFrey in javascript you often won't pass the wrapper
yes
you do
i'll give you an example..
a function object is a wrapper
18:41
^
around a (usually) compiled, machine code section of code
\/
18:42
obviously a function object is a wrapper
Nick is pretty
3
nobody is denying that
Damn. Too slow.
@barlop Then explain yourself. How is a delegate different from a function object, other than the name?
18:42
Console.log(map(addone,myarray));
that's not passing the wrapper
map is the wrapper function
That's passing the result of the function.
Wait, is your question about explicitly using delegate constructors?
18:44
I'm asking, in C# do you normally pass the delegate object.. You said Yes. I asked if you do in javascript too, you said yes. I'm saying in javacsript often you don't.. you ask how that's possible that you don't, and I gave an example
indeed my example is passing the result, not the wrapper object.. and that's my point
Your point is that you have no point?
in javascript you're not passing the wrapper object
Wow.
@barlop you gave no such example, wtf
the console.log example
18:44
Exactly the same thing works in C# and is nothing whatsoever to do with delegates in C# either
nested function calls are nothing to do with delegates
That's perfectly valid C# syntax, and it doesn't demonstrate passing a function in any other form than a function object
@barlop - Your question is vague. Normally you don't pass functions at all. So when you phrase the question the way you did everyone assumes you mean "When you do pass a function do you normally pass the delegate object" the answer to that question is yes.
unless the result of map is a delegate
"passing a function" and "passing a delegate" are the same thing in C#
@KendallFrey Err, is a delegate a function, or an object?
or both
18:46
Yes.
BOTH
just like a function in JS
JUST like it
this is so much fun, i wish i had popcorn
Do you agree that the console.log example I gave, does not involve passing a delegate object?
18:47
@barlop it doesn't involve passing a function either
@barlop only if that's JS, which doesn't call them delegates
yes, of course, that's because you don't have to
and does not involve passing the wrapper function?
@barlop your example is meaningless for the topic you're discussing, it doesn't illustrate anything of that nature
the function object is a form of wrapper, yes
Maybe you need to show us clear examples in C# and JS side-by-side
18:48
Maybe
We've strayed really far from the original topic. The original question was "is it true that Canada is basically Trader Joe's-branded United States?".
dudes, it's the first time i really want to do something
can i?
@tweray depends what something is
@Nick Yes
18:49
Don't kick mute someone for asking a dumb question.
> don't ask if you can ask, it is recursive
i don't care what something is, i want to hear it
@SteveG laissez-faire as usual
!!google Get more juice.
18:49
@KendallFrey Can you give me an example in javascript of passing the wrapper?
thats not what i thought i had copied
!!google laissez-faire
@TomW what does that mean, "We surrender" or something?
"let it be"
(since you say that in c# and in javascript you do so.. i'd like to see a javascript example)
18:50
@barlop foo(console.log)
calls foo and passes console.log
which is a function that you should be familiar with
Laissez-faire is the title of the french translation of a popular song by the Beatles.
Looking for some unbiased developer input. I was recently offered a new developer position and put in my two week notice and was just counter offered by my current company President.

New Company
.Net/Bootstrap/angular/nodejs focus.
salary offered: $85K with the potential to become lead within 15 months @ $110K plus bonus and equity.
Telecommute 3 says a week after 6 months.
They have a team of 20 developers and 7 QA people. Active practice SCRUM/Agile. Previously were into waterfall methodologies.
@KendallFrey But I said passing the wrapper. console.log is not a wrapper
@Alex promises are all bullshit, always, in my experience
Totally off topic I know, but some unbiased input would be greatly appreciated.
18:51
@barlop Yes it is
it's a function object
@Alex - Go with the new company.
@KendallFrey console.log is not a wrapper, it's not wrapping a method
you can .call it, .apply it, etc.
that's what I mean by a wrapper
> commute is 138 miles a day
18:52
@barlop What do you mean by a wrapper?
jesus christ what the fuck
i'd never do that
user47589
@alex, never go with counter-offers
Wrapper - method that wraps a method
map for example is a wrapper
@barlop what the fuck is the point of that
18:52
a high order function. it takes a function as paramter.
@barlop what is map, you just made that up
you don't see a point in passing a functionA to a functionB?
No map is famous
across programming languages
@barlop - You should probably look into the definitions of the terms you're using.
and has been around for decades
18:53
@barlop oh no, I get that perfectly fine. very useful
@barlop Are you referring to Array.prototype.map?
map takes a function and applies it to every element of an array
@Alex Sounds like the new company's domain and product is a lot more fun to work on tbh
Wrapper functions have nothing to do with passing functions/delegates.
if so, FUCKING SAY SO
@KendallFrey theres a popular underscore _.map too, not sure if whatever
18:54
stop making this more confusing
sorry :'(
@Nick, the projects they work on are a mix of government and private sector
user47589
make it more confusing please.
@barlop 5 hours later, what the fuck is your point and/or question?
@SpencerRuport what's the difference?
18:55
@barlop If by "wrapper function" you mean a higher order function, better restate your question
@SpencerRuport you might have a point, maybe a wrapper function is a function witha function inside it..?
Wrapper functions make calls to other functions inside the function definition. Delegates, passing functions... whatever doesn't have anything to do with it.
@barlop "wrapper function" is an arbitrary term, don't use them without defining them
@Alex So basically you have a new job with a higher salary where you'll be working with non-legacy stuff, or your old job with a slightly less salary where you'll be in charge of migrating legacy stuff and they pinky promise you more goodies later
Or at the very least use it properly.
18:55
If it wasn't for the commute I'd take the new job in a heartbeat.
ok so wrapper function isn't the right term
user47589
do none of you know what a wrapper function is?
@barlop - Take a break.
Go research what you're trying to ask and then come back.
Would anybody claim that Delegates are an alternative to high order functions?
user47589
what
18:57
I'm not claiming anything when you arbitrarily change the definitions of terms.
Every statement becomes meaningless.
@barlop they are higher-order functions
@barlop no
completely unrelated
well, not completely
user47589
!!facepalm
18:58
@TomW no
@Nick - I dunno. Maybe he's young and still has the energy for that. Besides he didn't mention if moving isn't an option.
@barlop Delegates are the C# representation of functions
@KendallFrey Do you mean the C# representation of higher order functions?

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