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08:00
barlop do you see the contradiction in your argument?
and what do you think an address is?
it can still be null
an address is a reference to a location in memory
an address can't be null though
that's a difference.
An address is a location
hehehe
no it's not
08:00
no it really is
would you say your address is your house?
no
its the location of my house
a location is like a box
an address tells you where the box is
ok sorry i thought you were being sensable not make up a argument for the sake of it
Alex, you wrote "a pointer by its very def is a reference to a location in memory" So since you say a location is an address.. Would you say "a pointer is a reference to an address in memory"
what is the difference do you think then, between a reference to an address, and an address?
also, google shows you that malloc returns an address, Malloc also can be said to return a pointer
so yeah a pointer value is an address.
08:07
A pointer is nothing more than an address.
barlop, you know the addressof operator? Why is that when applied to a variable, the return value is immutable yet a pointer is mutable?
The value, if it is not null, is indeed an address. However, the pointer itself is not an address. It's a variable that contains the value of the address.
I do know the & operator.. not sure about the mutability/immutability of it that you speak of
@MoonOwl22 then explain how malloc can return a pointer, as the C standard says.
And when you agree that malloc is not returning a variable.
And by the way.. if you come to accept that a pointer is an address, then a great proof that an address and a location are different.. is sizeof(p) is not equal to sizeof(*p)
@barlop "Pointer" is the common way to refer to something that should be used as a memory address. It is, in fact, nothing more than an int|long (depending on platform). The block of memory address containing the address is "the variable". Having it defined as a "pointer" tells the compiler nothing more than how to traverse to the new address and do ops there. Really, it's not quite so complicated.
@RoelvanUden first, bear in mind that I know a pointer is an address.. moon thinks it's not.
but also..
a variable is an identifier
I guess maybe so is an address
Even 'NULL' is just a value containing the 0 number. It's nothing magical at all. So if you try to read from a null pointer, you're actually telling to the system to go to the address 0, where it tries to read, but alas it can't, because the memory block there is not set with the proper guards.
A "variable" in the sense that you're referring to is a common way to specify a piece of memory that is either in memory or on the stack/heap. Values on the stack are stored differently than those in memory. So no, you can't just say that "a variable is also an address". That's just wrong.
08:14
Thank you, @RoelvanUden
I never said a variable is an address
@MoonOwl22 Do you understand that Roel said a pointer is an address?
My claim simply is: A pointer is not a value but a variable.
You keep trying to suggest that everybody agrees with you when you say a pointer is not an address, but they are not agreeing with you.
@MoonOwl22 Why is it not a value?
@MoonOwl22 don't quit now!
08:18
Because, in this case, the value contained by the pointer is an address. The container is not the same as the contained
Hey, I'm just trying to work out the difficulties in your communication styles. Moon is often not wrong, but doesn't always use the common terminology. I don't know about you barlop, but I have a feeling you're the same. :)
So need to get all edgy or aggressive on each other :)
Another error moon makes is that he thinks 2 is not an integer, he says it's a literal
2 is not a variable
2 is a value
you do realize I didn't claim it was, try reading what I wrote
it's one line
@barlop It is a literal in the sense of a compiler perspective.
08:19
ok, but it's also an integer
It could very well be, yes.
and I think moon was denying that
Not all compilers need to compile the literal '2' as int, they might be byte.
It can be an integer
Or short, or long..
08:20
To say int, is a bit ambiguous, because it can be the variable or the value
Exactly, Roel
so pointer could mean a pointer variable, or it could mean a pointer value
depending on context
So you both pretty much agree that a block of memory can contain an address of a memory location, and a pointer is a common mechanism to treat the contents of a memory block as a reference to another memory block. Since you're on the same page, using different explanations, you could just agree on it -_^
moon has been denying that a pointer is an address
08:22
and moon has been denying that a pointer can be a value
I have been saying the value contained by a pointer is an address
I don't know whether he changed his mind when he saw you agree with me on those two points A)a pointer is an address B)a pointer can be a value.
@MoonOwl22 i'm obviously not denying that.
However, the variable itself is no different from any other variable. The only difference is in typing
i'm talking of where we disagree.. but now somebody has come along that agrees with me that A)a pointer is an address and B)a pointer can be a value. So you now don't want to state your points explicitly anymore!
Perhaps you've forgotten moon, but you did write "My claim simply is: A pointer is not a value but a variable." <--- And both myself and roel say you're wrong on that. And now you're just going a bit silent on that but not really changing your mind properly.
@barlop But he's right. Look at "I have been saying the value contained by a pointer is an address". The "variable" in the sense of C/C++ is nothing more than a way of typing to tell the compiler to read the contents of that memory block as an address and traverse to that memory location. He's not saying anything different.
And this is why communication is hard.
08:27
well obviously I don't disagree with that sentence
He also said "An array is an address"
which is also insanely wrong.
That depends on the perspective you're taking, really.
Indeed, a C array is an address
In fact, an address reference is a pointer to a block of memory that is to be treated by the compiler as an array of things of size x.
An "array" is just a concept we thought up of for convenience.
Which is also why it's impossible to have out of bounds checks in C arrays.
That information is simply not available (at runtime, in the current spec)
maybe.
I'd look at an address as an address of a single location
but one could look at it as the address of a block of size 1 or more.
An array is the address of the first element of the array
08:30
Hello guys
I suppose you could look at it like that for all cases.
That is what it is really
yeah I might agree with you on that.
i have created one Empty asp.net website and in that i have lots of .aspx pages
and now when i am running that pages i am unable to debug
@barlop In C, arr[1] merely means "traverse to the memory address contained by arr and offset by 1 * sizeof(arr_el)".
08:31
Yes I know
so as I say.. I might agree an array is an address.
like i have kept debuuger point on page load event page is running successfully but debugger is not coming to that event
can anybody tell me whats the reason and how to solve this?
I suppose an array is more of a concept than an address.
@learning: You've compiled it in release mode?
an array is a contiguous sequence of memory locations
but yeah the variable contains the address of the first location
I wouldn't say an array is an address though
but I know what you mean.
@scheien:I have press f5 to run it
08:35
I gtg to bed. good talking to you
Nice chatting, barlop
@scheien:i didnt get you
Roel, communication is hard. I have learnt today
@barlop Good night :-)
@barlop, as a fun exercise, apply the address of operator on an array
08:36
@MoonOwl22 Yes, it is difficult, even for a bunch of techies speaking the same thing.
Good night :-)
When I took engineering technical writing, I remember discussing technical language and how it too can still be ambiguous
Morning all
hi @Learning :)
But in software engineering, we still need to learn more from our cousin fields regarding the importance of avoiding ambiguity
It is better to have a precise page than an ambiguous word.
@Squiggle:I am stuck at one place
The only attempt I am aware of regarding technical writing standards is Microsoft's guide
08:42
@MoonOwl22 The risk there, as we can see from the field of law, is that it can also pose a barrier to communication.
Legal language is the way it is because it aims to be unambiguous. But the result is that it's unintelligible to non-lawyers, or even to lawyers not in the specific field.
Semantics is hard.
And still hold multiple interpretations, require changes, etc. Hence we have courts and judges, etc. Communication is hard
Doubly so where I work, because I'm the only developer who has English as their mothertongue
@Squiggle I hear ya.
It's standard practice to write technical documents and even internal communications in English, even though it's hardly anyone's mother tongue here.
Some of it is pretensions of professionalism, some required for regulatory reasons.
Regardless of reason, the result is terribly written documents.
My old uni resorted to having a course on technical writing and you would document any senior project of your choice
And it would be compared to the senior's documentation
It was hard but it was fun
In our case, a lot of ambiguity we deal with when exchanging ideas stems from the different language backgrounds people have and what their model of understanding is with regards to cross-language concepts
Most people would like to relate ideas from Language X to ideas in Language Y
It's part of how we learn and unless you have a common set of definitions, you can think you've understood each other yet you haven't
08:51
@MoonOwl22 That's 90% of misunderstandings right there. 95% of internet arguments.
@Learning Yes?
i have created one empty asp.net website like this:
and in that i have list of .aspx pages
consider i have abc.aspx page
i have set this page as start up page and now when i run this website i get this page but i am unable to debug it
means i have kept breakpoint i.e debug point on page load event but debugger doesn come at that point but still my page run successfully
58
A: Debugging doesn't start

bresleveloperI had the same problem and all the tricks didnt do it until I unchecked the "Enable the Visual Studio hosting process" under the debug tab in the project properties

@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I agree. It is having a consequence. If You agree with that, than You should not prematurely accept that somebody is stupid, if he/she said something, but ask why did he/she say that (what you think is stupid).
A lot of this happens between people who come from functional backgrounds and those from procedural backgrounds
Especially those who think they have an understanding of the other side and also think they understand their side as well
09:10
Here one time I had to ask, if we talk about programming or not... My conversation with the partner was so paralell talking
@ntohl The problem is that you don't automatically get a flag saying "There might have been an error parsing message". Your internal parser scans the argument and outputs "stupid" automatically.
You have to consciously force yourself to break out of your automatic assumptions.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan sooo true. You need self restrain
Automatic assumptions are important, though. They let us quickly make sense of the world around us without having to manually figure everything out all the time.
But these mental shortcuts are also what makes us deal with the unknown and unfamiliar badly.
I produced the slowest code ever! But it works! So should I care :P
only if the speed is an issue
is it?
09:16
Not exactly. It's a report of sorts. But you have to wait ~2-5 minutes for results.
It leaves a bad aftertaste :P
It has your name on it
:)
Hi all
Anybody know how to implement Identity based encryption(IBE) in c#?
Volkswagen, prepare for the shit storm coming your way. justice.gov/opa/pr/…
09:31
@RoelvanUden I'm running some very slow code right now. The first part parsed a 4.5Gb XML file into 1.2 million small XML files. Now I'm running code that correlates the entities in those 1.2 million files. :(
Slow running console app. Currently processing ~65 files/sec. This is gonna hurt.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Ouch!
Serial processing of the original XML file not an option?
That's going to take forever @AvnerShahar-Kashtan
Yes, yes it is.
09:33
3.5 hours, roughly.
you have an SSD, right?
if it doesnt crash or something, and you have to start over
Assuming my Dictionary<string,ParsedObject> doesn't slow down any more than it did at ~200,000 entries.
@scheien It crashed a couple of times when I was debugging it, and I saw very interesting behavior. It crashed at first after about 20,000 files. The next time I ran it, it processed those 20k files very quickly. NTFS cache, maybe?
09:36
Might be, not sure how the ntfs caching works.
09:49
I am going to learn basic C++17 if VS2015 supports it
And Roel, I strongly doubt it matters if the code will run once or twice
But once your code will have code depending on it and it's expected to run often, Idk
460,000 files in. Process memory still at a manageable 120Mb.
@MoonOwl22 Hm, we'll cross that bridge when we get there. For now, bleh. :D
I feel inclined to start 2016 with deleting all entity framework dals I maintain
This year, I promised myself I will not use any frameworks unless they are for IO
And IO only
Btw, a stupid question: Where are the main methods in ASP.NET and Windows Presentation Foundation applications
ASP.NET uses Global.asax (in < 4.6) which hooks into a HttpApplication that may or may not have an Application_Start
I'm not intimately familiar with WPF, @KendallFrey probably can tell you easily
@MoonOwl22 WPF has an App.xaml file which is the main entry point.
09:57
I know this
Though you can set it to another page in the Project settings.
What is that page actually doing because it is compiled right
And evaluated to C# right?
Found an answer
It's not really a page. It's an object defined in XAML, rather than in C#.
For WPF
It defines an instance of the Application class, which is the entry point.
XAML files don't necessarily describes pages, or even necessarily define UI. It's just a declarative syntax for objects and their properties.
09:59
3
A: What is the entry point of a WPF application?

lordjebThe Main for a WPF application is autogenerated and can be found in one of the .cs files that backs your App.xaml file. You can expand App.xaml -> App.xaml.cs -> App -> Main() in the solution explorer, which will get you to the App.g.i.cs source file, which contains your Main() function. This fi...

That's the answer I was looking for
There has to be a main method
The main method is just hidden away
@MoonOwl22 This isn't precisely like a console app's void Main(), or even Winform's Program.cs. It's just a class inheriting from Application, and the project settings can be set to point to it as the startup Application. If you have more than one Application, you can change the startup. There's more plumbing behind the scenes that instantiates it.
But for most practical purposes, you can use the class in App.xaml.cs as your main entry point.
10:43
Whats the right way do dispose a stream in a TraceListener component? I overrode its Dispose, found that it doesn't get called ! Then I wrote a destructor. I have to send a message downstream signalling a QUIT command...saying that I am done with my operations and severing the connection, but the issue here is in the destructor the stream is already disposed...?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan So let's get out of the language interface we are working with and look at Win32
I wonder why I have such an obsession with implementation detail
Anyway, in the context of Windows
@MoonOwl22 Autism!
!!define autism
@MoonOwl22 autism (clinical psychology) Pervasive neurological disorder that is observable in early childhood and persists throughout the lifespan, characterised by atypical communication, language development, eye contact, and sensory experiences.
I am not comfortable with "do it this way" books and tutorials that do not give background knowledge, at least by reference, to what the underpinning concepts and workings are
10:55
I still don't know, how is this called or does it have some general name?
For example, given (C#):
var foo = new bar(Language.Lua); // Some object (not System.Object, doesn't even matter - takes "Language" enum)
foo.If(condition: Integer.Equal(1, 1)).Then(action: () => Core.Print("1 equals 1 :D")); // Function to "construct/build if-statement"
System.Console.Write(foo.SourceCode);

Then after I run it, I would get source-code back (of course depending on the language specified, in this case Lua):
@OmegaExtern You're looking at emitting/generating code from code.
.NET has the CodeDOM libraries, which allow you to create an abstract object model of statements and expressions, and then converting that into source code using a language-specific provider.
Btw, @Amy did you manage to speak to the mathematician?
So the same CodeDom object can be converted to C# or Lua or whatever using a langauge provider.
@OmegaExtern You can search for "dynamic code generation" for more examples.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Thanks a bunch!
You're welcome.
11:08
@OmegaExtern Transpiler
A source-to-source compiler, transcompiler or transpiler is a type of compiler that takes the source code of a program written in one programming language as its input and produces the equivalent source code in another programming language. A source-to-source compiler translates between programming languages that operate at approximately the same level of abstraction, while a traditional compiler translates from a higher level programming language to a lower level programming language. For example, a source-to-source compiler may perform a translation of a program from Pascal to C. An automatic...
Except that you're feeding it statements via a fluent api rather than raw source
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan .co.il what the fuck
good morning
is € 1800 a good salary for a software developer in europe? and € 1000 or € 700?
Per month? Sounds awfully low.
Then again, that depends on the country you're in.
@RoelvanUden I'm in .il, so it automatically goes to the local google domain.
@RoelvanUden yeah, per month in portugal
how much is necessary to live well in netherlands or germany?
@JúlioMurta It depends on region. I need ~1000-1200 euro for monthly fees.
(In the Netherlands, 30km from Eindhoven)
So 1800 (after or before tax?) sounds terrible to me.
11:15
@RoelvanUden That's exactly what I was looking for, thanks!
@RoelvanUden so i believe that you need more to live in amsterdan right?
@JúlioMurta Oh yes absolutely. Amsterdam is much more expensive. You easily pay 1600+ for rent alone.
If you're content with a shitty neighborhood in a shitty appartment you may crank it down to 1200.
Anything semi-decent goes for 1750 or more
what is a shitty neighborhood to european standards? a violent place and without markets or something like that?
11:19
Tel Aviv isn't much cheaper, I'm afraid. A decent apartment will probably rent for 1400-1700 EUR, and the cost of living is high.
@JúlioMurta Yes. With high crime rates equals a shitty neighborhood imho.
Generally speaking apartments are larger than in European cities, but most (in Tel Aviv) are old and in bad shape.
hmm.. ok
i'm asking because i have a friend that is living in Portugal since 2012
For reference, living outside of a city can cut cost quite a bit more, but 1800 for a dev (before or after tax??) is really not much
and he is earning ~1800
11:21
If it's after tax and he's living outside of the city, then it's a good pay.
i believe that 1800 is before the tax
idk actually
For a developer that is bad. For a regular person, that's average.
A lot of people (outside of the city) get around with ~1200 after tax.
i know too in Portugal the salaries tend to be smaller
and i heard the same thing is true in poland
It may be cheaper too. I'm not familiar with portugal prices :)
It's all about the cost of living vs income.
@RoelvanUden Assuming that transportation costs don't offset it.
11:23
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Depends, yeah.
just one more question
what are the main skills to a dev in europeu nowadays?
i know it depends on region too
but you can talk about your region
Depends on the industry, too
Hm, it's been a few years since I was really looking on the market. But at that point, I did see C# ASP.NET MVC quite a lot. PHP with Symphony was popular too. Then there are the AngularJS and NodeJS boom that has been occurring here. There is plenty of Java too, but I ignored that.
One co-worker increased his salary by 700% by moving here from Portugal :-/
@JúlioMurta where are you considering?
"Europe" is a large and varied place
im thinking about Portugal mainly
maybe spain, france and germany too
uk i dont know, that guys look awful good to me
besides programming languages knowledgement good practices are welcome or necessary (solid, ddd, tdd, design patterns, etc)?
11:33
I have a friend who works as a dev in Gibraltar. There's plenty of gambling companies based there that pay well.
all job specs I've seen ask for "knowledge of SCRUM" and some waffle about SOLID development and unit testing, but that's about it.
ok
thank you so much guys
a bit late but happy new year too ;)
How much liberty do you have when it comes to coding style, architecture, etc at your current workplaces
any
since i began to work in a big company
when i worked in a small company i had all liberty in the world
@Squiggle Gambling companies I've heard of tend to adopt the "the money keeps on coming so we don't need to be really efficient" mentality.
They're usually very much not R&D focused.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan perhaps, but they pay well!
varies greatly on the team, too.
11:43
Of course.
my friend likes it, but has to commute over the border every day
12:11
@MoonOwl22 I work in a small company. We do have agreements on style and common architecture, but there is nothing to prevent us from trying something else, other than each other. So long as we understand what's going on, we'll be fine with it.
12:22
morning
nuget adminltemvc taking over 40 minutes to install ... -_- AYFKM
12:59
So how's the weather guys?

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