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19:03
better: "schedule this meeting a half-hour later."
user47589
reject the very notion that you're late, and that as a programmer you arrived precisely when you meant to.
user47589
now you're playing wizzards chess.
is that different from wizards chess?
"I'm not late. I tell time in base 16."
@Amy you know cats and khajiit exist in the same ecosystem
and that technically they are distant cousins
user47589
19:14
yes, wizzards chess > wizards chess
If you go far back enough, everyone's distant cousins.
user47589
it has double the Z
More Zs = more better.
user47589
Grant gets it.
That's just math.
19:15
yea get sit
sitter
Time to steal everyone's chairs, then.
@GrantHill - You can take my chair, but you can never take my freedom.
What if I ask nicely for it?
@TravisJ Do you know if Asp.Net Core supports areas.
@Amy, I started watching PBS Space Time channel, it's pretty sweet
user47589
19:16
if you give me his chair, you have my permission to take his freedom
user47589
@Nathvi ikr
@Greg - It should, although I do not know for fact.
I can't find anyway to actually add an area, that is why I asked.
Sounds like a good trade. I always wanted my own Travis.
@GrantHill - No, still not then. If you ask nicely we can have expensive time together though.
19:17
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@Greg - So in Visual Studio, if you right click on your project, there should be an option to Add-> and then "Areas"?
I don't see it.
That's almost as good! Expensive time is important.
When I do "Add New Item", I don't even see Area as a choice.
@Greg - Hm, it should be the option just above "New Item" so if it is not there then it may not be so easy to use for core
19:20
Yeah, trying to find it in documentation but can't.
is mixed authentication possible within MVC
yes
It isn't built in though
I know
tangent: youtube.com/watch?v=Io0fBr1XBUA been enjoying this song lately
@TravisJ So it isn't supported yet.
19:21
@Greg - Lame. I don't know how I would manage my project without areas.
Yeah, incredibly.
@TravisJ I know that Identity is pretty much set up for you already, but my new project requires admins to login via Active Directory and set up users
I got kind of excited after you showed me.
so I was going to use the Identity table for the users and have the Authentication token use Active directory
I have like 80 controllers in my project, so it would be a nightmare if they were all in one place. I just tried to open them all to count but it literally crashed VS =/
@Skullomania @Amy is pretty familiar with the Windows auth in mvc I think
19:24
She was on earlier
@Skullomania What are you attempting?
I figured it out using an old article on the web schiffhauer.com/mvc-5-and-active-directory-authentication
@TravisJ Yeah, I wish they had area's can you find anything on it?
I've got MVC using Windows Authentication.
@Greg I want to use the Identity table for the users and have the Authentication token use Active directory for Admins to sign up in order to create the users
19:26
I've got an SSRS report that I'm trying to display in a c# WPF app. The report was created in its own project which is part of the same solution. It runs fine there but in the XAML it throws this error...
@Alex You could take a look at:
@Greg - Ah, you have to manually do it.
I've copied the RDL file to the WPF project and made it an embedded resource
anybody here know lisp? or any lisp like languages?
19:27
And I've copied the .DATA and other files there too
This is a local report, not running on a SQL Server
I learned Lisp once upon a time.
Always wanted to learn more.
@Alex That calls a SSRS report.
how many of you guys started playing with F#? unsure if i should start looking at it. seems it's gaining popularity a lot
19:28
@sveva - It is.
@ReedCopsey - Here is your chance! :P ^^
@sveva I'd definitely recommend it
Why does the EqualityComparer Need the type for the comperision? bool r = EqualityComparer<string>.Default.Equals(x,y);
All the cool kids program functionally these days.
Yeah, Reed is the F# person here
Senpai of F#
19:29
Did you hear, C# 7 will integrate some of the functional aspects of F# in it.
@MatthiasHerrmann Because they made the type generic, and not the method. There is no generic inference for types, only for methods.
@Greg, like what
You mean aside from the existing functional stuff they baked into LINQ?
yea
@LasseV.Karlsen ok ty
19:31
Not sure yet, but they are talking primarily on data binding and a couple other aspects.
Well, what it "will" include and what it "might" include are different things. C# 6 was supposed to include default constructors as well, but they removed that.
@sveva We can chat in F# room, if you want - so as not to annoy everybody else around here :) chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/51909/f
@LasseV.Karlsen Not entirely sure, rumors from the conference.
There's a lot of info on the github pages, but until they actually release C# 7 I view all of that as plans and not as promises.
Yeah, I agree. But still interesting that it is in the discussion.
19:34
@Greg C# has been "integrating functional features from F#" (ie: stealing stuff) since C# 2 :p
almost every major feature of C# has been stolen or adapted from F#
@ReedCopsey - F# is just our testing ground :P
@ReedCopsey I assumed.
@ReedCopsey, what about stealing from lisp?
though, it'll never be as good IMO
there's too many bad, underlying decisions in the C# language
like?
19:35
statements
^ Which one is the worst?
backwards compatibility
the entire grammar is schizophrenic
no way to fix that now
Reed's making a statement about statements.
it's the enemy of forward progress
19:35
shit!
there are other bad decisions, but that's the one that really causes problems as they adapt features and add things
hindsight is 20/20
@LasseV.Karlsen Well, it's more that C# wasn't intended to be a functional language - it was designed to be an OO one
it's a pretty damn good OO language
Statements? What is the alternative to statements? Pure expressions?
19:37
its more that OO, as an entire concept, is not fitting as well with a lot of modern needs
@TravisJ In F#, everything's an expression ;) there are no statements
user47589
statements vs questions.
what?
;)
user47589
that's the alternative to statements.
I don't remember, how does F# handle impure functions?
@ReedCopsey - So how do you maintain state?
@ReedCopsey - Create sub scopes with nested let commands?
19:39
State's a separate issue
F# is actually very pragmatic - it's not really a functional language - it's a hybrid language - it's just "functional first", where C# is a hybrid that's (very much) "OO first"
best quote was from C# language design team...
Today’s programs are connected and trade in rich, structured data: it’s what’s on the wire, it’s what apps and services produce, manipulate and consume.

Traditional object-oriented modeling is good for many things, but in many ways it deals rather poorly with this setup: it bunches functionality strongly with the data (through encapsulation), and often relies heavily on mutation of that state. It is "behavior-centric" instead of "data-centric".

Functional programming languages are often better set up for this: data is immutable (representing information, not state), and is manipulated fro
Some of the proposed C# 7 additions I don't like. Mads Torgersen showed in a C9 video a case where objects which were essentially just data containers also had to contain things like a "draw" method, like in a object-based designer tool, in order to be drawn on screen. But with simple data container objects, the draw method should be easier to write to handle all the objects.
This breaks down when you suddenly realize that your built-in draw method now handles the 17 types of objects known to the framework at the time the programmer made the draw method, but you can no longer extend that framework without just ditching that basic draw method altogether.
So some parts of the proposed C# 7 additions are great for application developers, but probably pretty useless to framework and component developers.
I think in many ways the idea of dependency injection (not just with a framework or container - as in simply passing in the built object to modify or act on) kind of flys in the face of OO and yet is wildly popular at the moment. Injecting something that can draw in would create the write once use everywhere ability you mention there.
In any case, I don't see the difference between F# and C# as making either language "bad", it makes them different. You can, however, mix them which to me suggests that sure, you can add features that make either language better, but there shouldn't be a need to make one into the other because you can always just write the bits and pieces that are best written in X ... you know, in X!
pheww long day
yeah - the best thing about them is that they play reasonably nice together
19:44
.NET is magic like that.
Will they both compile into one .dll ?
To me, the perfect example of how C# is broken is the new ! for non-nullable reference types
but... I've found very few people who use F# for any length of time who don't tend to go there first. The "default decisions" are (IMO) better
it's so inconsistent
@VeronicaDeane They dropped that
19:45
I haven't really dabbled enough in F# to recognize situations where it would be more powerful to use than C# which I can usually recognize very quickly.
@TravisJ No - you have to have separate assemblies/projects
@ReedCopsey they did? boooo
@ReedCopsey - I see, so basically adding a library ref
they dropped all of the "big" features
I did not get this
19:46
With C#, backwards compatibility trumphs "what is right".
Can someone explain please
Knowledge and technology we have now does not invalidate all that we have had before.
otherwise a lot of the existing collection classes would be gone, no more IEnumerable.
@Obviously: A phishing license?
@LasseV.Karlsen - Can you give an example of when backwards compatibility has cause current features to be lacking?
19:47
@TravisJ Lately my mind tends to wander to Haskell when I think of a concept in C#, and wonder how hard it would be to implement in Haskell, and then I remember that it's already built-in as part of some highly generic system.
All the rigamarole the compiler and a lot of the built-in code has to do in order to cope with the fact that a lot of collections are still only supporting IEnumerable and not IEnumerable<T>.
For example, I started thinking about how to work with multicast delegates, and then I realized that they're just one of the many concepts that map to the IO monad
Several people associated with the C# team or Microsoft has stated that C# 3 was the C# they should've released to begin with.
if they had known
@LasseV.Karlsen, do you know what phishing is?
Yes?
Do you?
19:48
yep
@LasseV.Karlsen - Compiler stuff is behind the scenes though. Does that really affect project or feature implementation that much?
@VeronicaDeane - As far as I am concerned, usually when I am thinking of a solution as long as I can reasonably implement it in a nice encapsulated recursive design I don't care what the language is.
@LasseV.Karlsen, sorry, wrong person
user47589
phat phishing phor phoenicians.
that was meant for @Obviously,
@LasseV.Karlsen I'ts funny, though - when Don and Andrew made generics for C# 2, they got a huge amount of push back from the C# team - everybody said (at the time) that generics were "too academic" for mainstream languages :p
19:49
I guess the C# community showed them :)
If you want something "too academic", try finding anyone that can explain monads.
Either you can not explain monads.
Generics are great.
Or you do not understand monads.
You can't do both. apparently
@LasseV.Karlsen Just ask Gottfried Leibniz. He apparently invented them.
If it's not useful, nobody is really going to care about your esoteric dick waggery of words
The best explanation for monads is just the definition of the class itself
19:51
Real life monad: google directions.
@LasseV.Karlsen I've never had a probelm explaining them to people
Some people would call functional programming "academic", which is why they had to change a bunch of names to sneak it into Linq to Objects.
If Select was called Map, it'd probably be scarier.
@GrantHill Nah, that was just a (poor, IMO) decision to mimick SQL
Meh, academics like to claim they invented everything when really it was industry.
they just had to make it hard to follow :p
19:51
I still don't know what a monad is, "as a concept". I probably know it in terms of using it, I just don't know that the term "monad" applies to it.
@Lasse Want me to explain it to you? :p
Monad isn't exactly a term I use on a year to year basis.
I have yet to find anyone being able to both understand it and to explain it. Usually, not 2 sentences into the explanation they lapse right into "function application" and "currying" and then I'm lost again.
Sure, make a try :)
@ReedCopsey Didn't Linq to SQL come first? I can see wanting to expand it that way. More people probably know SQL than functional concepts like Map() and Fold().
@GrantHill No - Linq to SQL came way, way after FP :p
19:53
If you invoke currying to explain monads, you're confused
After Linq to Objects? Functional programming has been around since the 70s, obviously.
@Grant FP even came before SQL, let alone Linq to anything
@GrantHill 50s ;)
Currying... the idea that created the visitor pattern #shakesfist
I'm saying that the names of the functions in Linq to Objects were deliberately chosen to sound familiar to people who haven't studied functional languages.
19:54
I hate curry. Well, that's not entirely true. I'm not partial to curry :)
Functional programming is basically constraining the language to only use mathematical type functions, right?
@Nathvi no, not really
not really
@Lasse hahaha
19:55
what is it?
Functional programming means side-effect and environment-free programming.
The opposite of dysfunctional programming, naturally.
inputs 1,2,3 => output
first paragraph
19:55
In FP, usually a function has one input and one output, has no side effects, and is deterministic. That's the only thing in common with math.
"that treats computation as the evaluation of mathematical functions and avoids changing-state and mutable data."

So, you can't manipulate values in memory explicitly
Based on the idea of mathematical functions, sure, which don't have side effects and work on immutable information.
no you can't
"is deterministic" = environment-free, meaning that only the inputs passed to the function is used to determine the output, not anything else.
If you want a new value, you make a copy of it.
19:56
@GrantHill, cool
well, you can, but only in a pure sense
I have an ASP.NET mvc project, that displays a feed of articles to the user. Each article has a link that goes to the actual (external) article website.

Does any one know of a good way to track those link click/visits?
It's a lot of fun once you wrap your head around it.
I fell in love with it by using Linq to Objects and learning Lisp.
@Michael: Increase a counter before you redirect? Or do you link directly to the external article?
The typical way is to make a link that goes through a page you control, which would increase a counter, before redirecting.
@LasseV.Karlsen the links, for now, are just a direct link
19:58
@GrantHill, doesn't making a copy of values cause memory to explode?
user47589
if your memory explodes, you have some serious problems.
I hate when memory explodes.
@Nathvi not really - you don't always keep the old copies around
@LasseV.Karlsen how do you even do that?
@Nathvi There's a lot of really clever ways to handle it. For one, you can garbage collect old items nobody's using, and if only parts of the thing changed, you don't need to copy the whole thing.
19:59
but, FP languages do tend to put more pressure on the GC
@ReedCopsey, O,
@GrantHill, so basically, pointers
@ReedCopsey - The idea of building up state by visiting many methods or functions where they are internally chained. That is essentially currying. That may not exactly be where the visitor pattern came from, but the idea of having to constantly visit a similar place with one extra piece of information at a time bothers me at a fundamental level.
they don't have to - but that's common
@Michael Assign a unique ID to the link/target address, and increase a counter per such ID.
@TravisJ mmm - that's really nothing to do with currying
20:00
@TravisJ chaining functions isn't... what he said
And that isn't what I said.
but that's the basis of LINQ - which you don't seem to mind... ?
No, you misread.
If you have a string "CoolString", and you stick another string "!!!!" to it, you don't have to store the new "CoolString!!!" separately. You can just store that it's made up of these two guys in memory.
Keyword there being internal.
20:00
@GrantHill And that's how non-strict execution works
Oh, yeah. Lazy evaluation helps, too.
When you actually evaluate it it has to be a single string
@Nathvi I'm sure most functional languages use pointers behind the scenes, sure. I assume most nonfunctional languages do, too.
(C#, for one)
If by pointers you mean memory addresses, then yes, you need to be able to access memory to do anything.
Harrison Ford is adept at using pointers.
20:08
ResidentSleeper
@VeronicaDeane Pointerpointer never fails to make me smile.
lol
hi hello
hi j j
hjj
hj
20:17
hnng?
I propose a new convention. That ; means lol
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
That should probably be sanitized.
hands Nathvi a wet wipe
@Codeman do you have a favorite book on image processing?
20:22
@LasseV.Karlsen I think I will create an anchor tag that points to an actionresult in my controller that counts the visits and redirects from there.. But then if the user wants to right click and copy the link url to their clipboard they can't.
i remember you did computer eng in school, so I'm guessing you took a course on signal processing or something
Is there any way to have an anchor tag with multiple hrefs? or do you have any thoughts on how to solve this?
Google routes your clicks through another page, so you can't copypasta their links directly.
You'd think that if there was a way to do it, they would.
really?
But if they copy the link, then paste it and use it, don't you want to count that use?
20:24
@LasseV.Karlsen yeah i guess so
Google something, then copy the address from one of the links.
hmm.. catch 22
You get Google garbage, not the link it says.
@GrantHill yeah you are right
@GrantHill - You could easily create a userscript for that
I can make you a chrome extension for it in like 10 minutes.
20:31
I'm sure you could, but my point was that it looks like there's no way to do it serverside, which is what Mike here wanted to do.
oo
server side should be using the api not scraping though
Even with scraping, server side should have no problems. Just take the data-href instead of the href
Like, if he's running the server, and he wants to keep track of who's clicking on what links, he'll have to do like what Google does and route them through another "tracking" page on the way to where they actually wanted to go.
He was complaining that this made it hard to copy-paste links, but the Google example was to show that you apparently can't have links that go straight through but are still copypastable.
Without Javascript or something, I guess.
I see, thanks. I missed that aspect.
Record clicks on anchor tags then? Count the contextmenu as a click
It should be fairly accurate
I think @LasseV.Karlsen's point on that is whether you'd want to count copied links that didn't go anywhere.
Which is fair, but statistically it would probably be a far outlier. The exception would be if someone shared the link to a reddit that went viral or something, but still that probably isn't going to happen. The majority of use will more than likely be just tracking direct clicks.
20:45
You'll have to ask @Michael if he's okay with that. Seems like a good solution, honestly. If someone wants to copy and paste a link, and your URL-mangling track scheme prevents that, they'll just visit the site and copy where they end up, which also doesn't give you clicks.
oh kendall you grew your hair out
user47589
kendall is cuter this way.
@Jeremy you like my beard?
Kendall kinda looks like my stats teacher. Weird.
20:54
That is... statistically unlikely.
@TravisJ If I were to build a login system, any recommendations?
@Greg - Yeah. Keep in mind that if you build it then you are liable for its use.
user47589
build a backdoor in, just in case.
21:05
Well, was hoping to use a lightweight one and not sure if I should use oauth, identityserver
I just had to explain to my PO why it was a bad idea to ask our customer to do some work so that we could do some more work so that our system would operate exactly the same way it does now.
user47589
who is the intended audience?
user47589
@greg
Well, it will be customer's to a specific web-site.
Trying to make it semi universal, to the web-site.
21:21
Is it going to face the world?
Or is it internal to the customer's business?
@GrantHill - The world, Mr. Hill. The world.
Like, all of it?
That sounds like a lot.
face all teh things!
user47589
facing the entire world down? that takes balls.
user47589
or a ball-equivalent.
user47589
21:29
or profound naivety.
Obviously. If you want something to face the whole world at once, it has to be ball-shaped. Basic geometry.
user47589
right
If the light was properly bent in space then all light emanating from the world could in theory be redirected back to the one place. All your base. The one face. For all teh things.
#fridayometry
Is that really facing it, though?
When I think of "facing" something, I think of pointing myself towards it.
Not everything requires a rare spider bite.
21:33
If I'm looking into a mirror, I'm facing the mirror, not whatever I can see reflected in it.
If you discount what you see or what sees you, then how can you truly face anything?
Things that don't see can still face stuff, though. You could say that half of the moon faces the earth, even though the moon can't look at stuff.
Right, because it can be seen from the earth. Hence it is facing it. Thus, if all light bent to one place, then everywhere could see that one place. Hence facing all teh things.
Pluto and its moon face each other, yet there's nobody on either body to see the other.
Well they should seek counselling then. Having nobody on either body sounds like a personal problem.
21:37
There's nobody on my body. It gets lonely sometimes.
Well don't go to Pluto or the Moon for help. Perhaps you should try Venus, I hear that is where women come from.
Gee, that sounds hard. Maybe the Russians still have one of those space probes.
All I have is this lousy regular probe.
Do you need more pylons?
user47589
i could use some vespene gas
user47589
i'll give you a dollar on tuesday for some vespene today
21:49
Yes, it would be outward facing to the internet.
@TravisJ @Amy Any thoughts?
@Greg - I would advise against it, strongly. But that is just my opinion.
user47589
if its internet facing and you want people to be able to login using their G+ account or whatever, use Identity
user47589
But I'm with Travis, I strongly advise against having thoughts.
You think Identity Server would be ideal?
user47589
i dont know anything about identity server
21:51
@TravisJ I don't want to write my own.
Oh, cool.
I just am not sure what to use.
Then use OAuth :) Or SimpleMembership.cs Either way
user47589
i've heard good things about Thintecture's identity server thingy.
Are they lightweight?
user47589
21:52
i probably didn't spell that right
I prefer SimpleMembership but it requires the asp.net schema to be installed on a MSSQL db and is called antiquated by most people
user47589
No idea. I've only heard good things about it.
@Amy - Yes, mwuahah. No ideas.
Counterpoint: Whatever you're talking about is terrible.
What do you mean, antiquated? Does it work with Asp.Net Core.
user47589
21:52
Nothing in Identity has related to my job, so I haven't spent the time delving into it.
It doesn't force a SQL Server Express instance?
user47589
there's also MembershipRebooted
@Greg - I am not sure. It got phased out with asp.net mvc 4. And we are on like 6.5 or something now
user47589
SimpleMembership is pretty old now. It came out with asp.net
@Amy - And MembershipReloaded too
21:53
Oh, hm.
Not sure what to use?
I like SimpleMembership.
I will not give it up evar!
user47589
SimpleMembership doesn't handle things like G+ or FB logins, IIRC.
user47589
not easily
Correct, get those circle-jerking lightweights out of here
Bunch of password leaking bungalows.
user47589
Greg I think its really important to keep in mind that you can always swap out your membership/identity stuff later, it's mostly isolated from the rest of your app, almost plug'n'play.
user47589
21:55
So start with something that fits your requirements.
user47589
You can always swap out later if you need to.
Well, my requirements are: Core and lightweight.
Kinda :) .... well, not easily if you go with certain approaches.
user47589
yeah
In all honesty, you should probably use Identity.
user47589
21:56
i oversimplified a bit, but my overall point is probably good.
@Amy - Except for that part about swapping and fisting requirements.
user47589
fisting requirements
Isn't that what you said?
Doesn't Identity create a separate database instance and force Entity Framework?
Anyway.....
user47589
21:58
no greg
@Greg - I don't think so, you just need to have some sort of db interaction
I get to go early.
Like rite now.
user47589
i'm already home!
lol cheater
user47589
neener
Okay, well anyway be back on the day that shall not be named
21:58
Like the default template creates Entity Framework and a bunch of other stuff.
user47589
bye
user47589
yeah greg, but it does't have to be its own DB, nor does it have to use EF
Later @Amy
user47589
i'm not leaving. travis is
oh.

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