« first day (2083 days earlier)      last day (3094 days later) » 

20:01
@JakobMillah

PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
room topic changed to C#: The Purile Room, A Safe Space for Panini 🍞 Home of JicamaJS! Confused? Good! 🍞 csharpchat.com 🍞 gist.github.com - For Easy Code Pasting [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [coreclr] [entity-framework] [java-hate] [jicama] [linq] [panini] [php-hate] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
should change "Purile" to "Puerile" right?
why is a stack called a stack?
because it's not a queue
^_^
i feel like there are many definitions of the word thrown around.
20:05
Why you hate PHP here? :D even Visual Studio likes it now :)
Lol yeah..
but in terms of Microsoft Stack?
A stack is a pile of things
its not really the same as a programming stack
20:06
Think about it as application layers
except product layers
Ok, Sidney, I can C# now :D
@Bardicer ah crap you're right
room topic changed to C#: The Puerile Room, A Safe Space for Panini 🍞 Home of JicamaJS! Confused? Good! 🍞 csharpchat.com 🍞 gist.github.com - For Easy Code Pasting [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [coreclr] [entity-framework] [java-hate] [jicama] [linq] [panini] [php-hate] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
Is it a best practice to put the nullable/not required paramters at the end of signature????
@Obviously yes
so i was told
20:08
i'll star that - i'm not right often
I also like how dejected mtl was that you were right.
So If I have a method
like
@Obviously otherwise you'd have to put in random nulls
SomeMethod(int a, int? b, int c)
Can I call it like SomeMethod(1,2)
in that case it doesn't really matter since you have to supply all 3 parameters anyway.
20:09
yeah to use it without needing to specify b. you would have to do:
SomeMethod (1, null, 2);
SomeMethod(int a, int c, int? b = null)
You should use SomeMethod (Tuple<int, int?, int> a)
ohhhh so i will have to call it like SomeMethod(1,null,2)
But if the last parameter is nullable
@Sidney I was told tuples are undesirable
I can just do SomeMethod(1,2)
20:10
being nullable has nothing to do with it. being optional is the key
Is this correct??
@Obviously the point is that you want to put optional parameters torward the end
nullable parameters are not automatically optional, and optional parameters are not necessarily nullable.
#TupleLivesMatter
20:11
Tuple is awesome but my boss won't let us use them.
so I hide them deep inside the code where he never looks.
@MichaelEdenfield ohhhh risky move
We don't discriminate based on types.
like a dangerous monster lurking in the shadows for future programmers.
@MichaelEdenfield its like u planted a land mine
just when you thought you understood the data flow through the backend system, you scroll down and !WHAM~! you are attacked by a rouge Tuple<List<Tuple<int, string>>, string, double>
20:13
var v = new {item1 = foo, item2 = bar} //Secret Tuple
A wild Tuple<List<Tuple<int, string>>, string, double> appears
@Sidney sneaky
@MichaelEdenfield your avatar is very appropriate
Next you're going to tell me you use dynamic
!!dynamic
@mikeTheLiar Using dynamic in C# is like grabbing a tiger by the coffee cup.
20:14
the Tuple<int, IEnumerable<dynamic>, Dictionary<string, Tuple<int, int>>> is not dead but dreaming.
Aren't Tuples like... awful? I heard something like this
he uses dynamic tuples
@DominikSzymaƄski i think they are useful-ish. but some people find them confusing.
In a language that has first class support for them, tuples are awesome.
shoehorned into C# the way they are, they're annoying and not very clear.
@DominikSzymaƄski Tuples by themselves are fine. In C#, however, there is no advantage to using tuples over a custom type
@DominikSzymaƄski Ok, I'll stop trolling since you're new (I think?). Barring a major upgrade in a later implimentation of C#, Don't use tuples if you can ever help it.
20:16
I think they're unclear, and it's much easier to create custom, simple class with properties
Even when a temporary storage container within the scope of the function is required, an anonymous type offers more clarity.
I have used them on occasion to pass blocks of data between private methods.
I was watching a video the other day of a renown british professor that was marking the arugment that HTML can be viewed as a very limited programming language.
@DominikSzymaƄski take any advice directed at Obviously with a large grain of salt
where anonymous types don't work.
20:17
Oh, don't stop trolling because of me ;) I'll just get trolled sometimes :D
but I'd never leak them out of my class.
Like, a Lot's wife sized grain
@MichaelEdenfield if your class is leaking stop eating Olestra
@Michael, I saw it today too :D
@Michael HTML is a limited programming language if you consider 'not being a programming language' it's only limitation.
It's 30 minutes till quitting time and I've been regression testing all day. I'm a bit salty.
Yeah, not turning complete.. but a tag is like a function that takes parameters
Trolling is the default behavior.
> a tag is like a function that takes parameters
wat
That doesn't make any sense
<h1> being a function that takes the parameter of text to produce an heading of level 1
@Michael The problem with that is that you're restricting your idea of what a programming language is
20:19
except <h1> doesn't produce anything.
it stands for a heading.
Programming languages don't have to have functions
@mikeTheLiar but that's what the guy in YT said :)
Check out this vid: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4A2mWqLUpzw
functional programming does
oh.
Computerphile.
god.
I like the professor guy lol
20:20
I love Brady's videos. but Computerphile is geared towards people who think your CPU is the think you click on to make Facebook go.
@Michael whoa, you don't say
@MichaelEdenfield thats not true lol
> Where HTML beats C?
wat
@MichaelEdenfield All his videos are aimed at noobs. That's why I watch numberphile but not computerphile
> the two kinds of programming languages, known in the trade as "imperative" or "declarative"
fail already.
and this guy's obviously old enough to remember LISP
20:22
I love that Numberphile guy, that talks a lot about Pi :D He's funny :D
hmmm
Those are pretty loose generalizations
@MichaelEdenfield lisp is functional.
but not entirely wrong
He's old enough that it's impossible for him to be wrong
Old computerists is best computerists
@Michael that was my point.
20:23
@DominikSzymaƄski who, James Grime?
@MichaelEdenfield when he says declarative he means functional
@Michael now that's definitely worse
There are languages that are neither imperative nor functional
XML
and there are languages that are both
20:24
@VeronicaDeane, exactly :)
xml is not programming
although..... it could be :P
@Michael he clearly does not, since he proceeds to describe declarative programming languages as ones where you don't code the functions
XML is not a language, but XSL is
XML is very much a language
20:26
@MichaelEdenfield yes he does. he writes: "functional" right there under declarative.. doesnt he?
What do you think the L stands for?
really? someone flagged a yo momma joke?
@MichaelEdenfield Yo Momma so dumb she flagged it
ugh.
he DOES
wow that sheet is just all wrong.
20:27
"declarative" == "functional" == "interpreted" ??!?!
those three words mean totally different things
He's not saying declarative == functional
he's saying functional is an example of a declarative style
I think this guy is making this up as he goes along.
^
the "" indicate that he's even saying that in a qualified sense
he also says that printf is an example of a declarative style
I usually like this guys videos, but this one is making me cringe every 30 seconds.
yeah, and he uses <p> as the example of everything
20:30
also is that printer paper
my Dad used to bring piles of that home for colouring on when I was 5
lol its the rippyy sides paper
"computer paper"
@MichaelEdenfield what are your definitions (simple) of the programming paradigms?
imperative, declarative, functional? or are u saying functional is sub-declarative?
How do I remove the key cap inscription from an old, plain old key piece?
I want to mimic this:
I would say grouping functional under declarative is overly general, but not invalid.
20:33
get a knife
I don't thank that'd work.
spray paint?
@catgocat try... Sandpaper maybe?
try acetone
fire?
20:33
If you really want to learn about paradigms, try some of the languages on esolangs.org
Buy a keyboard meant for that sort of thing?
writing down the suggestions
Pop off the keys and spraypaint them?
@Sidney I beat you to it.. provide a unique suggestion
Pop the keys off, lay down plastic over keyboard, replace keys, then spraypaint? (good luck gettin' em back on)
20:34
Pop off the keys and sandpaper them?
nah spraypaint will wear off
unless it's enamel paint then you might have a chance
pop the keys off and replace them with popcorn
pop off the keys and pop them like popcorn
then eat.
@VeronicaDeane then I would get my hands dirty
bop it twist it pull it flick it
20:36
You guys think acetone will do the job?
Remove the keyboard housing and short the keyboard circuits with your fingers.
wont that eat the keys entirely lol?
Acetone won't do the job
hey.. just remove the keys.
then u will have those nice little squishy pads to press
Sandblasting could work.
If you used something super find, like baking soda.
20:37
It depends what the keys and the paint are made of
different solvents for different materials
they're made from keyboard stuff
Sandpaper ^^
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/90/Schleifpapier_verschiedene_Sorten.jpg
I would probably recommend natural erosion.
over the course of 500,000 years
thermoplastics tend not to be too bothered by acetone if it doesn't stay on them long
maybe carnivorous nematodes?
20:38
whether the paint is more or less soluble in acetone, eh, who knows
Everything is soluble in Sandpaper :D
@catgocat we are all made up of keyboard dust
keyboard dust is made up of us you.
Oh c'mon man you posted that like two days ago
20:40
But it's good
is it?
well.. we would make it not as good.
I left a key on acetone
we are all made up of atoms,
20:41
let's see what it does it a couple of hours
@catgocat u just casually have acetone readily available?
yeah
@Michael You don't?
@catgocat you'll probably have to go shopping for new, caption-free keyboard :)
@DominikSzymaƄski but but money
20:42
@Sidney maybe i need to rethink my priorities
Clearly.
what the hell am i doing?
@Michael If you don't have, probably yo Momma haz
@Michael wasting human cells
Not having strong solvents readily available in your house.
20:43
Are you a woman? If so, you probably do have acetone
Mommas often have acetone, like that fluid used to remove nail polish
at approximately 5 million % its reasonable market value
my mom has acetone
on her bathroom
exactly
20:44
doesn't acetone remove nail polish?
are u talking nail polish remover?
I have at least three different gallons of solvents in my garage. #Manly
@Michael, yup
yes, exactly the same substance
20:45
really? hm. I must google and confirm
--"Generally, the main ingredient of any remover is either acetone or the less-toxic combination of ethyl acetate and isopropyl alcohol"
I have also heard of commercial products called pine-sol and simple green to remove paint without damaging plastic
neither of which is available under that name in the UK so I haven't been able to find out what they actually are
I always associated acetone with paint thinner
20:46
@Michael
I didn't realize simple green removed paint.
@Michael, everyone, who is girl, or have ever lived with one knows, that nail polish remover, that doesn't contain acetone sucks at removing polish
@Sidney works on water-based acrylics, specifically. Warhammer as a teenager
Ah, I was gonna say. I use it to clean the garage floor after auto work, and sadly it doesn't pick up the paint stains in the corner.
An artist I knew was surprised that water-based acrylics existed, so
20:49
nah, acetone didn't work
it did nothing besides smelling really bad
@catgocat Do you have a compressor handy?
@catgocat did you rub-a-dub-dub?
fuck you acetone smells awesome
@Sidney ofcourse
20:50
@catgocat Buy a cheap sandblaster. Use baking soda.
@catgocat it completely depends on what the paint is made of
@catgocat what dont you have handy?
Why won't you use sandpaper?
You can get one at Harbor Freight for ~$10
much simpler, cheaper and less smelly
20:51
I don't have sandpaper
do you have a little red-ryder bb gun handy?
@DominikSzymaƄski because power tools are awesome
@Sidney yup soda blasting is a valid technique
@Sidney do you think it'd work through an airbrush?
20:51
I wonder if the nubs on the F and J keys would survive.
probably nowhere near powerful enough
@TomW I honestly don't know. Never played with an air brush.
does a sandblaster blast out sand?
Yes
@Sidney do you know anyone, that navigates on keyboards by these F and J thingys?
20:52
I do
use them to find your 'home' keys :)
@Michael soda blasting is similar but less harsh
It uses [science] to pull up sand with air and propel it at whatever pressure your air source provides.
@DominikSzymaƄski Do you like... Look at your keyboard when you type?
I ripped over 300 keys from old laptops (that went trash), thinking they'd be useful sometime in the future.
@TomW interesting. are they specific tools, or you can hook them up to a general air compressor?
....
@Michael no idea, never used one
20:53
no, I just know where my keys are, I don't need these dongles
@Michael There are electric ones, but you can use ones that you just hook up to an air compressor.
@DominikSzymaƄski fine, give them to me
oh hey, Szymanski is my wife's last name
@Michael it's a good way to give yourself lung disease without proper training and equipment though
If you have a crappy air compressor though, be sure to get an inline water filter.
20:54
@CuddleBunny, lol, where are you from?
@Michael In theory, you could make one with an off-the-shelf air compressor, but I don't think real sandblasters work that way.
we're from the US, but her father was from Romania I think
A friend of mine made a DIY one
@DominikSzymaƄski are you romanian?
Romania... Weeird :D But OK :D My father is from Romania too, but I'm Polish
20:55
@VeronicaDeane True dat. When I was working in a shop we had a shop service compressor we used. You wouldn't want to try it with say a pancake compressor though.
yeah, they are polish too
There are lots of "SzymaƄski" in Poland :D
Just want to say to all the Poles and Romanians who've heard things, I'm sorry for the utter utter shit said about you by idiots in the UK right now
Makes sense. Her family dropped the accent on the Ƅ
It could have been dropped by US Immigration office, they like to do such things to sound more like US people ;)
20:58
probably that
and it's easier to type, if you don't have PL or something like that, keyboard
magic car wheels
@TomW I quite don't care, idiots are idiots, nothing more to say :)
@Michael Nice, but how do they behave in normal road situation?
@DominikSzymaƄski im sure they dont behave
@Michael, you know, Won't they fall of while drifting or something?
21:00
adios for the day.
yeah because drifting is a "normal road situation"
@Michael I've used omni-directional wheels in robotics, there are some neat ones:
Can someone explain me why the first line is working - but the second doesnt? and if yes pls explain it :)
yeah, but you could just accidentally loose control over the car
21:02
nullableInt = Program.returnNull() ?? 10;
            nullableInt = null ?? 10;
@MatthiasHerrmann How is it "not working"?
Operator can't be applied to type null and int but as you see my Program.returnNull() method is returning null as well
@Veronica
I think it's because the compiler doesn't know that null is an int?
it should work if you cast it
but clearly, compiler doesn't know what is Program.returnNull() until it goes
21:05
What does returnNull() do? Other than the obvious.
so it might be null, or might be something completely different
Ahh ty, I Need to cast it:
nullableInt = (int?) null ?? 10;
@mikeTheLiar it is just returning null :) - I'm just testing stuff
@mikeTheLiar calculates your income taxes.
@MatthiasHerrmann type null and value null are not the same thing
@mikeTheLiar you know that, because you're human and have logic. Compiler sees method, that needs to call to see what it returns. I'm pretty sure that it's declared as public static object returnNull()
@DominikSzymaƄski yeah, which would explain a lot.
21:07
(int?)null is of type int?. null is of type null
@MichaelEdenfield I'mma null all over ya face in a minute
null is not a type at all. It's value
Now I'm confused
int is type, void is quite type too, but null is value, just like true
@MatthiasHerrmann when your function declares itself as returning an int? and then executes return null, it is returning a Nullable<int> with a value of null.
when you use the null literal, you are using a value of type null with a value of null
21:09
@MichaelEdenfield that's the point
Ok I got it :)
the error you are getting has nothing to do with the value being null. it's because the types are different. type null != type int?
no type null. There's no type null
sigh
just remember you made me do this.
> The null literal (§9.4.4.6) evaluates to the null value, which is used to denote a reference not pointing at any object or array, or the absence of a value. The null type has a single value, which is the null value. Hence an expression whose type is the null type can evaluate only to the null value. There is no way to explicitly write the null type and, therefore, no way to use it in a declared type. Moreover, the null type can never be the type inferred for a type parameter (§25.6.4)
Where did you get this from?
21:11
the C# spec
mic drop
So try to create public null GetNull()...
@MichaelEdenfield how can I get the type of the value null in a program?
you cannot.
you'll get "null is value but is used like a type"
21:12
There is no way to explicitly write the null type and, therefore, no way to use it in a declared type.
the null type exists specifically to be the type of the null literal, and specifically to be different from every other possible legal type you can write in C#
as far as I know, there's no way to "get it" in C#, because everything you try to do will cause it to be coerced into a real type, or be interpreted as the null literal and be a syntax error
okay, okay, let it be. But in the lowest level, there is nothing like types, there are references to location in memory. And null is reference to location "0", what makes it more value than type.
And that's why you can never get line number in debugger for NullReferenceException - It's so low level, that CPU don't know what you're doing now, but knows, that you're trying to reference part of memory, you shouldn't.
And that's what null means - reference to "0" location in memory
That's what I learned on StackOverflow ;)
null is also not a reference to location 0 in memory, but that's a whole different conversation. That's not even technically pedantically true in C.
long time ago, but still...
21:17
It does look like MS changed their mind on the null type as of C# 6, tho.
> In Roslyn we will probably not use this strategy; rather, we'll simply bake into the compiler implementation that some expressions have no type. -- Eric Lippert
user47589
whats the question
Am I super awesome?
user47589
Absolutely.
user47589
Next question.
that was pretty much it.
user47589
21:19
the junior dev and i just spent the last 2 hours trying to figure out how to add a button to the Outlook ribbon bar. :-/
and some inanely pedantic discussion about nulls.
ugh. we ended up buying some 3rd party library for that. and it mostly works most of the time.
user47589
yeah i tried following the nulls conversation
Null conversations rarely go anywhere worthwhile.
user47589
everything we found online indicates you just need to add a ribbon to your project, set a few properties, and install the addon. that's supposed to be all you need to do.
user47589
meh
21:22
Add a yellow ribbon to the old Outlook tree
user47589
I'll bring an axe to work tomorrow, cut down that tree.
my vague recollection is that things got progressively worse with every version of Office.
user47589
All evidence available validates that hypothesis
I was supposed to be implementing a new data connector to some legacy system today.
instead I sat on a useless call, ate lunch, then started teaching myself how to chiptune.
I call that a step up.
user47589
slacker
21:33
@techspider I asked there already, but I prefer my mates around here
@mikeTheLiar Well, not many options when it comes to API on hostings..
22:08
so I guess there is gulp.watch and gulp-watch what do?
@MichaelEdenfield "started teaching myself how to chiptune" I can think of no greater cause.
So far I have successfully transcribed the Doctor Who theme.
22:26
I made rebecca black in chiptune once
why not?
good enough.
after chiptune I'm going to move up to remixes. So I can do this
How the hell do those songs go together? :wtf:
I can't quite figure out if I should be shocked at how well they fit.
i mean, the same key and tempo and beat isn't a major deal... lots of songs sound the same if you isolate those parts because they "sound good".
but all the timings line up.
the whistling gets me very time.
22:37
I'm going to download it. Really interesting
22:47
@MichaelEdenfield From 2:15 is just amazingly well lined up for me
22:58
Something I've been unsure of for a long time. Let's say I have a collection (that get's recreated often) of some class that implements INotifyPropertyChanged. If I hook up a lamda to each instance of that class's PropertyChanged event, in the collection, will I create a memory leak when I drop that collection and create a new one?
@BrandenBoucher I can't think of how you would. I think you're safe.

« first day (2083 days earlier)      last day (3094 days later) »