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07:00 - 20:0020:00 - 22:00

20:00
C# is easy to learn
If I were paying for education I'd pay for the hard stuff
it was a hard time for me to understand the databases and queries
but I do know
I like the hard stuff more
I have 0 clue about anything lower than a managed language
haha
Yes my school learns us to google things by ourselfs
my supervisor in my first job wrote a compiler and a 3D engine for his course
They don't teach us c#
they teach us to search for help with c#
:P
20:01
he knew a ton more about low-level stuff than I do, thing is - I'm now a consultant developer and people think I'm a genius with the specific tools I use
I understand them, because if there will be a new language in the future, you have to know how to google
I'm really not, I've just learned it
hahah nice
yeah exactly, my expertise is ten years of googling
3 hours left to do the last 2 requirements + documentation
:(
using Contains and indexof
Really don't know where...
20:04
String methods, right
Contains - does this string contain [character], result boolean, yes or no
They told us that we could come up with an application, BUT u need to have all the requirements in it.
IndexOf - where is this character in the string, if it exists
yes and i'm making a fitness app
You know what I found with university assignments
why should I use that :P
20:05
Listen very carefully, because they will drop hints about how they think you should complete the work
So if you choose a solution that is something they had in mind, the completion of each requirement will be that much easier
But they won't just tell you
They don't tell you the requirement?
What I mean is they will have probably had some particular kind of application in mind that would use each of those requirements
yes
So you had to guess what kind of application?
Well a good lecturer will give good hints, without actually telling you what to do. A not so good lecturer will think they've given you good hints
aha
Ye they told me to come up with a random application and use all of those requirements without even knowing what they would do.
is it hard to make a textbox text invisible? like a password?
20:10
Of course if it's not intentional, you're stuck. They're often the kind of people who see only their way and nothing else and what they had in mind is impossible to guess. Those courses tend to be very hard, because completing the work is much more guesswork than they expected
I know what to do with that indexof, I'm making a captcha :P
good call
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So true, instructors like that also think guess work is part of real life
While it's true, in business world you can always ask. If you are left with guessing, it's usually your own fault.
how many years of experience you guys have?
500 years and counting
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20:15
@Gigatex 8-10 for me. It's a range because I also have some time in other areas, like digital marketing
and do you program as a job or just as a hobby?
I've been a sometime mentor to a relatively new compsci grad before, what he told me was that they did next to nothing about things like how to use source control in a team, how to talk at standups, how to plan work and so on.
I've been mentoring this single girl to be honest tom as of late
My first thought was "Gee, wouldn't a course titled something like 'Commercial Software Practices' be useful?"
and I can't really explain to her the concept of source control
20:16
My second thought was "Who would actually take such a boring-sounding course?"
its like an impossible mission
that's true
We don't learn that
I only think that once people actual face with a problem and need a solution
Just programming all day long
they'll understand it
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20:17
@Gigitex mostly as a job. I do have odd times where it's just PowerPoint for a whole week, or look at Tableau for a whole month.
@Gigitex 8, started my first job in 09
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I'd say the hardest part of software development is people and process.
@edc totally.
One day in a week we are getting lessons to learn how to Pitch and write good documents. Also things like MoSCoW
Even with trying to get something working in software, once you've found the answer, it works
With people, they keep doing it wrong even when you've found the solution
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20:19
I am facing a big problem at work where my team (BI dashboard) gets totally blindsided because some people told the CEO that data are all ready, while they are not.
I have to work with some classmates in a group
We are totally different from eachother
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Because of one message, it takes months, 5 versions of dashboards, thousands of lines of SQL to let people realize something is fucked up.
One guy never listens
He thinks that his code is the best
I was in a meeting today where some executive bloke that hasn't done any software developing in his life kept screaming at us how we should just get the data from the database and its simple as that
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@misha130 oh story of my life.
20:20
whatever that could mean but he did it for a few hours
I think it's a miracle that I have managed to get my current app so far :P
with only 4/5 months of studying
well, I have no time, still need to complete 2 requirements
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A manager here tries to divide a dashboard project into "backend" and "frontend". I am like, dude, there are 5 backends - client data source, our ETL system, our internal database, our SQL queries to pull data into dashboards, which backend are you talking about?!
@Gigitex I guess your issue with a difficult colleague there is that there is no incentive for him to change his ways
121
Q: Fired because your skills are too far above your coworkers

Mik378I have been working for five months for a big French company building great things, a good product with trend methodologies. I've just learned from an internal coworker (technical expert) that I will likely be let go because there's a too huge of a gap between me and other developers in terms o...

I like to note this thread towards people who their code is the best
@Gigitex in the real world your manager should notice he's causing a problem and deal with him. I very much doubt that a class instructor cares
20:22
class instructors don't care indeed
They just have some feedback moments
Not everyone is being honest about eachother then
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@Gigitex consider that to be a learning experience. To fix him, you need to be far more knowledgeable in coding than him to correct him enough of times. Yes, it's possible, but it's hard.
That's not the problem, I'm always correcting him
But it's annoying
Even if I do, he still thinks that his code is good enough
well then don't correct him, point out what is he doing that is bad
and how he can improve
Ye he's getting a 'better' by time
Last week I made a good UI, eveyone in the team said 'We are going to use that', but he said NO I can make it better
>.<
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I am not sure if that makes me a good developer or not, but for the 8-10 years I have in my experience, I don't spend all of them in programming. When I do, I have to split among C#, database, dashboard design, even front end js, HTML, CSS, so I never consider myself to be superb at programming.
20:26
true
Yesterday I asked something about my error on SO
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So when someone says they have a better solution, I tend to listen, because there's a fair chance it's better.
Got a few comments like: WHY ARE YOU USING THAT
Like I would know there would be a better method :p
@edc as long as your ability to just get on a problem and solve it is recognised
with money and seniority
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@Gigitex: there are also cases where people on SO answer, your way is definitely not the way to go, while in a certain business case, or in a certain technical setup, it's the only viable solution.
@edc even when asking questions in person of colleagues who know the domain, I still find that common
"Have you tried..."
No, that's nothing to do with it
"Can't you just"
No, that won't work
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20:30
"Can't you just not use *** database and use *** database instead, and you will get this feature?"
I do this everyday
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Dude, the client has been using that flavour of database in their system, you can't just change that.
for fun
I remarked to a colleague the other day that when, at standup, I have to describe a problem I have, the explanation of what the problem is takes several minutes
god bless postgresql and we will never use it but I will sure to point that out
20:31
Because if I'm stuck on this thing, it's a really horrible problem
if only we could write all our sql queries in R
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@misha130 I used to be mostly on SQL Server, recently on PostgreSQL. Actually, PostgreSQL is indeed quite powerful.
its not much different really
its just comfty
I'm a dozen levels deep already and the constraints on the problem are now so tight that anyone else happening to know the answer is a very slim likelihood indeed
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@misha130 under the hood, there are some differences, but they are really deep-down kind of differences.
20:33
I guess good differences
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Like, you don't get table partitioning by default in PostgreSQL (like in MySQL), but you can still get it done.
I had one this week. A TFS release suddenly started sitting on one step forever, until the agent dropped the connection and aborted, took several hours
We hadn't chyanged anything
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On the flip side, you get the LISTEN NOTIFY feature in PostgreSQL that you won't get anywhere else.
After a day and a half of research I found that one of our scripts that uses sqlplus to install an Oracle package had for no apparent reason begun throwing permissions errors
and sqlplus when it hits an error just sits there and waits for input, which the script can never give
thats extremly useful
20:35
Cannot repro, the script runs perfectly when invoked by the same user logged onto the box interactively
There is no permissions error
So I'm now down to trying to troubleshoot why a remote powershell session would sometimes not see a domain user's group membership correctly
oh yeah, rebooting the box 'fixed' it
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@TomW the only odd time where rebooting actually fixes something
until next time! to be continued!
I have had my suspicions about this client's domain admin for a while
but I don't know anywhere near enough about windows domains to begin to fault-find for this
thing is if I present my suspicion that it's a domain administrative problem, nothing will happen
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I think recently my hardest problem is how to calculate gross margin for a client
The reason: they dunno how they calculate that either... but they are a multi-million fast fashion business...
Oh yeah, another great people/process problem
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20:40
no software, no programming can fix that... lol
the customer doesn't know how their own business works
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The process is screwed up to the point their finance don't trust their marketing calculations
guys I'm using a delete query with SQL with ExecuteScalar() and it is executing the query but then it's giving me an error
ow wait, nvm now I typed it
I have to use ExecuteNonquery
Sorry :P
That is some dumb naming, because a DELETE query is in fact a query...so 'non query' is not correct, is it
it is correct
I thought that at first too
stupid Nonquery
20:48
@TomW make every physical solution to the problem and present them with it
no I mean, it's the right method, but...the method is badly named
there, programmatically solved
ExecuteSomeQueriesButNotOthers
misreplied
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Well another problem is my company has never done BI before. They want us to start building reports when data schema is not at a sound stage. Oh they also refuse to listen.
Ah, don't want to go back to work on Monday... trying to quit this month.
20:50
Ah damn business part of IT is no fun
IT is business
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Business is fun when you get champions for your work.
and IT has tons and tons of business, probably more business than most other industries.
ye with the business lessons @ school we learn things like
PCDA
Plan do check act
and moscow requirements
and databases with Access...
>2016
do you connect to your access with a vb 6 form?
or maybe is it MFC
no we use access to understand databases
and MSSQL for forms
Hate access...
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20:55
I find that schools spend so much time teaching data and database, but never spent time teaching charts and graphs.
Yes haha
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This is 2017, we don't need to always look at data in tabular format.
I have 2 tables. Table User and Table Day. Table User has a column with a default of 3200. Table Day has a column with some random integers. I have to count al columns of table Day and do 3200 minus those colums.
how
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What database is it?
MSSQL
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20:58
Actually that's kind of irrelevant sorry. What's the relationship between User and Day?
I am thinking the PIVOT/UNPIVOT command can probably solve it
User contains all the information of the user. Product contains of all the information of the eaten products. Day is a 'linktable' (don't know the English name of it ) for User and Product
Day contains a column called UserID and one called ProductID
Both are foreign keys from the other 2 tables
Day contains also 1 last table called Calories
The user table contains a default table called Caloriesleft with an integer of 3200
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And is it one to one, one to many, or many to many relationship?
Now to recalculate the Caloriesleft, I need to take Caloriesleft and do it minus all the columns with Calories
User can have more products
A product can also have more users.
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so many-to-many
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21:02
I guess that's why the bridge (Day) is there.
yes
Since the products can have different amounths I have added Calories to the bridge.
You can drink 250 ml Cola,
but I can drink the same cola but more. 330 ml
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It sounds like you want to see if a User consumes enough calories for a day
So let's say I have eaten a banana 300 cal and a potato 400 cal
And my Caloriesleft is 3200.
It should do something like this:
Caloriesleft = Caloriesleft - All Rows of Column Calories for User ID.
Ye something like that :P
So Caloriesleft = 3200 - 300 banana - 400 potato
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So I'd forget about caloriesleft for a moment, do:
User left join linktable left join product, group by user_id, sum(calories)
Only have pseudocode, but you get the idea ;-)
yes, thanks :)
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21:07
actually inner join would be more decent
well, depends what they ask, if they want all users, or just users that actually consumed products
only the user thats logged in
so it first should Select Day where UserID = @userid;
or something
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Well, if it's left join, you would get rows for user_id even when there's no matching rows in linktable and Product. If it's inner, you only get the intersect.
@Gigitex: yup, didn't know you just want to calculate for one user in an application; thought you want overall :P
21:42
is it possible that ExecuteNonquery doesnt update?
("UPDATE [Gebruiker] SET RESTERENDECAL = 3200 where [Gebruiker-ID] = @GebruikerID;) this is my query
cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@GebruikerID", userproduct.GebruikerID); the parameter
but executenonquery returns 0 updated
when i run this query directly in the database, it works.
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