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03:07
I'm just gonna drop this here, take it for what it's worth.
332
Q: Time to take a stand

Joel SpolskyI am extremely upset by President Trump’s executive order on immigration. It is immoral, unconstitutional, and fundamentally un-American. The community on Stack Overflow is made up of users from all over the world. At least 100,000 posts on Stack Overflow were written by users from the seven cou...

 
1 hour later…
04:36
UHOH! tutorial is making me change border-radius guys
is NSA gonna spy on me now?
 
3 hours later…
07:30
'morning.
user7484641
08:07
Hello!
I'm no SQL wiz, but I'm pretty sure EF shouldn't create a query that's 6 subselects deep. :(
user7484641
Hello @AvnerShahar-Kashtan!
Nik
Nik
G'morn. Guys, I'm having trouble with a program I wrote. It ain't working as it's supposed to.
@BobDoeJoe Yo.
Nik
Nik
Could one of you gentlemen take a look at it : pastebin.com/sJdFzhDQ
08:12
@Nik What's the code supposed to do, and what doesn't work?
user7484641
I have a good story to share.
user7484641
C++ is not C#, luckly I'm a C++ guy now.
Luckily for who?
Nik
Nik
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan It's supposed to be cli that lets you enter a command that performs a function. Enter check to check if a number is a palindrome but the if cmd == "check" isn't working.
user7484641
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan @Nik. His paste is c++
Nik
Nik
08:13
@BobDoeJoe It's C11
user7484641
Yeah.
user7484641
Just a sec.
@BobDoeJoe Oh. Didn't even bother clicking yet.
user7484641
Lol.
user7484641
Do you like my new name?
user7484641
08:15
If you know, don't reveal it.
Does C++11 support == equality for strings?
user7484641
I'm sure it does. Maybe...
Or, more properly between char[] and strings.
@BobDoeJoe It's C++. I make no assumptions.
std::string might have the == operator overloaded, but char[]? Not necessarily.
user7484641
Okay, my brain is in JavaScript mode, I cannot do any C++ things tonight.
user7484641
And this regex.... jsbin.com/dalijohozo/edit?js
08:18
This answer isn't updated for C++11, but it is important to note the differences between char*, char[] and proper string objects, like std::string or std::basic_string
user7484641
How has it been @AvnerShahar-Kashtan?
@BobDoeJoe It has... been. Definitely been.
user7484641
Haha, okay, I know what I am asking at that sounds weird, I'll explain, not on SO.
Nik
Nik
08:45
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Thanks. I replaced == with strcmp() and it works just great.
@Nik A better idea would be to not use scanf/char[] at all.
These are C functions and C idioms.
C++11 has much better and safer alternatives.
 
2 hours later…
10:56
What does this mean in Entity Framework:
[ForeignKey("ItemId")]
public virtual List<File> Files { get; set; }
What I know is that we just use the `ForeignKey` Attribute on single properties
11:32
It creates a link between your entity (Item?) and the File entity, modeled as a foreign key in the Files table.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I want to read more, have a link to any reference?
 
1 hour later…
13:00
Doing database profiling all day. Found some really, really stupid bugs.
We have a NotificationMessages table, like Facebook notifications, stored per user. When the user clicks Clear All, instead of issuing a simple "UPDATE NotificationMessages Set IsRead=1" to the DB, the code would read all unread message to memory via EF, mark IsRead=True, and AddOrUpdate the object back to the DB.
Note - ALL messages. Even other users' messages.
Also, since there were 400k unread messages in the table (it's on a stress testing machine), it would spend around 3 hours updating them one by one.
Replaced with a single ExecuteSqlCommand call.
Good riddance.
And this is why cqrs is good
That code sure was crud.
 
1 hour later…
14:17
Oh!
3
A: Can not find C# Chat room

Ivo FlipseYou ask, we serve

Brought me here.
Well, here we are.
Of course, it's possible the room never existed before you came here, and we just hurried in to pretend we were here all along.
yes
bye!
you confused him lol
Just noticed that it's a 6 year old question.
14:22
yep
Is there a way to get EF to choose the latest-item-in-a-group that doesn't create a convoluted query behind the scenes?
Let's say I have a table with CaseActions that can have multiple actions per case, and I want the latest Action for each case.
Right now I do CaseActions.GroupBy(ca => ca.CaseId).Select(group => group.OrderByDescending(ca => ca.CreationTime).FirstOrDefault())
But it makes for complicated queries that make it hard to figure out what's going on and where the slow queries are coming from.
 
5 hours later…
19:05
hey can someone help me with an ASPNET question?
i have a dropdownlist that is being populated correctly, but suddenly it stopped working. the list is still populated but when i try to select an item it is not being displayed
what is interesting is that the database when i save information shows that the selected item from the dropdownlist is being added to the database
20:05
@peterpep Sounds like a CSS or other presentation issue.
<div class="form-group">
        @Html.LabelFor(m => m.Genre)
        @Html.DropDownListFor(m => m.Genre, new SelectList(Model.Genres, "Id", "Name"), "", new { @class = "form-control" })
        @Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Genre)
    </div>
@SeventhSon this is literally what is controlling that dropdownlist
i dont understand what suddenly changed that it stopped working
It is possible that "Name" no longer contains the data you might expect?
but when i press the dropdownlist it shows all the genres
just when i select an item
the dropdownlist display value is blank
Oh, so the selected item is not being reflected when populating the list from existing data?
when i click the dropdownlist again, it shows it selected in the list view
the list is populated correctly
just when i try to actually pick it
the display doesnt update
20:10
I don't understand. It's probably just me.
Is it the form-control class?
Did you try removing that?
@SeventhSon VERY INTERESTING!
when i removed the form-control it works
but it loses its styling
Another thing you might try is using source control, so that you can examine the differences in previously working code and new code.
Yeah, I thought it might be a presentation/css issue.
the only code i added to the site.css regarind form-control is:
.form-control {
font-size: 14;
padding: 20px 15px;
-ms-border-radius: 9px;
border-radius: 9px;
}

.form-control:focus {
border-color: #2196F3;
box-shadow: none;
-webkit-box-shadow: none;
}
i dont see which of those could be affecting it displaying anything
son of a bitch
its the padding!!!
Padding of 20 px might be higher than the height of the control!
lol,, I didn't see your comment till just now
yea
what was strange is it didnt affect my other fields
20:16
Know anything about RAID HDD controllers by any chance?
not too much
but i know someone that might
whats the questions?
Well, I had two HDDs configured for RAID at one time, but took one HDD out a long time ago, and want to be able to use it again. I'm using AHCI for HDD setting in BIOS, and want to ensure that placing the old HDD back in the system isn't going to prompt the sys to attempt to use RADI and sync up the drives and cause data loss.
ill try to send friend a text
christ learning all this front end and back end shit is a lot to take in
MVC and all this stuff is so new to me
Yeah, me too. I'm a webforms guy.
20:36
spit spit
whats really the difference between mvc and webforms?
still new to all of this shit
im just following a tutorial thats building a website
21:01
Hi there !
I would need some help with a C# program
21:54
@peterpep Webforms sucks, that's the difference.
@Marc-AntoineJacob Maybe later, running out.
22:22
Having trouble with public/private get/set access modifiers. Can someone help me clarify?
I'm watching some instructional videos right now on C# OOP. I took a few courses in school and I felt like I never got a deep understanding of private fields and get/sets.
you dont want the public to see your privates
Essentially, I need clarification on exactly what's happening.
@hsimah thanks for that.
lol
private is only usable in the class it is defined
public is usable by other classes
take this for example: public DateTime BirthDate {get; set;}
Now, my understanding is this short essentially does this:
*shorthand essentially does this:
if that is on class A, then it can be read and set by class B
22:26
private DateTime _birthdate;
public DateTime {
get { return _birthdate}
set { _birthdate = value }
}
so, _birthdate is only usable inside that class, but it can be accessed by another class via the public BirthDate (which you missed when typing that in)
But, I'm seeing some examples where they also make the "set" private
yeah
for example, your birthday never changes
yes, thank you for understanding my typing error.
Yes, exactly, but then why have a set if it's private?
so you might only set it in the constructor when you create the User
so other classes can get the birth date, but they cannot modify it
22:29
Then all you have is a read only which is just a "get" isn't it?
that's one way to do it
but you might want to change the value from inside the class
Outside the class, a property with a private setter looks just like a readonly property
So they are accomplishing the same thing?
And you would generally only set a private "set" from inside a constructor when an object is instantiated?
a better example would be the Status of an Email. eg Draft, Sending, Sent.
ok...
22:31
inside the email class it determines its own Status, using the private set. External classes only read the Status via the public get
when should i use ref?
Almost never
you shouldn't use ref from my understanding. If possible
even tough i change the object?
22:32
there's this russian dude on my team who wont stop using ref
its all over the bloody codebase
an object is just a thing. if someone changes it, it doesn't appear changed for only some people, it changes for everyone
I dunno why you needed to know he was russian.
@hsimah I thought it was funny.
so say
ref is only relevant when you need to modify variables, not objects
22:33
i send an object
@hsimah so clarification on the email example.
and i only construct him in the function
So why do we need a private set inside the email class?
@schulzey This allows the class to reassign the property
Does this happen via the constructor or other places in the code? Or is it always assigned via the class in the constructor?
22:35
Depends what is needed
It can be reassigned anywhere, unlike readonly
@KendallFrey Okay, I think I know what I'm asking here. So we would only have private "set" if we are modifying in the constructor. We don't need a set at all if we are modifying somewhere else in the code correct?
incorrect
@KendallFrey @hsimah I think this is what's confusing me.
You need a setter if you intend to assign the property
@KendallFrey Anywhere else in the class?
22:37
anywhere at all
I just remember we had assignments where other methods set the property last semester and I thought it was confusing
I'm saying if the setter is private
There was no setter private field, but we set our field somewhere else in the class
You can always set a field unless it's readonly. It's not like a property.
I don't know why this is hard for me to explain. I apologize
it's okay mate. these things seem really easy to me these days, but I had to learn it all too.
I thought properties were fields?
22:40
No.
What is the difference?
A better question might be, what is the same? The answer is, pretty much nothing.
They both can be read and assigned to
Hmmm
if you are using the auto-implemented property (ie get;set;) and you want to limit read/write access you would have a private get or set. If you are using a private field (ie { return _birthdate; } { _birthdate = value; }) you can limit it by not having a get/set at all
A field is a variable. A property is a get and/or set method that can do anything.
22:42
So a property is just a field that has a get set?
A property is not a variable
It per se does not contain a value.
But a field might not either
A field always contains a value
where null is a value for the purposes of this discussion
22:43
as in null? No object was instantiated
ok, gotcha
So back to my birthdate example. That's a property or field?
Which one?
If it has a get/set, it's a property
private DateTime _birthdate;
public DateTime Birthdate{
get { return _birthdate}
set { _birthdate = value }
}
That's one field and one property
_birthdate is a field
So a property is a way of setting a field, but it is not a property. I think that's what you're saying
22:46
Birthdate is a property
the property exposes the field
*not a field sorry
Keep in mind that properties don't need to use a field
properties can do more than just setting a field, but basically yes
So is a constructor a property?
No, it's a method
22:47
I'm aware it's a method. But a get or set can have method as well
get and set are methods
yes, I meant they are methods and can have methods inside of them as well
No
Methods cannot have methods inside them
You can't have a method inside of a get set?
except for anonymous functions
22:49
private DateTime _birthdate;
public DateTime Birthdate{
get { return _birthdate}
set { _birthdate = DivideAge() }
}
public int DivideAge(int age) {
myAge = age/2;
}
okay you are calling the function there, it's not 'inside' so to speak
Isn't that a method inside of a method
!!tell schulzey format
@schulzey Format your code - hit Ctrl+K before sending and see the faq
oh my bad. thanks I'm new.
22:50
@schulzey No, it's calling a method outside it
ok, I got ya. You're saying I can't create a method inside of a set to use somewhere else right?
So clarification, what I've really been asking. If I'm going to "set" a field somewhere else in my class (not in it's associated property), I should still be using a private set?
That depends entirely on whether you intend to set the property outside the class
No, only inside the class. I don't remember the exact situation now, but there was an assignment that there was no "set", but it was set somewhere in the same class.
Are private sets only for constructors or do we always use them even if it's set somewhere else in the class.
?
Hmm, I think I know where I'm going wrong here.
23:00
they arent only for setting inthe constructor
thats just one use really
Okay. I'm just thinking there is no need to set a private set, unless it's in the constructor. I private set would be redundant if you're setting somewhere else in the same class.
@hsimah right?
@schulzey property setters aren't different in constructors than anywhere else. Get that idea out of your head.
not exatly
a private setter on a property means: This class can update the value of this property. Only this class. Other people can read it, but only we can change it.
private DateTime _birthdate;

public DateTime Birthdate{ get; private set;}

//method here to set birthdate.
Why can't I just have...
private DateTime _birthdate;

public DateTime Birthdate{ get;}

//method here to set birthdate.
In the second example, you'll never be able to assign a property to Birthdate
It will always be zero
23:12
Hmm, that's where I've been going wrong. It was hard to explain that for some reason.
In fact, I don't even think that will compile
Okay, I'm just trying to remember a situation that was on an assignment that I thought did that. And that's why I was wondering why we would have private sets. Because we would just do a get then and call it a day.
And you would never have a private get correct?
Sure you can
it's rarely useful, but you could come up with a situation for it maybe
I can't think of a situation why we wouldn't want to be able to read a field
*property
23:15
okay. But, if you can set a field from within a class, you will always have a private set, correct?
hmm?
A property only has a setter if you give it one
only from within a class, sorry
I think you're confusing ideas that are best understood separately
public/private/protected/etc. is one concept
get/set is another
they work together but are not related
okay, I think I'll google around a bit and see how I can put all this information together better in my mind.
Most of the other concepts sunk in pretty quick. But the get/set public/private things has made me feel like I'm missing something
Do you understand what public and private mean?
23:20
Yes
So you really only need to understand get/set
I think an assignment we did gave wrong information and now I'm confusing two different concepts. It wouldn't be the first time in this class. Bad teacher who didn't know what he was doing.
okay, I'll work on that.
get and set are simply methods wrapped into a specific pattern, known as a property.
okay
I have one more possible stupid question now that we are down this road.
private DateTime _birthdate;

public void SetBirthdate(Datetime birthdate) {
	_birthdate = birthdate;
}

public DateTime GetBirthdate() {
	return _birthdate;
}
This is an example from mosh on udemy. The order of get/set is reversed. Which has confused me, because I've always thought it was weird the order of get set. Don't you need to set something before you return something?
The order you define methods in doesn't matter
23:26
static void Main (string[] args) {
var person = new Person()
person.SetBirthdate(new DateTime(1982,1,1));
console.writeline(person.GetBirthDate());
}
I understand that, but it makes sense to me that you would set before returning. But when you do the shorthand version, you always do {get; set;}
You do have a point.
It just seems reversed. I would think that it should be {set; get;}
It's not important though, and I've never thought of it.
thank you, because I've been feeling dumb about this fact
Has no one else questioned this?
I did
23:28
You're returning something before setting it. It's a big part of what has confused me about get/sets
@hsimah and??
but that's how Ellipse formatted it when I learned Java at uni
and g comes before s
How did eclipse format it? They did {set; get;}
so I just accepted it
I hope you mean Eclipse
I do
Eclipse not Ellipse lol
Java doesnt have that shorthand, it was get { return blah; } {set etc etc
g comes before s
23:30
So it's still backwards?
so it's in alphabetical order
and that is enough for me
lol, no it was set then get, I am just used to writing get/set that I did it that way
hahahahahahaha
it's compiled code, so the order doesnt matter
No wonder I'm so confused, jk
you dont have to declare your functions in the order they're called in
23:31
That's like having a method that returns a not-set int before it's ever set.
but they aren't called until they're called
so the order you write them doesnt matter
I've very aware that you don't have to set them in order. So you're saying that I could put {set; get;} and it shouldn't still work.
I gotcha, but why would they list them that way. I'm sure that other people have been confused by this. Because in practice you could not call them that way.
*should still work
@schulzey Convention
Unfortunately, this is an example of very bad convention to me
It's ever so slightly strange, IMO
23:34
I realize they are methods, but because they are typed a little differently, they look like they should be called i no order
not harmful at all
For beginners I would say it's fully harmful
But, I gotcha
It wasn't to me
I see your point
okay..
23:35
but if I have to write color all the time instead of colour
well, we all have to make sacrifices
Maybe the harmful thing is implying that members need to be defined in a specific order
Yeah
has anyone used vs code?
Again, I'm trying to get the fundamentals down now because I had a teacher that gave a lot of misinformation and mosh's programming udemy courses have caused me to question some concepts a little deeper
it's pretty nifty as a text editor, but it won't open large files
23:37
Thanks guys!
that's cool dude, there's nothing wrong with asking more questions
:0
Yeah, I think I know why they did it this way. You would never have a "set" without a "get" correct? So that's probably why the get is on top. There will always be a get.
If you have a property, there's going to be a get. Also, It should look like set() {} and get(){}
There's actually another kind of member that is made of two methods
Events
23:53
you can have write-only properties

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