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01:00 - 20:0020:00 - 23:00

20:00
while you are at it, define "easily"
I say it because it is based on my opinions
that said, windows desktop apps are probably easier in C# than in Java
jaba is a pita if you want to make it modular, basically start up an equinox or felix from main and handle all the complexity that comes with that
.NET Framework is shipped with Windows usually so you can go with that
compiler output is your regular .exe file you can ship
and not a .jar you have to wrap further in a .exe
by modular i mean that i want to create libraries with configuration that can be plugged in my application and interact with it via good old DI and Eventbus or what have you
use jaba
@milleniumbug depends on what you are making though
and what you are used to
and on what scale you are making it
yes, pluggable libraries can be done. you ship your library as a .dll file you can load from your program by using reflection
jaba has an easy way to write libraries and use them nicely
do you want to load in the libraries on runtime?
(i guess that defeats the purpose of a library, but ok)
in 99% of the cases, no
and in 1%?
20:05
in 1% i just want to ship the client updated and new libraries that conform to an already existent api in the main application and the application loads them at runtime
otherwise it's deployment hell with multiple versions for multiple clients
so, you have an application and you want to write "plugins" for it?
so that the plugins can be separately updated, installed, uninstalled, used, etc
I actually made a Jaba application that works that way
:D
yes[2]
is it public?
not yet
i havent done the updating part yet
20:06
So what is the question?
i am working on it but having the web server being hosted is quite a pain
at my work, we use a similar thing in C#
but it doesnt work so nice
That's a given
however, that could be because of how it is implemented
What is the state of Windows Desktop application development and how easy is it to make one that is modular (think plugins)
Things can't be updated.
20:07
@LasseV.Karlsen ?
why so?
"things cant be updated"
The Things application can't be updated. What is your question?
because I do have it...
Ah, now I see what you're doing
You're making a general statement
Something nobody but you can verify
Well in that case who knows.
20:09
sort of true
at least you cannot verify it (yet):D
i am lost, can't understand discussion anymore
in any case, you should check out how to load assemblies
@RaduStefanPopescu more than one conversation going on
Can one make a modular, updatable, application in C#?
@Wietlol how do you do updating? OSGI or custom classloading?
20:09
.dlls in .net
Yes, one can.
.jar in Jaba
For specifics, ask a specific question.
I use reflection to locate the main class and instantiate it
Which can be done in C#/.NET.
20:10
The standard for loading new code at runtime the last I looked was MEF
That's one way.
when I want to update it, I close the plugin, calling some events and cleaning up memory and stuff, then I drop the resources and replace the ones that are installed with the ones from the server
then, I reload the plugin so it will be activated again
Seems reasonable.
I also provide it some additional data of its previous state
but that is optional
and I for my own plugins havent really used it yet
kind of dead code now that I think of it
I am sure it can also be done in .net
... at least, I hope it can
:D
doesn't that mean you have a dependency on it on your main application though
20:13
not really
"it"? Not sure what "it" refers to here.
why would you have the dependency?
Load code? Sure, load dlls (assemblies) at will.
on the plug-in
Unload old code? Sure, as long as you use AppDomains.
20:14
could any issue rise when you are loading the same dll multiple times?
aka, if plugin A uses library X and plugin B also uses library X (maybe different version or stuff like that)
Such a broad question can only be answered with "maybe.............."
It depends on how you're doing the loading.
iDunno
its done by a third party
of which we use the program
If you're not, you're just assuming .NET will handle it for you, then no, as long as you separate "things you want to unload later" into their separate application domains then it shouldn't cause any issue.
and we write dlls that it uses
basically loading jars (dlls in c# case) at runtime and accessing code from there is bad because it bypasses security and you have to do it with reflection, or that is what i know
20:16
and many issues are rising
i am trying to find a way to write a desktop app that can do that in a clean way
@RaduStefanPopescu How/why would it bypass security? What security?
@Wietlol If you have specific issues you're seeing then stop asking "can this cause any issues" and start asking "this specific issue X we're seeing, why is this?".
in simple terms, the plugin can reach out to the root of the applications data and mess it up
Classloader security, encapsulation, etc.
(also, my name does not start with We)
20:18
"SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = " + SQLESCAPE(username);
is that bad?
@LasseV.Karlsen issue is we have no idea what the situation is
@Tobiq in simple terms... yes
how
@Wietlol If you load an assembly into the main application domain it can obviously "reach" into whatever it is this domain is storing/doing. Not sure what the issue is here though.
because "SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = wietlol" is not valid sql
On the Java side of the world doing such an application requires quite a bit of documentation and work (or you can hack it but i don't like that)
20:19
and if SQLESCAPE is written properly, then you cannot enter a valid string
laffo not using precompiled statements
"SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = '" + SQLESCAPE(username) + "';";
I want to see if C# + windows desktop frameworks have a nice solution
@Tobiq Any string concatenation used to build SQL or any other executable statement is bad because of injection.
@Tobiq that is perfectly fine
20:20
but its escaped
fuck your escapes
at least... what sql version do you use?
mysql?
mssql?
postgresql
or mysql
or mariadb
Seriously, fuck your escapes.
20:21
then no
its not safe
If you're building SQL using string contatenation with untrusted parameters, you're not doing it right.
you don't copy a file by running a shell and doing copy file1 file2, so don't run SQL statements created by string concatenation
SQLESCAPE cannot know what quotes you are using and both single and double quotes are able to be used
Use parameterized SQLs. Every language/runtime worth their salt provides this.
so, you either end up with injection or have a modified string stored
20:22
but can u hack it? its escaped
I don't care.
It takes you 5 minutes to learn how to do it properly.
It takes you more time and energy trying to justify doing it wrong here.
is that a no
Seriously, go learn how to do it right.
prepared statements is longer
@Tobiq I could either hack it, or mess it up
which one do you want?
20:23
how could u hack it, its escaped
If you don't understand SQL injection, read it again until you understand SQL injection
first choose
**I**
**Do**
**Not**
**Care**
2 mins ago, by milleniumbug
you don't copy a file by running a shell and doing copy file1 file2, so don't run SQL statements created by string concatenation
Escaping strings and concatenating to do SQL is wrong.
20:24
@LasseV.Karlsen you are missing a line at the bottom with 1 letter
Plain and simple.
Escaping control characters is not the same as preventing arbitrary SQL from being inserted into that content
the thing is
There is no thing.
why go through the hassle of prepared statements
if u can just escape
and it works
20:25
No it doesn't
one second
You're pissing in the wind here.
That is not what that function is for
lemme show you
Get lost. ignored. If you're going to be stupid, and stubborn I have no patience. Let your site have an SQL injection attack later and you justify it by "BUT IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE FAILSAFE!!!!!1111"
20:26
Hello. I'm trying to get a thread safe collection but I need one with only a Key, not a value, just to store a list of class instances. Would I be okay if I used HashSet and did lock on each call, or is there a better alternative? I guess what I'm asking is will locking a hashset make it as thread-safe as a ConcurrentDictionary or would I need to go for something else?
so... my username is the following: wiet"lol
how would that be stored in the database?
I kicked him. He's posting nonsense on purpose
3 hours ago, by milleniumbug
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.collections.concurrent(v=vs.110)‌​.aspx <- concurrent collections in .NET
20:27
im fine with that
@milleniumbug I did look at that, It seems ConcurrentBag would be my best option, but I wanted to knock if HashSet would be okay if I locked on each call?
@VoiDHD If you're locking on every access a HashSet<T> is completely safe, though there are some concurrent collections in the .NET runtime you should definitely profile them before switching. Some of them are very good in high-traffic scenarios but ultra-slow compared to a normal lock in some other cases.
@milleniumbug #missingJabaCollections #sad
Thank you, I guess I'll have to put some studying in to .net's collections.
Workx!
20:30
@VoiDHD yes, wrapping in a class which internally uses a lock to synchronize is a common way to make objects thread safe
@milleniumbug do you know much about locks?
I actually have a requirement for a very special lock
I'm not a locksmith
why did that happen
instant kick?
in any case, this is the concept: paste.ofcode.org/gtH4Fus7UbVsdSwYNJLJZJ
Just make sure you lock on every access.
20:34
but the lock should work on each thread individually
DoStuff() by design is allowed to call Foo()
but it should avoid recursion
Not sure what that paste code is supposed to be?
but every thread is allowed to call Foo at the same time
a simple scenario of my lock case
With race conditions, and doesn't release the lock? Not a good example.
As long as you have an if-statement first checking if there's a lock, before obtaining the lock, then yes, it seems to me you would have a race condition.
20:36
Whatever IsLocked is, you'd also have to lock on that
or more than thread could access it at the same time and see different results
@Wietlol you probably want a mutex (Reentrant lock in java)
is if(IsLocked) supposed to be if(IsLockedByThisThread)
yep
@TomW its supposed to not lock other threads
I don't think you understand what locking is
its supposed to prevent recursion
20:39
then why use locking
iDunno
@VoiDHD that's ok (at least, as it's now)
what else to use?
you can prevent recursion using a state check (either class field or parameter)
20:40
No, that looks OK.
@RaduStefanPopescu that doesnt work with multiple threads
functionName(arg1, arg2, boolean recursion) {if(recursion) return;}
indeed, a regular bool variable combined with a mutex should be enough
can you link any mutex article?
wikipedia it, it's mutual exclusion
20:42
Why is recursion a problem that needs to be solved?
because recursion will end up in an infinite loop
If you don't want it to recur, just don't call the method inside itself
The code was fine to prevent multiple threads accessing the same hashset at the same time (which could be bad).
How would the code, as posted, end up recursing?
@RaduStefanPopescu i cant
if you do want your method to call itself, then you should start your method with the end condition
20:43
@LasseV.Karlsen i think we are talking about a different post
if (ComputationIsDone) return result
@RaduStefanPopescu the issue is that it is about logging
and depending on the logging settings, every single method in the entire application could do a log
A simple lock is all that is needed to prevent multiple threads accessing the same resource at the same time.
Foo here is the Log method
20:44
It may not be optimal, depending on the resource and scenario, but it will work.
and DoStuff is the serialization
Void asked about a very specific case though, even posting code, what are you talking about?
Are you trying to log whenever a log occurs?
im trying to avoid logs when logs are busy
20:45
I did that once... hurray infinite loop
but only on the same thread
hmmm, you could identify a thread by using Thread.ManagedThreadId and then doing different stuff depending on which thread got a lock
@Wietlol And that code is perfectly fine to prevent multiple threads accessing the same hashset at the same time.
Is that a problem? Doesn't the logging framework you use handle that for you?
0.o
there is no hashset
20:46
hashset guy is a different person
@RaduStefanPopescu yes, it is a problem for me
Sorry, I looked at the wrong tab. Your code is just broken, I'm not going to spend more time on that, it contains both a race condition (as already stated) and does not release the lock.
Do interfaces affect the performance of structs when used as arguments?
@LasseV.Karlsen thank you for MEF i think i will learn C# today and implement my solution using it. Running on linux isn't a requirement. I just need client desktop application with plugins
I realize it would be minimal
20:48
Wrapping structs in interfaces tends to box them, so it will have an impact.
@WilliamMariager it requires the struct to be mapped to an object
Not a large one, but there will be one.
(boxed?)
Yeah, I figured
Boxing happens when you cast a value type to an object type.
Yes, wrapping them up in an object allocated on the heap.
20:48
object i = 64;
That adds at least another lookup in a vtable, right?
It depends entirely on the code in question though.
There are usages which will not result in the struct value being allocated in the heap, but it depends.
on top of that, you also ask for the type of the object and then ask for the implementation of the method rather than calling the method directly
@LasseV.Karlsen "and does not release the lock." It does
It does? Where? You mean "ReleaseLockForThisThread"?
20:51
The method that won't get called if "DoStuff" throws an exception?
You mean that method?
Tell me again why I would listen to you?
you want me to write 2k lines of code to satisfy you?
or you want a simple illustration of the general idea of the concept
1 more line would do
No, sorry, I don't want anything, I'm just going to ignore you.
20:52
ok
w/e
I am accessing excel spreadsheet data via OleDb. In C# Interactive window everything works without a hitch. In execution, it comes time to execute a command and it can't find the sheet that I specified (This is the same code executed in both cases).
@Wietlol here you go, I think you should listen to Lasse though, you should try to understand how threading works first instead of argue
Sorry about that, my cat decided to get cosy.
warm laptop?
/cat
Interestingly, the var sheetTable = Connection.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null); returns an empty datatable as in there is no data in it, only column headers.
20:57
No, not really, he just likes to roll around on the desktop :P
Anyone got any ideas?
This is pissing me off to no end.
Also there seems to be multiple tech for developing Desktop applications. UWP, WPF aaand i think something else too. Which is recommendable an why?
There is no correct way to answer that question.
There's multiple ways and they all have their pros and cons. Exactly what would matter to you is what matters.
okay, UWP already ruled out because i need full access to system files
@RaduStefanPopescu I appreciate the help, but I don't think you understand my situation
the try lock might result in what I try to achieve
but the blocking lock is literally the opposite of it
"lock" is probably not the right term to use
21:03
WinForms is the oldest one and it's mostly meh, WPF is quite nice (and IME one of the nicest GUI frameworks out there), but it seems a bit neglected by MS, UWP is supposed to be the "next new thing", but it targets Windows 10 and so you won't run it on Windows 7, so I prefer WPF over that one
but I dont know what to call it otherwise
"you don't understand me" followed by "you gave me a possible solution"
you gave me 2 "possible" solutions
one of which I guarantee it wont be what I want
the other being most probably not what I want
no, the first one is just what a synchronized method is, it's there for educational purposes and I explicitly commented what it does
so that you know that is not what you are looking for
then neither of your solutions is what I want
21:06
why?
from what i understand you want to do nothing if you cannot obtain a lock
again, lock might not be the right term
that is what the 2nd class does
I want to block recursion to the same method
so, the body of Foo() is not allowed to call Foo() itself
when it does, it must return false and skip the actual body
this works fine by having a boolean and setting it to true and false
however, this approach breaks when multiple threads use the same object
because when thread A calls Foo()
thread B should still be allowed to call Foo()
Java doesn't have a non recursive mutex implementation
by default
if you want that you can implement it yourself
or you can use a reentrant lock with either a class field storing state or a function parameter storing state
that is trivial
@TomW it was sql escape. because i wanted to show you
21:12
@Tobiq it doesnt work
@Tobiq as has already been explained to you, that's not what it's for and your approach doesn't work, as you could easily read for yourself
But it appears that you know that, and are posting nonsense on purpose
I honestly dont know what you mean
it replaces special characters so injection wont work
@RaduStefanPopescu as far as I understand a mutex is a lock where threads are waiting for each other to finish
then thats not what I want
21:14
what do you want
@TomW let me show you, one second
output should be:
Foo is available, body called.
Foo is locked, body ignored.
Foo is available, body called.
Foo is locked, body ignored.
Foo is available, body called.
Foo is locked, body ignored.
everything is fine
@Wietlol @TomW do you see what I mean?
it works fine. Which is why i was confused by kick
if you don't want to use precompiled statements in your example because "it's longer", you're a moron
... don't show code. tell me what you want to do
that code is an X Y problem
21:23
@RaduStefanPopescu I have a method (Foo)
that method runs some stuff
some stuff can potentially run Foo again
when it does, this will result in a stackoverflowexception
because, it will be looping infinitely adding stuff to the stacktrace on each iteration
@milleniumbug That's like saying if you dont want to use javascript because its slower youre a moron
I want that, when Foo is called again, the method returns false and that it doesnt do any executions of its body
aka, block the recursion
in the example that I provided, this works fine
however, when there are multiple threads, one thread can block Foo and another cannot execute it any more
(however, right now, I am confused... I did a test run with multiple threads, but something weird is happening)
wiet i can help you
what are you trying to do
He can't tell in words what he tries to do is the problem
that is what I want to have
the numbers at the beginning are the thread ids
thread 3 locks "Foo"
but thread 4, 5 or any other must still be allowed to call it
only thread 3 may not call it
until thread 3 releases it
21:30
so you want N threads to run 1 function, but no recursion
it works
i tried the code
@RaduStefanPopescu yep
(and I cannot ensure that DoStuff() will not call Foo() compile time)
or prevent it from doing so
are you allowed to change the function signature?
21:33
i suppose so
it depends on what you want
your solution is not multi threaded
and fails with multiple threads
sorry, forgot joins on the main thread
rider is nice and waits for it by himself
i am busy for a while, sorry i come figure what u want later
never released
that works... sort of
I guess I am the ConcurrentHashSet guy after all
jokes on me I suppose
21:51
the thread sleep reks the thread
dostuff doesnt end
foo is never returned back to, from dostuff
you have to try the second fiddle
i forgot the joins
icba
you made a spelling mistake
its "idgaf"
22:29
wiet, try to learn concurrency first
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