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18:00
If Java logging is this verbose, how on earth do you not run out of disk space?
saying you can have a toString provide a single object from a collection
because of reasons?
because they keep adding storage
@juanvan why a single object?
its a collection after all
reasons
18:01
even then, in actual logging, I use a serializer that uses its own methods of providing the data
because the toString() doesnt come with a reversable format
but for debugging purposes, it is quite useful most of the times
... could it be you would be better served via the watch window?
not always
18:31
Heard over the cubicle with 100% confidence. "Technical debt is tomorrows problem"
tomorrow's problems are day-after-tomorrow's problems
^^This guy gets it
@Sidney Spoken like a true American.
cough brownback cough
I'd say "shut it coastie" but... Y'know. I can't afford the bits.
technical debt is a bitch
18:38
TIL Wietlol's nickname for Kendall's mom is "Technical Debt"
when you think its payback time, karma is one step ahead of you
!!wat
@Wietlol That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: bot, uwot, wow, wut, wat
!! tell wietlol sandbox
@wietlol Please go and play in the Sandbox
there we go
18:40
Context context = new Context();
        public async Task<bool> IsRegisteredCopy()
        {
            var isAny = await context.Doctors.AnyAsync();
            return isAny;
        }
//
   Sign sign = new Sign();
   bool isRegistered = sign.IsRegisteredCopy().Result;
Is this the right way making my call async, or .Result ruins it?
the "right way" is going async/await all the way up
everything else is a workaround
I've never really understood that. Your void Main() can't be async... How for does "All the way up" encompass?
up to your top-level handler
if you have a WPF GUI app, it's up to the events (which will be async void)
so, there should be .Result some where?!
void Main() can't be async, but that's a language limitation, there are plans to allow it
18:45
@milleniumbug hey, up your top-level handler too, buddy
@MohamedAhmed in a console application, yes (most likely in Main()). otherwise not in your code
but how to get the boolean value without calling .Result?
I'm in OnStartup method in App.xaml.cs (WPF)
oh, it's void so you can make it async
18:56
good to know that I can change the signature of the auto-created method! (if it's really a signature change!)
whether the function is async is an implementation detail to the function
it doesn't affect overriding, for example
19:13
Hmm I wonder: *should google be forced to no longer base searches on previous searches?*
One of the problems that keeps rising in today's western societies is that groups are getting more and more alienated from each other. (Just look at the US political climate, but the same happens in europe). One of the main tools to prevent alienation is making groups understand each other.
Now understanding starts with knowing and reading about. So our goal should be to make people read topics from all kinds of different viewpoints.
Yeah but every time I google a programming problem on a different computer and Quora, ExpertSexchange, or (god forbid) w3schools comes up at the top instead of Stack Overflow I want to gouge my eyes out.
@mikeTheLiar so basically Google creates this little bubble so you can safely live in it :P
like matrix :D
Obviously, there is only one correct and true location to get information within given domain. For programming, the on correct true source is stackoverflow. For news, it's NPR. For human sexuality, it's Kendall's mom. etc etc
s/human sexuality/new forms of STIs/
user7480455
19:56
why dont you like w3schools mike
@007 it's frequently inaccurate, incomplete, misleading, or just flat out wrong.
It's sometimes correct but I highly advise you to double check with at least one other source before accepting something w3schools says is right.
user7480455
I like it but I am just one person...
user7480455
and I am not a hardcore programmer like you guys are
user7480455
so maybe for the casual programmer it is a nice fast easy to understand resource
user7480455
you have to admit stack overflow is full of incomplete information as well
20:01
Kind of like for the casual person DJT is a reliable source of information.
it's important that a "nice fast and easy to understand resource" doesn't have factual errors, you know
because otherwise it's just a cache which is invalid all the time
user7480455
well that is everything in this world young men
user7480455
nothing is perfect
user7480455
there are lots of green check answers on stack over flow that are wrong
....he's got a point.
user7480455
20:04
also even on microsofts introductory to mvc video guide the two programmers make a mess of the tutorial
the difference is that you can downvote a wrong answer and/or edit it to remove the inaccuracy and you can't downvote w3schools :P
programming-related video guides are garbage
user7480455
it was completely unusable
user7480455
ahh ok
user7480455
yeah I could not follow it at all
user7480455
that is how I found this place as I did not know this place existed
20:12
Oh god I bit my tongue, fuck everything in the world.
That's a lot of fucking.
user7480455
maybe you need to realign your teeth
user7480455
back in '09 I had to be fitted with false teeth due to the loss of many of my natural teeth.
20:28
why this declaration way is preferred by professional programmers
private ICustomersRepository _repository = new CustomersRepository();

than this:
private CustomersRepository _repository = new CustomersRepository();
@MohamedAhmed The former is easier to customize without breaking anything.
The whole interface vs class thing is pretty complex and involved though
So to easily customize without breaking anything (sorry for repeating your words), I should make an interface for every class as possible?
20:48
Hey guys
What do you think is the best way to synthesise strings
I have no idea what that means.
The + way or the {0} way¿
I mean putting things on strings
Use interpolation if you can, otherwise Sting.Format
@MohamedAhmed If you want easy unit testing, pretty much. The exception is classes that do nothing but hold data and will 'never' change. And I mean do absolutely nothing.
>Sting.Format
20:52
@GeorgeSarcasmGod String interpolation. But again, depends on format.
@Sidney I mean, have you seen Sting?
The sword or the sex symbol?
Also, yes
Interpolation looks like this:
$"I am {name}! Screw {dislikes}!"
Yeah add looks simpler to me
So unless it's some weird high performance scenario that I should use string builder instead, I'm a stick with it
@Sidney There's a symbol for sex? Does Unicode have it?
20:55
There is a symbol for nai I think
@GeorgeSarcasmGod Pretty sure that's what it will use under the covers anyway.
Just try interpolation. It's great you can also format in it.
Ex: $"Look a date {date:ddmmyyyy}!"
@KendallFrey hint it's the one your mom's got tattooed on her forehead.
Hmm never knew that
Gotta check it out
20:56
@KendallFrey I'm really sad that Unicode doesn't include the Prince Symbol now.
It's a newer feature of C#
Plus, it saves on key strokes and allows the compiler to make additional optimizations.
I gotta read the regex thing one of those days
"This " + val + " that" vs $"This {val} that"
also easier to read whitespace.
It's the new hotness.
Oh damn
I get it now
It looks nice
@MohamedAhmed no, that's missing the point
Sep 25 at 17:57, by milleniumbug
@MohamedAhmed Basically, you accept an interface which provides minimum functionality which is required by you, to maximize general applicability of your function
the same with fields, properties and return types, but here we return the most general interface that the user expects so the API provider can have more freedom with returning alternative implementations
If you just mechanically add an interface for each class you have, you'll basically disregard the entire reason why you'd do this in the first place
21:15
hi anyone knows hi I can pass an access token using angular js without using sessionStorage
Im saving the access token in claims
Oh look, I must've wandered into the JavaScript room again. Silly me.
lol
I would like to find a way not to call actions from the web application and then to the api
@KendallFrey It actually doesn't appear to use a string builder for the + operator. It appears to be purely built into the compiler. So, you really don't know what method it will use. That said, there are multiple Concat methods. Only the IEnumerable overload uses a StringBuilder. If anyone knows more, I'd like to know. I just can't find the + operator declaration in String.cs.
@TylerStahlhuth That's because it doesn't exist, it's actually Concat
And yes, that uses StringBuilder
@KendallFrey Right, but there isn't an operator defined that calls Concat.
And no, not all of them do.
21:24
No, that's the compiler part
@KendallFrey That's what I figured. Just wasn't 100% sure.
@TylerStahlhuth The ones that don't are "good enough"
ex:
public static String Concat(String str0, String str1) {
            Contract.Ensures(Contract.Result<String>() != null);
            Contract.Ensures(Contract.Result<String>().Length ==
                (str0 == null ? 0 : str0.Length) +
                (str1 == null ? 0 : str1.Length));
            Contract.EndContractBlock();

            if (IsNullOrEmpty(str0)) {
                if (IsNullOrEmpty(str1)) {
                    return String.Empty;
                }
                return str1;
Looks like up to 3 doesn't. Arrays don't. IEnumerable does.
Jess Pardue on October 11, 2017

Welcome to The Stack Overflow Podcast episode #118 recorded Thursday, October 5 at Stack Overflow HQ in NYC. Even without Joel, who’s still out working on NamCoin, there’s still a full house! Including VP Jay Hanlon, CTO David Fullerton, News Editor Ilana Yitzhaki, me, Producer Jess, and a whole slew of guests.

Today’s episode is sponsored by Oracle. Stack Overflow appreciates Oracle’s support for this podcast and for our community. Learn more about all the ways Oracle supports open source, java, and developers like you at oracle.com/developers. …

My guess is that on most hardware concating 4 strings is faster without the string builder. More than that is either IEnumerable or the array implementation.
21:39
@TylerStahlhuth It obviously depends on the strings
@KendallFrey Regardless, my point was you can't be sure. If you are worried about it, be explicit.
I think you'd have to be really worried to reimplement string.Concat.
@KendallFrey I meant more along the lines of a StringBuilder vs. Concat which does matter if you are concatenating a large number of strings. But yes, if you are worried about string.Concat, maybe C# isn't the language you should use to implement whatever you are doing.
string.Concat is plenty smart enough to concat lots of strings with performance
You're probably not even going to see significant improvements with StringBuilder
Not if you do something like this with thousands of strings:
21:46
Are you saying string.Concat is slow when joining thousands of strings?
var result = str0 + str1;
if (... some check...)
{
     result = result + str2;
}
result = result + str3;
I actually benchmarked someString += someOtherString once because I was bored and you're going to need to be dealing with strings the length of novels or severely degraded memory before any of that even remotely becomes a problem.
@KendallFrey Comparatively, yes.
@TylerStahlhuth That's not a problem with string.Concat, that's a problem with your code.
@mikeTheLiar Who says I haven't needed to do that?
21:48
@TylerStahlhuth because if you need to do that and you're still using native strings, you're already wrong.
@KendallFrey No, I'm just saying that's a case where the compiler can't pick the best case/
In the original context of the discussion, using + or string interpolation or string.Format should all handle it intelligently with a single concat.
@mikeTheLiar StringBuilder works well enough. I was pulling large amount of text from a database that was already using Entity Framework. It was a one time thing so I wasn't going to switch languages.
Still helped with debugging.
@KendallFrey Right, I just get the feeling he's interested in the how as well.
I think we are all on the same page that in any normal circumstance don't even think about it. It's not important in the larger picture.
Is there something like Assert.That(item, Is.Inside(expectedcontainer)) in NUnit?
I could switch the "test" and "expected" around, but that breaks the visual clues a bit.
22:45
I am having a performance issue where my MVC program is decrypting over 100 records fields from an oracle database and it's taking forever. I separated some so it loads on a different page, but it's still slow. Does anyone have any other ideas I could try?
@CheezStix You would have to provide more information than that.
Is it the decryption that's slow?
Also, remember that in debug mode things are going to be far slower.

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