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11:03
@mark333...333...333 does this help? stackoverflow.com/a/44345087/1859959
user5500750
What is the recommend property naming convention in c#?
user5500750
Is it;
user5500750
Or;
user5500750
private string MatchStringValue;
user5500750
private string matchStringValue;
user5500750
11:06
I know Visual studio will refuse it for methods such as; public string getMatchStringValue()
11:21
neither of those are properties
private string PascalCase { get; set; }
private string _camelCase;
public string PascalCase;
properties are always PascalCase
public/internal/protected fields are PascalCase, private fields are _underscoreLeadingCamelCase
public anything is PascalCased.
Properties, methods, constants, anything.
@Wietlol They messed up when they decided the semicolon was optional. The parser must be happy looking for stuff that may or may not be in there.
Types.
@HéctorÁlvarez Tell that to javascript, where all semicolons are optional.
@HéctorÁlvarez semicolons arent optional
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan autistic screeching
hiss
11:33
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan tell that to groovy, where return statements are optional, variable declaration words are optional (I think Javascript also has that nowadays) and everything else is also optional
Did someone say optional semicolons?
AND FORGOT ABOUT VB
They're not optional in VB.
They're flat-out syntax errors
@Kieran dude, semicolons aren't optional in VB
I thought they were
wait, its brackets that's not used in vb isn't it
Yeah. For procedure calls.
11:35
you can only use semicolons to separate instructions that should be in different lines, but because you are some sort of troglodyte you put them all in the same line
Idk why i thought vb had optional semi colons
@Kieran its the case that messes up VB
moar coffee
or lemme rewrite that
ItS tHe CaSe ThAt MeSsEs Up Vb
RiPeROnI
11:36
fail
Brb, unfucking myself
Case-sensitive syntax, like arrays that start from 0, are basically an aesthetic choice these days, that's usually backed up by spurious logic.
oh please, have you ever tried to return an array? It's the most retarded operation in the history of mankind, after the discovery of reggaeton
youtu.be/XD_dLgzg024?t=10s I am pvt joker rn
Life is the drill sgt
@HéctorÁlvarez i return arrays all the time :D
11:44
Oh well enlighten me, I want to return an array representing the select I performed
return select.ToArray()
pfff you peasant, that's not VB
smells like .NET
i thought you meant C#
i have the pleasure of never having to touch VB
11:46
your soul is clean, I see
I had to use vb in college
luckily at university we moved to c++
then i got a job in c# haha
i had to use Java at school
then i had to use Java at internship
Unless you're talking about VB6, which has been deprecated for almost 20 years.
then i chose to use Java at school
then i got a job with C#
11:56
hi
In Mongo DB, update the record two more primary key using Filter . It is possible
i'm using using MongoDB.Bson;
using MongoDB.Driver.Core;
12:16
@Saravanakumar you want to update a document with 2 primary keys?
Please how do I post an image here
uoload it to imgur, post link
@gbade_ There's an upload button the the right of the textbox -->
Though there might be a rep threshold for it.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan
https://imgur.com/a/jJMqU
I have a shared layout and a jquery script in the main page. In the shared layout, I have tags with ids I'm calling from the main page's javascript. each time the page loads, I get an error in console
PS - It's an ASP.NET MVC application
@SebastianL ^
12:36
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan VB.NET is .NET, VB isn't .Net
Hi Guys, I've got a stored procedure that is called both individually and from within another procedure
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Yes I am
now both these procedures are using encryption by symmetric key certificate
the issue is that when I call the first SP from within the second, it closes the Key
and the parent SP throws an error
@HéctorÁlvarez VB has been discontinuted for almost 20 years. It existed for about 10 years in the 90's, while VB.NET has been around since .NET and 2001. VB.NET is the VB - it's been around for a longer time, is active and supported, and is 9995% better.
The key 'FooBar_SYM_KEY_BY_CERTIFICATE' is not open. Please open the key before using it
12:38
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan more like ∞ times better, but I still have to comply with company standards
I offered myself to port all this trash to .NET and perform any integration they might required with their equally-gimped database models, but they declined due to time-cost ratio being excessive
@HéctorÁlvarez That's fine, though a pain to still be using VB6 in 2017. But it's safe to assume that to 90% of people you meet, "VB" means "VB.NET". That's the default VB.
@gbade_ looks like your code has a syntax error
@SamyS.Rathore Make sure you don't close the handle before invoking the external method
and reuse your former connection to perform the requests, instead of creating a second one (which I assume you're doing, given the premises)
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan side note here, if you want to develop .NET I think you should go the C# way. Evne more now that VB is getting lightweight support as opposed to C#'s full-fledged features
@HéctorÁlvarez I've had these discussions from 2001 and onwards. :)
12:46
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I have had these discussions since I was introduced to programming languages
Up until C# 4.0 (2010?), there were some good points to make for choosing VB in certain scenarios - COM interop was better because of VB's support for optional parameters and dynamic dispatching.
C# 4.0 ended most of VB's advantages, and choosing between them now is mostly a question of personal preference.
> and choosing between them now is mostly a question of personal sabotage preference.
@Wietlol So a few years tops?
13:03
how much is a few?
var aFew = aFew;
compiler error
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan well, MS isn't giving as much support to VB.NET than it is to C#, which makes the decision pretty easy
@HéctorÁlvarez Now that roslyn-based language proposals are open on github, you can see the process. VB's been getting some love: github.com/dotnet/roslyn/wiki/…
(This is for an older version).
i love it how Notepad++ reminds me how idiotic we are
13:16
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I'm amazed, glared, and frightened at the same time
I get public parameters MIGHT, as in SELDOM, be initialized by default instead of the ctor... but what's the point of a static import?
partial classes I assume
...and what else?
static import is importing the static members of a class
it means you dont have to write the classname before each method and field
aka, a feature disencouraged by all standards
It makes sense in domain-specific situations. If you have dozens of calls to Math.*, for instance.
If it got implemented, I assume a real-world need was presented. As Eric Lippert says, every proposed feature starts with a score of -100, and needs to justify its existence.
@Wietlol Use the SyntaxFactory from Roslyn for more than five minutes and you'll love static usings within seconds.
I would love to type WriteLine without Console. for console apps... because you don't really have that many assemblies loaded for console apps, you know
I've only used it for SyntaxFactory.
13:30
My heart burns with the power of a thousand suns, I'll use static imports soon
Oh god, nobody knows about this in my workplace apparently
Another syntax feature I love is out var
time to troll with property initializers and remove ctor stuff
if(dictionary.TryGetValue(key, out var value))
    /* do something with value*/
There's a difference between those though @HéctorÁlvarez
Wow welcome to CSharpScript
@WilliamMariager what is it?
ctor can write to readonly properties, initializer can't.
13:33
Anyone using SSRS reports on VS2017?
and on source control with earlier versions of VS
@MohamedAhmed I do, in every version
currently have VS2008 business intelligence project for SSRS 2016 (or 15, I don't know)
My colleague having this issue on his VS 2015 :
Error 119 The definition of this report is not valid or supported by this version of Reporting Services. The report definition may have been created with a later version of Reporting Services, or contain content that is not well-formed or not valid based on Reporting Services schemas. Details: The report definition has an invalid target namespace 'http://schemas.microsoft.com/sqlserver/reporting/2016/01/reportdefinition' which cannot be upgraded. F:\Projects\Win Applications\ERP\ERP\DidERP\bin\Debug\Reports\Inventory\Ar280.rdlc DiamondERP
@WilliamMariager no problem, everything's public around here apparently because it gets rid of permission problems
That's because your SSRS manager is from a different version
It's a long story this one
Is there a way that reports of my VS 2017 is compatible with earlier versions ?
the short version is, there was an update that targeted your SSRS schemas that disabled your management tools from accessing it
No
13:36
@HéctorÁlvarez Thats ... horrible.
you can't rollback schema updates
@WilliamMariager I was scolded for using schema names for tables, e.g. products.Leftovers instead of prd_leftovers
@WilliamMariager I like that one
@WilliamMariager syntax factory?
@WilliamMariager you mean "out" or "var" or "out var"?
@ntohl I know right? Minor thing, but it looks so much better.
@Wietlol I mean out var.
And SyntaxFactory is for generating C# with Roslyn.
@HéctorÁlvarez I'm surprised you haven't tried to kill yourself yet. :P
I never used roslyn i think
13:43
@HéctorÁlvarez, how about indexer initializer in collection properties? :P
i like the tuples from C#7
var memberCreateRequest = new MailChimpMemberCreateRequest(memberEmail, memberStatus)
{
    MergeFields =
    {
        ["FNAME"] = firstName,
        ["LNAME"] = lastName,
        ["CNAME"] = companyName,
        ["PHONE"] = phone,
    }
};
@HéctorÁlvarez ^^
it comes close to multiple return values
@WilliamMariager but an out and ref are just rarely used
at least, they should
@WilliamMariager i've been asked several times why sys.information_schema and not dbo.information_schema
@Wietlol How is out rarely used?
Only alternative when parsing types or handling dictionaries are exceptions and poor performance.
13:45
In my previous job I was asked if I could put everything from sys. to dbo.
I find multiple return values messy. Nothing like a line of Lua that looks like this: _, _, _, port, _, _, ip = Connect(...);
C# 7's value tuples, especially with tuple decomposition, is about multiple return values, which is symmetrical with multiple arguments, so I'm for it.
@WilliamMariager Smells like 1995
the functions for example "dictionary.TryGetValue" should return an Optional<KeyValuePair> or Maybe<KeyValuePair> rather than a boolean with an out parameter
pass by reference has some use cases that I still can see
but outs are not that good
@WilliamMariager That's just a bad API. Same as the Word API's Documents.Open call that takes 16 arguments.
13:47
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan It's a bad API because the language encourages it.
multiple return values can be a clutter if you mess up
The problem is that the API returns multiple optional, not-needed values, and the language syntax doesn't allow you to ignore them.
but you shouldnt mess up
As for the word API, I dunno, everything COM seems to be like that :P
C# tuples doesn't allow you to ignore them either, does it?
pass a bunch of nulls and hope for the best
13:48
@WilliamMariager That's because the language - VB6, originally - allowed you to ignore optional parameters and only pass in the relevant ones, same as C# 4.0 and onwards.
If your language doesn't allow you to ignore parts of the return value, then a good API won't return them.
46 secs ago, by William Mariager
C# tuples doesn't allow you to ignore them either, does it?
Just like a good API for a language without optional arguments won't have 10 non-necessary arguments that simply accept null.
The same API can be an OK API for one language and a bad API for another.
@WilliamMariager It can actually. github.com/dotnet/roslyn/wiki/…
13:50
@HéctorÁlvarez Huh?
C# tuples do iirc
@HéctorÁlvarez That shows you a ctor setting the value, not initializer syntax.
@WilliamMariager Starting with C# 6, a read-only auto-prop has an implicit private setter.
So your ctor can set a value.
public class Customer
{
    public string First { get; } = "Jane";
    public string Last { get; } = "Doe";
}
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That's exactly what I'm saying.
13:52
that crap works, it's going to cause many headaches
I'm saying, ctor can set, initializer syntax can't.
@HéctorÁlvarez That's auto-property initialization. It's nothing different that setting it in the ctor.
@WilliamMariager that piece of code sets the value and works, as an initializer, on a read-only property
It's not initializer syntax.
var customer = new Customer
{
    First = "William",
    Last = "Mariager"
}
^^ That's initializer syntax.
Which can't write to readonly properties.
then my problem there was a misconception
@WilliamMariager they still have to improve constructors though
factory methods are still way better
13:54
@WilliamMariager Oh, I understand now, yes. That's because initializer syntax is from outside.
It's just shorthand for customer.First = "William".
It makes sense. The code that uses the initializer syntax is not part of the class, so there's no expectation that it can write to readonly fields.
Yup
I was just trying to clear that up with Héctor
13:56
Right.
noone saw that
We can view the history, though. :)
I remember a time when creating a bookmark would let you view deleted messages.
Not sure if that works anymore.
@Wietlol Can you show me how that would look syntactically?
public Tuple<int, int> foo() {/*...*/}
var (i1, i2) = foo(); // << would take both
var i3 = foo(); // << would take the first one
but I might be mistaken for a different language
where "public Tuple<int, int> foo" can also be written as "public (int, int) foo"
That's how Lua does it. You can omit later, but you can't specifically take return value 2.
14:03
hmm... actually i lied... i think
they use (var myX, _) = GetPoint(); // I only care about myX
but you can still write "public (int, int) foo() {}" :D
lua might also be the one i am thinking about
@Wietlol That's what I find messy. Especially if you have more than a few return value. But as @Avner is saying, it just has to be used properly.
@Wietlol Yeah, that _ is what makes it ugly.
I've yet to see that done in Lua though.
in the one I have in mind, you write "var (i1, i2) = getPoint();"
and if you only care about the first, you do "var (i1) = getPoint();" or rather "var i1 = getPoint();"
But what if you only want i2?
14:06
if you only care about the second, you have to do "var (_, i2) = getPoint();"
@Wietlol Ah, positional, not named?
on the other hand, i'd say getPoint shouldnt return 2 separate values, but hey :D
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan named stuff was a fix to it
@Wietlol Yeah, that's exactly what Lua does.
but i think it didnt remove the duplicate naming
@Wietlol Well, getPoint is a contrived example. It makes sense (for us OOP-inspired devs) that it should return Point struct.
14:08
aka,
var (x: x, y: y) = getPoint();
var (x: x) = getPoint();
var (y: y) = getPoint();
People from a more mathy background would say a point is a tuple.
In that case, getPoint would need to return a named tuple right?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Why shouldn't it return a "primitive" type though?
(int:x, int:y) getPoint()
@KendallFrey As in, (int,int)?
14:09
@KendallFrey Just wait a version more, and have it return a record ;)
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan yeah
i think C# does this with the initializers though
@KendallFrey One reason is that (int,int) is a structural type, not a named type.
The only benefit a struct adds that I can think of is semantic typing
Can be confusing in some contexts.
14:09
that if the property is named the same as the assignment variable, it says the property name is redundant
@KendallFrey Exactly.
And there are solutions to semantic typing that don't require structs (or classes)
structs also add operators, methods, etc.?
Or am I missing something.
In case of a Vector, stuff like distance, length, operators.
@WilliamMariager From a functional perspective, those don't need to be "in" the struct, just publicly available functions
@KendallFrey Using (int,int) to describe a point requires implicit knowledge that the first int is x and the second y.
14:11
@KendallFrey Doesn't sound like that'd play nicely with auto completion.
@WilliamMariager It's not a problem, just the functions are in a different scope
That's why mathy types are used to it - of course it's (x,y) and not (y,x)! - meaning that there's an expectation of shared knowledge, a barrier of entry of sorts.
@KendallFrey But then any function that works on whatever the return type is would be shown right?
Might make sense for int pairs, but sounds like it could be noisy for a lot of other types.
@WilliamMariager Explicit semantic typing definitely helps tooling, yes.
@KendallFrey structs implement interfaces
14:14
@WilliamMariager I don't quite understand what you're talking about
interfaces are good
@Wietlol You don't need structs for interfaces though
you can use classes too indeed
don't need classes either
@KendallFrey I'm saying, assuming I have a whole matrix/vector/whatever library.
14:15
but you cant do that with loose variables
I'm talking about programming in general, not C#
Where would methods go?
In Haskell, they'd go in the Vector module
And how would the IDE know which methods that makes sense for the int pair I'm using?
@KendallFrey you mean oo vs functional?
14:16
@Wietlol Not necessarily, just in general
@KendallFrey Everything I've seen, in general, that seems to be the case. For example, AutoCAD's API has Vector3D class and it's related methods within that.
@WilliamMariager There's some kind of disconnect here, what you're saying doesn't make sense to me
@WilliamMariager The point is that when you're not thinking OO, the methods aren't part of the tuple, they're performed on the tuple.
mr5
mr5
o/
You just type the name of the function you want
mr5
mr5
14:17
have any one here tried Realm?
@hilli_micha which seems to be the case?
e.g. Vector3d.RotateBy, Vector3d.Project, Vector3D.Negate
That gets very verbose though.
You're typing Vector3d everywhere.
14:18
If I have a (double,double) for a point's x,y and a (double,double) for a vector's whatever, you don't need your tooling to give you options when you press . on the tuple - you know it's a vector, so you do Vector.Multiply(tuple)) instead of Point.Whatever(tuple).
@WilliamMariager I'm not sure what context that's in, but you shouldn't have to
var product = Vector.Multiply(a, b);
vs
var product = a * b;
That's more verbose no?
The OOP conceit that your objects perform the operations require a certain level of explicit semantic metadata to function correctly, as you say, @WilliamMariager - a Point has a different set of operations than a Vector, even though they're both structurally identical.
var product = Vector.Distance(a, b);
vs
var product = a.Distance(b);
Again, the top is more verbose.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan isnt the behavior equal?
14:20
@WilliamMariager you'd normally just do product = dot a b (in a functional syntax)
just a different method
or product = a . b
There's no reason to have to qualify all functions with a namespace
var product = Vector.MyCustomFunction(a, b);
vs
var product = a.MyCustomFunction(b);
How about that?
product = myCustomFunction a b
@WilliamMariager mostly syntactic sugar
14:21
And how does the IDE know which functions to suggest to me?
the difference between the first and second is polymorphism
mr5
mr5
hey!!
@WilliamMariager Whatever's in scope
mr5
mr5
Realm is the future!
i.e. whatever's imported
14:22
So in conclusion, not very suited for C#? :P
Vector3d vector = new Vector3d(1,0,0) //Or however you want to create a new instance.
vector = vector.Negate() // Opposite direction.
vector = vector.RotateBy(Math.Pi, new Vector3d(0,0,1)) // Rotate 180 degrees along Z axis
@WilliamMariager Is how I've always worked in this sort of thing.
I've never actually used autocomplete with Haskell, function names are usually pretty simple and easy to remember
Yeah, same here.
It's the OOP way.
But Kendall is trying to make a case for not returning a struct.
Just return a tuple of x,y,z.
@WilliamMariager Well C# certainly doesn't work that way. I mean in theory it could, but then it'd be a different language
FTR, the last time I wrote a vector manipulation library, I used tuples as "vector literals"
But your opening statement was, "Why shouldn't it return a "primitive" type though?", and all this is why. It's C#, not a functional language.
14:24
I can't find this "TargetServerVersion " in the prject properties as this answer suggest:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/39192968/6197785
@WilliamMariager The question is, are you, the developer, in danger of not knowing if a given struct is a point or a vector?
@WilliamMariager Sure, C# is very OO so it makes more sense to use an object in C#
In general, not as much
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I know people get confused by var already.
Even in C# I'd be fine with a functional approach. C#'s syntax isn't so good for it though
> C# is very OO
pfft
mr5
mr5
14:26
heyy listen!
> Real is the future!
Anyone heard about Realm?
No, complex is reality
@mr5 calm down, Navi
No clue what Real is, can you tell us @mr5?
@WilliamMariager Being frank, I don't like var. It seems like an unnecessary step when explicit declaration is an option.
14:27
It's there so a statement like this would be marginally less ugly:
Why would you be Frank? You're Hilli Micha.
Who is Frank and what does he have to do with this?
It's my second identity.
mr5
mr5
@WilliamMariager I don't know if it falls under the category of an ORM but it's quite alike
Dictionary<string, HashSet<Tuple<int,int,int>>> vectors = new Dictionary<string, HashSet<Tuple<int,int,int>>>();
Dictionary<string, IEnumerable<ResultEntity>> results = new Dictionary<string, IEnumerable<ResultEntity>>;
14:28
@mr5 I'm making fun of you. You wrote Real instead of Realm.
Sorry Navi
@hilli_micha var would be better if it was implicit and worked everywhere :3
mr5
mr5
You extend your object to it and you get a real time synchronization of it's state across the internet with a local copy
oh. hahaha didn't noticed it
@KendallFrey but how does that functional approach handle polymorphism?
oh fuck, here we go
Depends on the situation
mr5
mr5
14:29
use var please.
@mikeTheLiar (again)
Haskell has generic functions everywhere, and typeclasses for functions that can't be generic
Ok, I'll leave y'all to listen to @KendallFrey wax poetic about functional programming. Me? I'm heading home before traffic becomes impossible.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan enjoy your freedom
we will be here listening to Kendall's love for Haxxor Haskell
Hello guys, what is Saas, Iaas and Paas depending on this scenario. "In microsoft azure, I've created a virtual machine, let say it is windows server. I open the windows server remotely and I installed IIS and Microsoft SQL Server. I publish my asp.net mvc application and copy and paste it inside the inetpub then host it using IIS inside the windows server virtual machine"
I'm just wondering please help
Is it Saas, Iaas or Paas?
14:32
What do you think?
Saas?
software as a service?
Why?
Saas is a very bad disease, Iaas are for holding jam/marmalde, Paas is what your compiler does.
But I'm not really sure.
What software in that scenario is being supplied as a service?
14:34
There's none I guess
But a friend told me it is a saas but I don't know why
that approach I've mentioned so I doubt it
that's why I need a clear info :(
@TomW is it Iaas?
Infrastructure as a service because I use virtual machine
Anyone ever use Xamarin?
@Nathvi yeah, drop your question
help
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47309134/is-there-a-way-to-make-ssrs-reports-made-in-vs-2017-compatible-with-vs-2015
@mark333...333...333, that was the question
14:45
Yes I use Xamarin Forms
and a lot here uses xaml base in creating applications
@MohamedAhmed short version, no, you can't do that. It's hidden MS magic that no one outside of MS knows about
does C# have delegation?
> In object-oriented programming, delegation refers to evaluating a member (property or method) of one object (the receiver) in the context of another, original object (the sender).
I don't even know what that would imply
uhm... lemme write an example
mr5
mr5
all I could think of when I hear delegates are those people in politics
14:59
in simple terms, you would do something.Stuff.Foo()

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