has anyone ever had to program somethign where they reserved a space for something
i am dealing with a network game where I want to reserve a spot for someone upon their connection, but if they dont fulfill certain requirements within x amount of time, i want the spot to be freed
Today's lesson is that you're never too experienced or too professional to try out a project in a new environment or programming language, look at your code, and say "my god, this code is terrible and I'm a terrible programmer". Learning is fun!
@M.Aroosi A couple of years ago I suddenly found a triangle of red skin on my leg. Turns out a little sun coming in through the window through the shades where I worked was enough to burn me.
@mr5 In my headcanon he's a squirrel who's a killer. A killer for hire, but with a heart of gold, forced into this life of violence. He's trying to get out, but the stains, they don't wash off.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan sounds like a dialogue from an advertisement. Now it reminds me of that "ajax"(Not javascript) script(not our jargon) in trade for sex
@M.Aroosi Not too common. I like its frequency - common enough to be familiar and recognizable, infrequent enough so I don't run into too many other Avners.
I'd love to tell you the story of how we had a chance at that, and then something happened and lost it, but I don't want to be kicked for using the F word.
Traditionally, german women also take their husbands name, but that has been changing for some time now. Now it's double names, men take wifes names, or whatever.
@mr5 I'm sure you can find plenty of Roman Catholic women who don't take their husband's name. It's a cultural thing, and is probably more common with more conservative people, but it's not religious doctrine.
I believe the concept comes from guilds and houses, where firstborn children were meant to keep the father's name because those were the names people knew.
I think it predates guilds, but it does center around the Family, and specifically the man's family because many if not most of our cultures are patriarchal.
In ancient Rome, people would have first names like "Primus" and "Secundus", literally meaning "first" and "second". Their family name was the important part.
The gens Julia or Iulia was one of the most ancient patrician families at Ancient Rome. Members of the gens attained the highest dignities of the state in the earliest times of the Republic. The first of the family to obtain the consulship was Gaius Julius Iulus in 489 BC. The gens is perhaps best known, however, for Gaius Julius Caesar, the dictator, and grand uncle of the emperor Augustus, through whom the name was passed to the so-called Julio-Claudian dynasty of the 1st century AD. The nomen Julius became very common in imperial times, as the descendants of persons enrolled as citizens under...
Being the one to establish the Roman empire made the Julia/Julius name kind of popular among other people as well :)
Depending on the circumstance though. "Good morning" is so long, we usually only use it when actually talking to the person. When just passing by, we say something like "morning".
There's a traditional festivity here in Spain, more specifically in Murcia, where the carthaginian empire built their stronghold in the peninsula. They take traditional names and have a lot of parties and some kind of BBQ.
It's REALLY hard to come from a romance language and say romance stuff in a non-romance language.
Well, if everyone around you is used to you that you greet them good morning everytime, it's not awkward at all. But when I do that, they'll look at me thinking "what's wrong with this guy"
But it's just my exaggeration. I know they don't think like that
Indeed. And just as you should be able to look at your new code and say "This is not supposed to look like that", I want to be able to look at cultural things and say "This is something we need to change."
@Squirrelkiller Yup. It takes a mindset of introspection and questioning. Saying "I've always believed that X is right. But if I look at it closely, it seems to conflict with Y, which I also believe in. Are these compatible? Am I actually not in favor of X, now that I see that it's so anti-Y?".
The sort of questions that people ask themselves during adolescence. Some resolve them by not thinking about them and simply accepting the cultural norms. Some resist and go against. Some find other answers.
unironically, I talk to cashiers for two reasons: 1) no fear of rejection, so it's good practice for higher risk situations 2) can use it as an alibi if I'm ever accused of a crime
from pd in dataContext.tblProducts join od in dataContext.tblOrders on
pd.ProductID equals od.ProductID
into t from
rt in t.DefaultIfEmpty() orderby pd.ProductID
It looks like you're doing a group join. You're iterating over the Products table. For each Product, you're joining all Orders that match the Product ID
@mr5 Nothing to do with your profession. For example, I have this colleague I talk with, sometimes we're like "hey this game's on sale now". But for the most part none of them are geeks like me.
They look at me like I'm some sort of creep because I have Jira installed at home.
a left join takes everything from the left and whatever matches from the right, a right join takes everything from the right and whatever matches from the left, a "normal" join tends to only take the bits from both that matched
Oh, I pretty much know the different kinds of joins. It's just that I can never remember what "left" or "right" or "inner" refer to. The terminology simply does not click for me, never maps into the concepts.
Left means left + whatever you can find for the right, whether it exists or not. Right is the same but for the right. Inner means left when there's a right that matches it.
@M.Aroosi exactly, which is why it never makes sense. Right and left seem like pointless distinctions. You have the source table, and the table to join to it. Being able to do so symmterically from RTL and LTR seems pointless.
If I want all people and their associated fruits, it doesn't make sense to start my query with the Fruits table and right-join people. It's like Yoda conditions.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Which is why everyone uses LEFT JOIN almost exclusively, because you usually put the most important tables at the beginning of the query.
@HéctorÁlvarez Heh. This is mostly why the left/right terminology doesn't work for me. It doesn't match what I want to do, but what the db engine does.
person x wanted select stuff where this is true, y didnt want that so added and where that isnt, but z wanted to link it.. so you can litterally see rather than deciding if there is a better way they just unioned, and temp table then delete half of it... its UGLY
@HéctorÁlvarez I've seen them before when people mix OOP inheritance with EF persistance.
Say you have a "BaseEntity" and several different concrete childrens - say, an ActionAudit with a derived CreatedAudit, UpdatedAudit and DeletedAudit, each with different fields.
So they'll be created as three different tables in the DB, but if I want to get a list of all ActionAudits (for a list, for instance), I need to Union them all.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan In my opinion, that's a mistake. You should be grouping Audits together in a table, then mark their type, kind of AuditStatus { 0=active, 1=deleted, 2=updated };
Engineers at MS decided to do it with a start and end dates. Start date set when the row is created, end date when the row is modified. An update would create another row with the same data, but a new start date and different identity behind the scenes, a delete would not create a new one so you have traceability from start to end.
@HéctorÁlvarez Usually, yes. But what do you do when different audits have additional data? Delete has a DeleteReason. Update has UpdateType, and maybe UpdatedData.
I don't think the OO hierarchy is the right way to do it, but there are drawbacks to other ways as well.
One way is to have one central Audit table with the basic info, and to keep the specific in a key-value table.
@HéctorÁlvarez Immutable database records are useful in many scenarios, especially when you need to be able to refer to older revisions (for instance, editing a Template will create a new template with a new ID, so documents linked to the previous version could keep working with the old )