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00:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

00:31
@JasonBrown Operator overloading can't accomplish this? I've never messed around with that, but if you can't do it with operator overloading, I can't imagine another way.
yeh Apparently Its not possible in C#
Why are you trying to do this, anyway? What's the y to your x here?
I just want a Limited String (Im working on a game engine. Certain Strings have to capped off, And I want to treat my class as if it were just a normal string after initialization (Just one that Can only be a certain size)).
I might look into using a raw byte array but I think id have the same problem...
its not really a big issue, just find it annoying that there's no way to access an objects properties without an accessor...
lol...
Err well i guess i can "read" the string, just cant write the string without the accessor
V.7
V.7
01:06
Does anyone know how to arrange windows in mdi mode in reverse order rather than from 4 to 1?
For example, there are windows with names 1 2 3 4, so, TileHorizontal will arrange them from 4 to 1, but why? The need is from 1 to 4.
02:04
is there a list of C# Timer's and time counting methods somewhere lol... Should be simple but I hate the DateTime Format..
@JasonBrown capped off why?
Server - Client interactions. Don't want the client to b able to break things on the server and viceversa
anyway the whole thing is just for convenience. The LimitedString Operator things, I was just trying to get it to make sense, so if you did Limitedstring = string1 it would set the text property of LimitedString to whatever string1 is then Truncate it if need be. The issue is that Operators overrides haveto be static, so you cant reference the Object on the Left side of the operator?
I also easier to work with a string that has a defined size
 
3 hours later…
05:04
Could use a char[]
05:58
Type type = obj.GetType();
object ocxObj = ((AxHost)obj).GetOcx();
IDispatch ocxIDisp = (IDispatch)ocxObj;
IntPtr ocxTypeInfo = IntPtr.Zero;
ocxIDisp.GetTypeInfo(0, 0, ref ocxTypeInfo);
type = Marshal.GetTypeForITypeInfo(ocxTypeInfo);

In the above code, do I need to release IntPtr ? to keep reference count ?
 
1 hour later…
07:23
ohayou
ohai
07:53
g'morning.
@samnaction Generally speaking, any instance of an unmanaged object needs to be released, since you can't rely on the GC to do it for you.
In this case, ocxTypeInfo contains a pointer to a COM object (an ITypeInfo), so yes, you would have to release that ITypeInfo.
(Incidentally, why do you have the initial Type type = obj.GetType? Doesn't look like you're using it.
Also, there's a good chance you don't need to muck about with IDispatch explicitly. If you create a COM TLB for your OCX, you can create an RCW wrapper around it and treat it more or less like a managed object, except for needing to release it manually.
I find myself disliking expression-bodied methods for void methods.
COMs are a pain and a half
08:09
I mean, something like public string ToString() => $"{_prefix}_{_data}" is fine - the method clearly takes no arguments and returns a value. The => syntax is obviously borrowed from functional programming, where it's the obvious convention.
But public void Initialize() => EraseTemporaryData(), for instance, annoys me. It doesn't really save much space over statement-bodied methods, and abuses the logical justification for it.
meh, it's just syntactical sugar isn't it?
Syntactic sugar is never "just". It's important.
that's the point. it wouldn't be syntactical sugar if it weren't representable in some other way, albeit more verbose
If it's doing something unique, then it's not syntactical sugar, it's a new language feature
int Add (int a, int b) => a+b is very expressive and clear. It performs an operation on the parameters. The arrow notation signals "this operation takes X and returns Y".
It's not about being unique, but about conveying more meaning with more clarity.
But with void methods, the arrow suddenly doesn't signify a transformation.
It just signifies... a method body.
something which is clearer can be a new language feature and not syntactic sugar
I think in this case it is though
it's simply avoiding having to write the typical code block { } with a return statement
08:13
I don't think it's a meaningful distinction. The C# compiler could decide that expression-bodied methods are only valid on non-void methods. It would still be syntactic sugar and compile to the same thing as statement-bodied method, but it would be a language feature - a design choice that the arrow notation is there to signify a function.
well a language feature I suppose you could say is a superset of syntactical sugar features
Syntactic sugar and language feature aren't mutually exclusive. Extension methods are a language feature that don't rely on runtime changes, but are instead simply syntactic sugar on top of static methods. They're still a language feature - C# allows you to extend (in a limited way) an existing type with new methods.
Whether it's syntactic sugar is simply the implementation detail.
I was talking about whether or not it is syntactical sugar. I think it's always technically a language feature
but it cannot be syntactical sugar if you cannot do the same in another way
Yeah, but I'm saying that a feature that's just syntactic sugar doesn't mean it doesn't have real meaning in code clarity and expresiveness. It's not "just" syntactic sugar.
I wasn't downplaying the usefulness of syntactical sugar to be fair :P
08:17
The fact that I can take an Array - a framework class I can't change - and using extension methods, have it support syntax like var (first, rest) = myArray; is fantastic.
The "just" was meant to distinguish between a language feature which isn't syntactical sugar
But going back to my original rant, I think that expression-bodied void methods are an eyesore.
I accept the clarification. :)
meh. I develop in Java. I've seen what verboseness does to a language
I can't entirely bash something which tries to allow you to write more concise code
That's my point. string ToString() => $"{_prefix}_{_data}" is concise. void Initialize () => FillCache() isn't concise, to my eye.
Because the arrow notation (again, to my eye, in my opinion) signifies a function in the "functional programming" sense of the word - something that accepts (0..n) parameters and returns a new value based on those parameters (and possibly external values too, I'm not a purist)
Well from a purist standpoint, there is no purpose behind a method which simply calls another method with no added parameters
I suppose that isn't true from an inheritance standpoint, but that kind of situation doesn't arise often
08:26
Meh, let's not get lost in the example.
void Initialize() => PreloadCache(_dataStore.CurrentIncident.AssignedUsers.Select(u => u.Id)) is pretty close to code we have.
On initializing the UserManager, it loads pre-loads and caches user data relevant to the current incident.
What happens if we want Initialize to do two things? Then, of course, we'll change it to a statement-bodied method. It's easy and safe enough to do, with modern tooling, but I still dislike this syntax.
I think it would be a mistake to use that syntax if there's a strong possibility of requiring multiple statements to be executed
It's not switching between expression- and statement-bodied that bothers me. Unlike putting braces around single-statement scopes after if or so, which I do try to avoid because the potential for errors is higher.
Well that's what bothers me :P
I don't know what bothers you about that
It bothers me because I really like the arrow notation as concise syntax for functions that return values, because it really parses, in my head, as take INPUT and return OUTPUT. When it's just an alternate syntax for RUN THIS CODE, rather than a concise expression of a f(x), it feels messy.
I think of it like "Here's a list of all things I want done when Initialize is called". Even if it's just one thing, it could be many, in the same way that you'd use an array even if it only held one value if you thought that might change
ohh
I can see that
08:34
@Neil Exactly. "Here's a list of things that need to happen" is something that happens in a statement block.
As opposed to "Here's the value of this method".
Because an expression is something that resolves to a value.
So you think this type of syntax should imply something is getting returned?
Yes. It should resolve to a value.
Then you'd have a lot of programmers bitching about how they wanted to call their void return method and now have to force a return so that it'll work
But I still agree with you on that
though keep in mind that not all lambdas are supposed to return something
When writing ad-hoc anonymous methods, the alternative is between the lambda syntax and the much clunkier anonymous delegate syntax, so the choice is clear.
For methods, I don't think the statement bodied-methods are clunkier. They take two extra lines, yes, so there's a bit of vertical whitespace involved, but since we have to have to full method signature anyway, there isn't the discrepancy between x => x.ToString() vs. delegate (int x) { return x.ToString();}.
(Or the slightly less clunky x => Console.WriteLine(x) vs. delegate (int x) { Console.WriteLine(x);}.
09:44
I feel all retarded
Just had a tooth pulled and now I can't talk properly or feel my face proeprly
oh that's gonna hurt later
I've had my wisdom teeth removed
Yeha I just got one of mine done
if it were a quick pain, that'd be something, but the slow throbbing continual pain is almost worst in some regards
I've never had a tooth pulled so I don't know what it's gonna be like later
But it did not want to come out
they usually don't
did the dentist manage to get it out all in one pull or did it break?
you'd know because you'd have heard it
09:48
Came out in one, but I could hear/feel it tearing away
my dad was a dentist, and it can happen that it breaks
sort of a indicator that the dentist isn't really that great
it was always a bragging point of my father to say that it almost never happened to him
Oooh what bragging rights
ikr
he also claimed he could inject local anesthesia without anyone feeling the initial injection
he had this method where he'd pull slightly on the lip before injection so you'd sort of be distracted by that
morn
oh both squirrels are back
!!Did this squirrel escape from you ?
@Hans1984 Of course!
 
2 hours later…
11:51
Goood moorniiiiiingInColombia CeeeShaaarp! What have you been doing these last two weeks? I've been away and need an update.
ah windows reboot @Squirrelkiller
@Squirrelkiller Well... I have a headache. That counts as news?
@Proxy plese tell me you reboot more than once every two weeks
i never reboot
@Avner Kinda...are you at work? Is it bad?
!!votekick proxy
12:03
@Squirrelkiller voted to kick @proxy
12:18
How to optimize asp.net webform? Is there any way to do it? I have a long value of ViewState is it good or not? Needed some suggestions.
I have asked this question, here is the link but still waiting and searching for the answer.
0
Q: Could not load type App_Code Class in App_Browsers .browser File

Jawad AnwarImproving the performance of ASP.Net Webforms I tried a method which throw an error of Could not load type 'ServerSideViewStateAdapter'. In my App_Code folder I have created a class with the same name. using System; using System.Web.UI; using System.Web.UI.Adapters; namespace MyProject.App_Cod...

The easiest way is to not use webforms
12:36
I dont' know anything about Webforms, but it might be that you're loading a ControlAdapter into a PageAdapter
(or vice versa)
Is there any way to resolve this error?
Trying inheriting from ControlAdapter instead of PageAdapter
Alternatively, run it so you get the error again and look further into the exception, there's probably a reason in the InnerException.
Could not load type 'ServerSideViewStateAdapter' won't be the entire error because it doesn't say why
DLL missing?
When I inherit ControlAdapter it shows error.
DLL?
12:49
A dll file, compiled from your code. Maybe your ServerSideViewStateAdapter is in a dll that is missing or somsething?
An Assembly file
Wait that's not precise
A file containing an assmebly
ServerSideViewStateAdapter is located in App_Code folder.
In which file though
Nopenopeniopenmojnpe
Lee Butler has stopped working, windows is working on a solution.
You can't just throw shit in folders and hope that it woeks
Unless of course you built the application to work like that
12:55
In the Project Folder
Project
|_ App_Code
|_ ServerSideViewStateAdapter.cs
But in deployed state?
It's not a .cs file anymore, right?
Please don't try to deploy by copying your .cs files to the application server
I'm running it locally using my VS
What's in your /bin folder?
That is where the actually run files are
VS compiles your code, puts the output in the /bin, and runs it from there
Also maybe you have to put the namespace somewhere into that xml file, not sure.
There is a Foler same like I have in my Project App_Browser, AjaxToolkit.dll, Project.dll, Project.dll.config and Project.edb
I can't wait for it to not be compiled
13:03
That would have been too easy, albeit hilarious
Nah I mean the class not be included in the project files, so it's not being compiled into the assembly
Ah I see
Like maybe he just dropped a new .cs file in the folder with the others, but didn't add it to the solution
I have included that class and set it from the Properties of the class to Compile, it was Content before.
My cs classes say "Build Action: C# Compiler", maybe go with that?
13:05
Put the class' namespace in the .browser file. Like adapterType="MyProject.App_Code.ServerSideViewStateAdapter "
I guess "content" might put it into resources, stopping oyu form using it as a normal class
940
A: What are the various "Build action" settings in Visual Studio project properties and what do they do?

Gishu None: The file is not included in the project output group and is not compiled in the build process. An example is a text file that contains documentation, such as a Readme file. Compile: The file is compiled into the build output. This setting is used for code files. Content: Allows you to retr...

:45253319
@LeeButler when I did, like you said MyProject.App_Code.ServerSideViewStateAdapter, it throws an error of The type 'Project.App_Code.ServerSideViewStateAdapter' is ambiguous blah blah blah
That sounds like an improvement to me. My work here is done
Hahahah :-D
But the line is still highlighted as it was before "<adapter controlType="System.Web.UI.Page" adapterType="eDental.App_Code.ServerSideViewStateAdapter" />"
Ew you're a dentist? I ain't helping you today, dentists are evil bastards
13:16
Ahahaha I'm not a dentist Bro!
But your program is eDental though! Don't try fooling us!
Oh Man!
:(
I'm not on good terms with dentists since about 9:20 this morning
@Lee what did you do
I didn't do anything, but a dentist yanked my tooth out
I mean sure, I asked him to on friday, but HE LIED TO ME
13:20
That's hilarious!
By the guys! Thank you so much for your help, appreciate that effort.
Bye, good luck!
13:53
I have two in house programs that I would like to be able to work together, specifically, I want one of them to be able to pass data to the other and trigger a function. I started looking into WCF, but needing to configure open ports on each machine is irritating. Are there any better ways to get one program to talk to another?
@AndyD273 There are lots of ways, depending on your requirements and tech stack.
Are they on the same machine? Different machines?
Are they client apps? WPF? WinForms? UWP?
They will be running on the same machines, both are winforms, but we do have a handful of WPF programs that may get some functionality if it makes sense and is possible down the road
obligatory why not make them wpf
In that case, you can create a NamedPipes connection between them to pass data. Or use ASP.NET to create an HTTP service.
How does Visual Studio decide, which entry goes into which <ItemGroup> element? How can i make a template decide?
More specifically: If my template creates a new my.json file, how do I tell it to add "CopyToOutputDirectory:Always" to the second ItemGroup?
Or of course, if no packages are included yet, to teh first/only ItemGroup
14:03
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Cool, I'll look into namedpipes, thanks for the tip!
I think I've used them before, but it's been a while, and it slipped my mind...
14:21
Yeah they can work with WCF in exactly the same way, the only difference being binding the service to a named pipe listener instead of a TCP listener
@Squirrelkiller I'm not sure it matters that much. Every time I've looked in various projects at mine the ItemGroup elements seem fairly arbitrary
14:32
I wouldn't use WCF, though, because it's a pretty clunky library. A lot of fiddly configuration files and such.
You might be better off using ASP.NET Core, which is pretty lightweight out of the box (and runs on .NET Framework, not only on .NET Core) and throw up a lightweight service listener.
It might even be possible to write a Named Pipes-based pipeline for ASP.NET Core.
15:09
I'm trying to get my fork up-to-date with the upstream repo. I'm using this manual, but it doesn't "just work". It wants to make a merge commit. Any idea what I'm doing wrong? I'm kinda lost. I just to continue work on my fork from the most up to date state of the upstream/master.
Also gtg home see yo uwhen I get home so I have internet again, SIM card lost in colombia.
anyone has an idea how to check which tls version is used for a http request?
as in, we send a http request to an external server, how do I check what tls version is used?
On the external server?
I don't know that you can.
I could be wrong
we just had an issue where one of our legacy services was giving stupid errors
it sends http requests to external services but they just stopped accepting the requests
@Squirrelkiller why dont you pr
10
Q: How do we determine the SSL/TLS version of an HTTP request?

Shaun LuttinWe are wanting to configure our Windows client to use only TLS 1.1 and greater. We've learned that we can do this by editing the registry. Now we want to make several HTTPS requests from different applications and check to be sure that they all use TLS 1.1 and above. What we have tried is to run...

turned out that on our production servers, TLS <1.2 is used
local, testing, staging all use >=1.2
only production had <1.2
tomorrow we are gonna take a look at how to properly solve this, but I also want to include the tls version in sanity/regression tests
or... unit tests
somewhere
Check out the ServicePointManager class.
Although, I think, that just sets the SSL/TLS policy, doesn't tell you exactly which protocol was negotiated in a specific session.
15:22
anyone here use nuget? I have a class library project that I want to turn into a nuget package, but the project depends on a nuget package from nuget.org.
What's the problem? You just define the name and version of the dependent package, and let whoever uses your nuget worry about it.
so I don't have to include the actual referenced dll?
in my package
Nuget.org is just a catalog of nuget packages. You don't reference nuget.org.
If your package depends on, say Newtonsoft.Json.Net v11.0, you define the dependency based simply on the package name and version.
When Visual Studio tries to add your nuget package as a dependency to a project, it will try to resolve your dependencies. By default, that means looking on nuget.org.
ok i'll give it a try
You don't tell it where to look for it. If one of your nuget's users has a policy that nuget.org is disallowed and they have their own nuget feed (like we do here), VS will simply look for Newtonsoft.JSon.net in that feed.
Or any feed that happens to be configured.
Waiting for a build... if it passes, I'm off home.
If it doesn't, I'm off home a bit sadder and will fix it tomorrow.
15:28
doy ou include pdb files?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Good luck. Thanks for the help.
16:18
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Well?
16:47
posted on February 04, 2019 by ericlippert

Last time on FAIC I complained bitterly about the shortcomings of System.Random. In this episode, I’ll take a stab at the sort of thing I’d like to see in a redesigned random library. This is the “fix the trivial problems” … Continue reading →

> The first thing I want is two static methods
closes tab
opens dr. pepper
@Wietlol What would you prefer?
a globally available (thread-local) instance of an RNG of which, you can ask numbers
@Sinjai Don't ask him complicated questions like that. He prefers something trite and easily regurgitated, requiring a minimum of understanding to be snarky about.
17:00
@MikeTheLiar meh
"globally available (thread-local)" what does that even mean?
Global but not thread safe?
public static RNG ISometimesForgetNames { get; } < globally available
get implementation should provide a thread local instance
Is RNG the type or the name of the property?
Not really relevant but that typo is driving me insane.
fixed it
17:02
Thanks.
disclaimer, names are not my strongest side, these names are just examples of what could be chosen, but I highly recommend everyone to not use them
So you want a RNG factory?
insert java joke here
not a factory
more like... a singleton
but not single
more like... a ton
or multiton
You want a static, global property that generates thread-specific instances of a class.
That's a factory with some funny syntax around it.
I suppose so
17:05
Oi, Mike
Oi, Sin.
if ThreadLocal<RNG> is a factory, then yes
You mentioned not being able to use C# 6. What framework version are you stuck on? Because I discovered the other day that you can get some features of higher language versions (ex C# 6 on .NET 4.5) thanks to decoupling of compiler versions from framework versions. Not sure how common-knowledge this information is.
5 I'm pretty sure.
It's more complicated than that - we've got a lot of different components.
But the big, old, nasty one is 5 I think.
Well, it's the biggest. Might be the nastiest. It's definitely not the oldest.
The oldest that's still in use is VB6.
Not even VB.NET
@MikeTheLiar 4.5?
17:14
.NET 4.5. C# 5.
I think I found a bug in Azure Active Directory.
I am almost positive you didn't.
I'm willing to be proven wrong, though.
@MikeTheLiar I think string interpolation should work, if you have a recent compiler. 🤔
Inside of our Azure Active Directory they have a selection called "User Assignment Required" when you set the value to "No" any user not on the list but within Active Directory should have access. That is not happening.
17:18
@Sinjai lack of string interpolation is far from the worst part of this project but thanks for the tip.
holy shit it's 58 degrees outside what am I doing here
bbl
@MikeTheLiar I can't even imagine, but maybe that could ease the pain slightly.
Whiskey would ease that pain.
17:52
@Wietlol Isn't there some kind of thread-static thingy you can use? An attribute or something? I forgot most of it, it's just a shadow of a memory, but google might help.
Damn, you beat me to it.
Was just looking at that attribute earlier.
And I even just came home 10 minutes ago and just booted my pc
What you both speaking about?
53 mins ago, by Wietlol
a globally available (thread-local) instance of an RNG of which, you can ask numbers
Quite literally the example in the MS docs
18:04
I want to create a hashset<char> but essentially as a constant (Only set once) Should I just use a private static?
probably offers more then I need but thanks :)
What exactly should be immutable? The HashSet itself? Or each entry?
the hashset itself
after its creation, it should never change
essentially instead of
string a = "words go here"
I want HashSet<char> a = {list of chars}
Still trying to get strings of limited length are we?
18:09
lol nah I left that, Now Im keeping the strings from getting invalid characters
but I need a really fast method to do it (since it will be used ALOT)...
using a foreach loop on a char array, along with a hashset of the characters that are allowed
const string inValidChars = @".-;";

bool OnNewChar(char c)
{
  return !inValidChars.Contains(c);
}
isnt regex relatively slow?
im applying it to a string anytime it changes
should never be more then 255 characters
heh... i find regex super confusing xD I really should go work with it more...
regex101.com
To play around
@Squirrelkiller What on Earth is up with the capitalization on inValidChars?
you guys got all the links xD
World-class Googler, I am.
Unrelated:
79
A: There is an if-else, is there a Neither Nor statement?

Jeff AtwoodOh ... you wanted the "ain't" keyword? VB adds Ain't Keyword (Newswire 8-19-2004) Microsoft has announced that Visual Basic will add the "Ain't" keyword to the language. According to a source on the VB.NET team "With VB, we want the language to work the way you think. Exte...

@Jason, if speed is that much of an issue, make your own benchmark.
regex is awesome, once you learn it.
18:21
till you learn it, its just a confusing jumble of characters ;)
@Sinjai Uhhhh I'm still a bit sick from colombia I guess
RegEx is dangerous.
!!htmlwithregex
We have an app for that
user10864482
18:22
good morning
good evening
good day
Back in my day we used these things called bookmarks. Websites used to invite you to bookmark them.
good afternoon
Back in my days too, but I evolve with the internet and trxy to keep "my days" the current ones
Hm... how do we make that hammertime stuff happen?
STOP
18:23
HAMMERTIME!
Azure support, painful.
STAHP
HAMMAHTIME!
18:24
There's like 3 more, at least.
!!what
@Greg That didn't make much sense. Maybe you meant: wat
HALT
HAMMERZEIT!
Yeeeeeesss
18:25
haha
user10864482
I'm looking for a way to subscribe event on a process. Basically I have a running process I cannot interact with. Eventually the process die. When this happen I want to start it again. Basically once the process is started I cannot interact with it but I can decide what argument to feed it with when I start it.
@Sinjai Hey that generates controls for the space team android game :D
morph open-source portals!
benchmark integrated technoloogies!
empower backend users!
Team, we need to integrate out-of-the-box users!
@User23332 There are Semaphores, you can pass those between processes. Have the process to be monitored set a nuber to 0 every second or so. Have the monitoring process increment the number every second or so. If the monitoring process sees the number is greater than 10 or something, your monitored process is probably dead.
I'm not sure if the Semaphore can carry a number though, or if it's solely for synchonization.
Although...maybe you can have your monitored process lock hte Semaphore and have the monitoring process wait ofr it to unlock, at which point the monitored process has to be dead.
Gotta check if a dying process unlocks hte semaphore though.
user10864482
18:41
ok thx
@Sinjai Passed!
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Hallelujah!
Hooray, I made a C# version of that bullshit generator. Don't tell my boss.
This shit doesn't get old (for me).
19:47
Anyone have an elegant solution for this?
Specific code please?
The inner variable might aswell be "Integrated" or "Generator" or something
What is the inner Class, and what is the inner variable?
Maybe it's Class Callback and Callback OnThreadDeath
(Or OnThreadDeathListener)
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