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08:00
@RonaldMunodawafa it depends
does it (significantly) improve maintenance?
remember, code style does not affect runtime
That's one of the factors I would discuuss with my manager
it only affects readability of the code
so... how much did it improve?
@RonaldMunodawafa Sure, but it's something that the team should choose to do, not something that a person joining a team does on his initiative, and implicitly saying "Me, the new guy, knows better than you all".
Readability is important though
and... do all devs on the team think it improved?
08:01
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I think you're misunderstanding me
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan but what if he does
@Squirrelintraining That's not the question. The question is how well you'll be received by the team.
Some projects are developed in a rush
And if you are hired to maintain code surely you should have the liberty of bringing up the coding style with your manager
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan true dat
@RonaldMunodawafa Sure. Suggesting improvements is always good. I'm just saying that there are ways to do it that can antagonize, and ways that don't.
08:05
Please go on
What are ways to avoid antagonisation
"hey, I wrote this code in this different code style... do you think this is horrible?"
"or less readable in some way?"
How about asking: "The original coding style seems to cause a lot of confusion and debates in the team. Is there something I can do as a maintainer to curb the style anxiety?"
> The original coding style seems to cause a lot of confusion and debates in the team.
did it tho?
If you have evidence for it
If you come in to an established code base and say "This isn't good! It doesn't match common style X and Y and it's much less readable!", while the rest of the team say "Sure it's non-standard but it's clear enough to us, you'll get used to its idiosyncracies". What do you say to that?
08:09
hmm.... familiarity... its a dreaded sign of obfuscation of either simplicity or complexity
for example
for (int i = 0; i < arr.Length; i++) { ... }
is very familiar to most people
but extremely complex
There's nothing wrong with bringing it up. The issue is if you change it without consulting the team
@Wietlol lets not call a simple for loop "extremely complex" now
It's more complex than it could be, perhaps
it is extremely complex
ey guys ... quick question, anyone got xp with dockers? I got .net core app and I only got problem connecting to mySql db ... while oracle and sql server works perfectly ... connecting to all 3 using their IP address, but connecting to mysql server i get error "Unable to connect to any of the specified MySQL hosts."
and it is not a simple for loop
it is a familiar for loop
this is why junior students struggle in school
teachers are familiar with things and therefor assume they are simple
and simple things should be easy to understand for students
its sad...
@Veljko89 Does the same code connect when running outside the container?
08:14
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan running on IIS it does, yes
@Wietlol Psychologist: "What do you think of this for loop?" Wietlol: "it is extremely complex"
I get your point, we're familiar with it, but it isn't even that complex ultimately
I may exaggerate a bit :D
+1 @Neil
but its by far not simple
Not as straightforward as say an implicit loop where you're simply given the item of each element in the array
08:15
what you basically do is implement an external iterator
Generally an implicit loop is preferable, but it isn't going to wreck your day to stumble across an explicit loop like that
it is :D
not because it is complex, but it violates SLA
so... yes, it is going to wreck my day
damn man, way you talk, it seems like it's personal and you hate for loop :D
hmm... that may be true
I havent used a for loop in years
Are there any psychiatrists and counsellors who specialise in dev patients
08:18
perhaps I hurt its feelings
...
@Wietlol Spend a weekend writing C
nah
why would I write C?
You will remember why you stopped using them
They are the way of C
@RonaldMunodawafa Wietlol and C are two things that should never be mentioned together. I'm pretty sure he'd find a way of ending the world should he learn C
if I use C, I will first have to write a new base library (or sdk)
heck, I need to write a String class
08:22
I imagine something like this for Wietlol, except using C
I will use Wietlang (Kode)
good morning
@Wietlol Yeah, but you know you'll just end up implementing Wietlang as a set of preprocessor directives that generate C code.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan not really
I generate LLVM IR
08:24
@Wietlol That used to be my hobby
I like C for recreational frustration
generating LLVM IR?
C has many undefined ideas
@Neil lmao
It is a thing of beauty
lmso
laughing my squirrel off
08:26
It is like staring into the eyes of the infinite void that has been part of the synthesis of what we have today
There are uglier languages
Ever tried Visual Basic 6?
You don't know ugly until you see it
It makes me want to throw up in my mouth a little
I have seen ><>
(fish)
I have seen JASS
>=<>
VB6 was a great language.
I hated it
It was my very first language
Things felt magical when I wanted to learn
It was the precursor of .NET in many ways. A managed language with a focus towards developer productivity.
08:28
VB6 is an awful first language
RAD they used to call it
VB6 was what taught at my high school
It is so different from most modern languages
@RonaldMunodawafa I know, hardly your fault
I have seen..
JS
Elm is beautiful
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH
08:29
@Neil That's not why it's awful as a first language, though. It's a bad first language because it's a language that seeks to abstract away details to let you be productive. So it's a good productivity language, not a good learning language.
React is lovely
gets out cross
I'm not saying anything about JavaScript itself
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan True, you know nothing of how it works under the hood
I wouldn't teach VB6 in high-school, where the goal is to teach concepts and fundamentals, not to be productive.
08:29
stay away from me JS !
there's plenty worse than javascript. I remind you there's always PHP out there
@Neil my first language was JASS...
you probably dont know it... but it was pretty easy to get into programming, but it is a horrible language
Both JS and PHP are fine. They support a lot of advanced concepts, they have great ecosystems. Yes, they're both messy languages, but not bad.
@Wietlol Not familiar with it
William Marriager helped replacing it with Lua iirc
08:30
yeah i know
but since im a java dev i despise js
@Hans1984 There's no actual relation between the two, you know, right?
c# is really easy to pick up if you come from java
since I like statically typed, compiled, not-crashing code, I dont really like JS...
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I know
@Hans1984 And Java is really easy to drop
08:31
Actually only PHP7+ is fine
@Hans1984 if you are a Java dev, you must also hate PHP
PHP 5 and before can go to Hell
@Wietlol ok
@Hans1984 new List<string>().Push("")
@Squirrelintraining Idk
08:32
Lavarel is lovely actually
So is Symfony
@nyconing hehe
I hate both PHP and Java
im learning c# with unity for a while now
@RonaldMunodawafa I think the best PHP is PHP 6
I hate Java for poolitical reasons
08:32
something could be said for having an imperial language as your first language
and its all still fucked where's the nearest cliff I can jump off
humble bundle had some great c# and unity stuff lately
and i bought it
@Wietlol The PHP that was never released
exactly :D
you learn nothing about what happens under the hood for a scripting language
08:33
Unless you read the source code
now they have some python stuff in store
but im not really a python fan
@RonaldMunodawafa source code for javascript? are you mad!?
I love Python
@Neil Source code for Bash
I only love one python
I don't call JavaScript a scripting language anymore
08:34
ahh, ok
giggles
@RonaldMunodawafa why not?
it's remarkably detailed for a scripting language, but it is still technically a scripting language
JavaScript by definition is a scripting language
well python is very straight forward
thats probably the best thing about it
08:35
Scripting languages are a subset of programmingn languages
python is a great first language imho
If you can get something like React or Elm out
@RonaldMunodawafa every scripting language is also a programming language, iirc
I don't think that should still be considered in the same spirit that Perl, Bash and friends are
But I have to say JS has done a lot more earlier than PHP in resolving issues
Now what is needed is someone brave enough to break backwards compatibility getting the junk out and only providing security updates to older versions
@Neil The distinction between "programming language" and "scripting language" is pretty pointless, and usually used only to denigrate certain languages.
08:39
i thought a scripting language is a language that you write scripts in...
and scripts are pieces of code that you load into an application to be executed
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Meh, maybe these days it isn't really even so relevant
for example, SQL is a scripting language
You can say JS is a scripting language ("Hey, it even has Script in its name"), but de facto, it's one of the most popular programming languages in the world, used to build countless real-world apps. It supports structured projects, clean code separation and many other concepts of programming languages.
or JS
or Groovy
Sure, you can write JS script snippets in HTML's onclick handlers. But you can write C# snippets and run them with scriptcs as well.
08:40
but when you create an array in javascript and assign value at index 1000, it's not really an array, but map
what you write and what actually happens can be radically different
or even C#, if you include the C# compiler in your runtime and found some way to put the dlls in some place to be loaded
i was also doing some c++ for a while
when i was working with unreal engine
@Neil That's only because you came to it with a certain concept of what "array" should be.
every instruction is a request to the interpreter to perform some sort of action, which can be as specific or vague as the language requires
The definition of "programming language", as opposed to scripting language, isn't "a language where an array is a contiguous memory location".
08:41
OOP
Fucking melons
thats all i care about
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That's the difference. An array is an array in an imperial language
OOPs
They were all "Antivirus won't make the already strained system any slower"
Bollocks
08:42
It isn't represented in another form, unless you're already using a class or abstraction
A goood example is F#
@Neil No, it's "an array is what I'm used to from my previous languages".
You can either script with it
Just because C's concept of arrays trickled down to most other popular languages today doesn't make it the only definition.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan What you say is not mutually exclusive with what I say
08:42
@Neil an Array is a name commonly used for an implementation of a List (where List means a ordered collection of elements)
I know Pascal's array's are different
And that's what C# and friends base their arrays on
A common definition of array is "a data structure that can be accessed by index". Another common term is "associative array", which is what C# calls a dictionary.
The fact that JS implements arrays as maps-keyed-by-int (does it, btw? I don't know) doesn't make it more or less a programming or scripting language.
Same label. Different semantics.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan it appears it does
array appears to be syntax sugar for named properties
arr[0] == arr.["0"]
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan In one case you're asking the interpreter to perform a specific task, which can be more or less represented the same under the hood, and in the other case, you're asking the computer to do precisely the task being requested
08:46
and arr.["a"] == arr.a
Some exceptions there, for what concerns requesting the operating system to perform tasks, but otherwise, the intended meaning is literal, not interpreted
a scripting language, iirc, is where you feed source code in that language to a running application to be executed
.dlls (CIL perhaps?) could be considered a scripting language for example
a scripting language can be precompiled, it makes no difference
@Neil No, you're not. When you access an array in C#, you think you're telling the computer to do something specific, but you have no idea what the compiler actually boils it down to, and what the JIT does later.
its a weird version of scripting, sure
08:48
the distinguishing factor is that.. that they aren't literal instructions but pseudo instructions
I like to think as programming as constructing a story for the computuuer to play out
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan A compiler is allowed to optimize anything away that wouldn't affect the overal behavior
@Neil then every high level programming language is a scripting language?
new Object() << this is not a machine instruction
@Neil C# runs on a VM with a JIT compiler. Even C - a language designed to be a "portable assembly language" that runs close to the metal and compiles down to pretty predictable ASM, is still not writing proper instructions to the computer directly.
Why do people care if a language is a scripting language. If it solves your problem best does it matter if it's even a language to begin with?
08:49
> C# runs on a JVM
this sounds so weird (and is nicely editted out)
@Wietlol Exactly. I think, @Neil, you're mixing the concept of scripting language with high-level langauge.
@Wietlol Who said that
Yeah, I meant to say "VM"
It's a CLR
That's what the specification calls it
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan The fact that it is run by a JIT compiler or run directly as executable binary is irrelevant
08:50
I wonder what the semantic differences are
If you wanted you compile assembly to JavaScript. Would that make it a scripting language?
@Neil Just as the fact that your instruction to "access the 5th element of the array" is the same whether you're accessing a memory offset of (5*sizeof(T)+arr) or whether there's a secondary lookup step involved.
that moment when you realize your tools are helping you ... codegasm
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan The additional steps are supposed to be transparent to the overall behavior ultimately
@Neil They're transparent in JS as well as in C# and in C, even though those three languages handle the same logical directive very differently.
I'm just waiting my moment to say something stupid....
08:53
In javascript, I can write window.open(), and the scripting language can check permissions, run a new thread, create a window, and set it to sleep to await additional user interactions.. In an imperial language, if I try to attempt the same, I'm either writing all these things manually or I'm depending on a library or an abstraction which does it
What the heck is an imperial language?
the idea of a scripting is to inject behavior into a running application
programming languages that support this kind of injection are called scripting languages
the running application may require some libraries or architecture to support those languages
Lua is a scripting language
By that token
If a standard library does all this for you, it is still very much a library. I could write my own version of it if I wanted to
And Lisp too
F# three
08:54
You can't write your own version of window.open in javascript
not unless you consider creating a fake UI window as doing the same
@Neil Javascript doesn't do any of that. window is part of the HTML DOM, not of the JS language. That's exactly the same as doing new Form1().Show() - it's library code (which happens to be a standard browser interface)
window.open is a "native" function... as in, the compiler/interpreter is providing the implementation
the source code (defining the function to make it visible for programming tools) does not provide the implementation
Unless you are coding in Assembly, you are writing high level code that hides certain features
You're confusing the javascript language, and the browser-based, sandboxed runtime environment.
08:56
native functions are often impossible to be implemented
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan You could write your own version of Form is my point
a scripted language defines what you can and can't do, on the basis of limitations of the language.
Nothing stops you from writing window.show in JS if you write your own translator
@Neil Sure. And you could write your own UI library and call it from Javascript. The reason you can't do that in a webpage isn't because of a limitation of Javascript, but of a limitation of the browser's Javascript execution environment which explicitly prohibits it.
The DOM is language-independent
If you ran your own JS directly, say in a V8 execution engine (which is what NodeJS does), then certainly you could do a lot of things that you can't do in the browser.
08:57
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Right, javascript is entirely designed to be sandboxed
@Neil Tell that to a server-side NodeJS developer. Tell that to someone writing WinJS, writing Javascript code to create UWP apps on Windows10.
Sure, it's commonly sandboxed. But that's not what the language is.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan So now javascript is the same thing as node?
Can I or can I not access the filesystem in a browser? There's no support for such a thing
It was added to node because it wouldn't be possible otherwise
@Neil With Blazor, you can run C# in a browser. Exactly like running JS. And you know what? You can't access the filesystem with C# in that case, either.
Because it's not about the language.
It's about the environment
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I thought node was the application that runs the JavaScript
09:00
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan do you have any experience with Blazor?
Do you liken it?
The environment only makes the language usable for developers
@Wietlol NodeJS is the server product that uses the V8 JS engine to run JS code, yes.
Otherwise, it's a curiosity for language nerds
@Squirrelintraining Not really. Just a couple of demos.
I should stop asking mutliple questions at once.. xD
09:02
ahoy mateys o/
C# can't access the filesystem. At all. Nothing in the C# language knows what a filesystem is. When you write C# code on the .NET Framework, you use System.IO - a library - to do that. But when you write the same C# against UWP (a variant of the .NET Framework), then... no, you can't really use System.IO, because UWP exposes a different set of filesystem APIs.
You're confusing permissions with language restrictions
So you have to use the Windows.Storage namespaces.
You have to ask the operating system for access to a file, because the operating system manages this
And under the hood, the V8 engine does the very same
It's not a language restriction! I used to write JS scripts for local admin operations - before Powershell came along. We would use wscript and cscript that came with Windows and could run JS or VBS scripts.
09:03
@Neil if I say "File.Open" I still have to get past the FS permissions
perhaps the file is locked...
Then write me a javascript script which can copy files from one folder to another from my browser
cscript's engine supported COM operations, so I could write JS code that did var fs = WScript.CreateObject("FileSystemObject"); and get an object - a javascript object - that could access the filesystem.
@Neil You can't, because browsers lock down access to the filesystem.
permissions are granted by the environment... wether that is your browser or your OS doesnt make any difference
It isn't just restricted, it isn't possible
not in a browser at least
@Neil Exactly. But because of the browser.
09:05
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan If it were the browser, then in my script I'd write File.Open("C:\") and then I'd get an Error thrown
It isn't permissions, I don't even have the syntax to describe that action..
@Neil No, because File.Open is a library call for a library that doesn't exist.
@Neil try to make your own language, trust me, it is "fun" and you learn a lot
Just like var file = new Windows.Storage.StorageFile("/path/to/file") is valid C# code that simply makes no sense outside UWP, because the libraries don't exist.
@Wietlol shutup
hehehe
09:06
You're mixing the language and its standard libraries.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan people tend to do that a lot... way too often
Javascript-on-the-browser has one set of standard libraries (the HTML5 DOM and browser APIs). Javascript-on-Node has a different set. But the language is the same.
some syntax in node cannot be valid in javascript in the browser
it is not the same
the syntax is a function call
What can't be valid?
09:07
@Neil It's not syntax.
did you mean something else with "syntax" ?
It's a library call.
function or method call to be exact
The language in the browser and nodejs are exactly the same, the difference is the environment APIs provided.
> www.secureservercdn.net/184.168.47.225/01b.4c8.myftpupload.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/kater-karlo-har-har-har.jpg
09:09
Unity is another good example. You write the same C# in Unity (depending on language version, of course), but there are a lot of things you're used to in .NET programming that simply aren't available in Unity.
I think Kotlin is a good example
Look at that URL!
It's amazing
you can run Kotlin in a JVM or in a browser (using JS)
Wwww Wwww Wwww
two very different environments
but the same language
I suppose it is similar to C# with blazor... or... razor.... or gazor... or whatevazor
09:11
C# on Xamarin or .NETCore are two very different APIs, but same language.
That's all.
Incidentally, to go back to the start of the topic, it's quite possible that var a = [0,1,2,3] in javascript is implemented differently by different runtimes. Some might allocate a contiguous memory block, some might create an underlying associative array with the index as the key.
But if the language doesn't specify it, it's just an implementation detail of the environment.
@Squirrelintraining googling that IP results in weird results.
some might use a local sqlite db
What's better than a sausage sammich in the morning?
A free sausage sammich in the morning
two sausage sammich in the morning?
09:15
if..if a HasSet's Add, Remove and Find operations only take O(1), why isn't it replaced with List?
because it isnt ordered
Just that!
@Wietlol there's also that
in most cases, it's not crucial to keep lists ordered
true
https://i.sstatic.net/O4ly9.png
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/150750/hashset-vs-list-performance
there is also this
the growth of operation time is lower, but that does not mean the operation time is lower
it just scales better
09:19
@mshwf HashSet also has greater space complexity than a straight List, I think.
iteration is also faster on list
even on internal iterators
It's a textbook case of "what are the pros and cons of these two data structures". It always depends on what you need them for.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan space is still O(n) iirc
Also what is "order"? when you loop through a HashSet, elements are fetched in order
@mshwf Are they? What order? A List keeps the insertion order. Hashset doesn't, necessarily - it groups items into buckets based on their hash-set.
09:22
@mshwf when you iterate over a hash set and print out all items, you get a nice overview of what it contains
if you then add a bunch more items, and print the same... the order could have changed
also, the order can change between runs
or between run configurations
As if it's randomly printed!
but this:
HashSet<int> data = new HashSet<int>();
data.Add(1);
data.Add(2);
data.Add(3);
data.Add(4);
foreach (var item in data)
{
    Console.WriteLine(item);
}
Console.WriteLine("---");
data.Add(5);
data.Add(6);
data.Add(7);
data.Add(8);
foreach (var item in data)
{
    Console.WriteLine(item);
}
prints in order
sure
!!tell mshwf format
@Squirrelintraining That didn't make much sense. Use the !!/help command to learn more.
but that is just because your test is unlucky
09:26
@mshwf Format your code - hit Ctrl+K before sending and see the faq
a7a
Format your code a7a
:D
@CapricaSix thnx, next time
I didn't know downloadmoreram.com redirects you to youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ after you've "downloaded"/"generated" all the RAM
Is it just buggy for me?
ooo shit
that's borked
hmm... funny
09:34
> Liverpool Humidity 94%
there is a significant difference between the implementations of Java's HashSet and C#'s HashSet
kill me now
C#'s version appears to behave more similar to a bag

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