Y'know... it all sounds like your company has no idea what they're doing, either. All I can say is... start simple. Start at the top and work your way down.
@notatroll You can use a pointer to traverse an array of fixed size by incrementing the pointer without needing to keep track of where everything is in memory.
@notatroll A IList<T> is an abstract list. The common implementation, List<T>, is built on arrays, so it's very fast to access, but could be costly to add to.
A different implementation of IList<T> might be using a LinkedList<T>, which would be slow to access by index, but much quicker to add to, especially in the beginning/end.
To get the item at position #12 on a linked list, you have to do 12 operations (iterate "this.Next" 12 times) and return it. For an array list, you need to calculate (start+12) and access it, and that's it.
though typically you'd use an array-based implementation because literally every operation you could perform on the list is fast except add which is fast unless it is full
I use List<T> as the base of all of my collection classes and some of them are called literally millions of times in the space of a few seconds, and it's by far not the bottleneck
@JonathonChase An array list is a general term for a list implemented on top of an array. In .NET 1.0, the ArrayList class was the default implementation. In .NET 2.0, List<T> is simply a renamed, generic ArrayList.
@notatroll A List<T> uses an array internally. When it's about to expand, it creates a new chunk of memory that is twice the size of the old one, copies over all the content, and then destroys the old one. It keeps doing that each time it needs to expand. It wastes a lot of time on the copies and has much more memory in use than strictly necessary, so it's quite inefficient (relatively speaking).
@CaptainObvious It could be a bottleneck if you have a list that can grow and shrink dramatically. You can have a list of 1000 items, which grows to a million, then shrinks back - but it will still have a million allocated. Not ideal.
@notatroll No, they're different tools for different tasks. Arrays (in C#) are simply preallocated sequences of items. They're not equivalent to lists because they don't have list/collection semantics (add/remove/etc)
When I read a file from disk, I might read it as a byte[] - I don't need it as a list because I don't need to add more bytes to it, or remove any. It's an array because that's a simple way to express the fact that it's a sequence of bytes.
if what you're putting into the array is no bigger than 8 bytes, then you're literally just putting in 8 bytes * n where n is the size of the array. Anything bigger become pointers, which are 4 bytes * n
@HéctorÁlvarez That's different. Jobs can pay based on average cost of living. But not "oh, you're living with your parents, so we don't need to pay you enough tomake rent"
My employer was paying me minimum salary. At a certain point, I was the sole developer for a legacy project and working on that and three other projects
a year ago there used to be this social event called "Is it time to tell Héctor to get a new job?", my previous job took less than 4 months for me to quit.
@Developer00 just spend your time as you wish, if they pay you so little they don't deserve your full attention. Grab some experience and move to the next company that will give you more money
I moved from my home city to find that job, because I couldn't find any back here. It took me 2 years to come back, and was lucky to find this position.
I was told a few years ago I would have never been hired because I don't have a paper that says "Engineer". It wasn't until recently that this company started to realize that having a degree doesn't mean exclusivity.
@HéctorÁlvarez Everytime I brought up getting a raise with my boss, my boss used that moment to bring up past mistakes I had made and how, if anything, I might even get fired..
First time that happened, it scared the shit out of me. The second time, I saw it for what it was. There was no third time.
@Developer00 It was, but it took me about 15 days to realize what I had was much better. It's a great step forward like the first time you have to do some blood analytics and you're afraid of the needle. It's nothing more than you being afraid of the unknown.
I would like to work with a team of nice, reasonable programmers who are interested in putting out good code, working for an organization that pays competitively, treats us with respect and isn't actively making the world a worse place. Is that too much to ask?
Jup. You're exchanging your time and skills for money. That's it. It's a business transaction. Nothing more. Also, your colleagues aren't your "family". If they're cool, that's great, but don't let the corporate bullshit brainwash you into thinking your workplace is more than what it really is.
@Hypersapien You know something? There's a problem with that, which is making one self replaceable by making good code that everyone can read and maintain is against your needs. For a major company it might mean you're stuck doing something forever and be the only one that understand it until you're replaced. For a small company nobody knows what you're doing and your gibberish hieroglyphs are arcane knowledge that only the most proficient programmer in the company knows (a.k.a. you)
@Wietlol So I was playing around with the kotlin builders, and I tried to use map on a collection to create my output, but the result of that was just ignored. Do I just need to use for loops, or is there a way to dump it?
Also wanted to buy planetfall but I spent 18 hours in a single game and went to bed next day at 11am, and thought I wouldn't try it because my health was at stake