« first day (3322 days earlier)      last day (1853 days later) » 

09:00
  Tomorrow Night "Tomorrow Night" <<<EOT
  /*! Tomorrow Night *\/.prettyprint{background:#1d1f21!important;font-family:Menlo,'Bitstream Vera Sans Mono','DejaVu Sans Mono',Monaco,Consolas,monospace!important;padding:10px!important}.pln{color:#c5c8c6!important}@media screen{.str{color:#b5bd68!important}.kwd{color:#b294bb!important}.com{color:#969896!important}.typ{color:#81a2be!important}.lit{color:#de935f!important}.pun{color:#c5c8c6!important}.opn{color:#c5c8c6!important}.clo{color:#c5c8c6!important}.tag{color:#c66!important}.atn{color:#de935f!important}.atv{color:#8abeb7!important}.dec{col
What the foreign key is this.
What kind of CSS aberration am I looking at
@Proxy In OAuth2 I think identity is just a claim that describes your username, isn't it? Facebook has taken your password and verified that you own that username, then signed that claim and returned it. The RP can verify that claim
mr5
mr5
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan how do you think it will affect your career with changing of language used? But it seems you're quite established in your portfolio so it doesn't put downside in you. But what if you're experienced level is around ~5years only?
@HéctorÁlvarez maybe the line endings are \n and you're opening in notepad or something
(windows prefers \r\n)
> Works Alongside Your Existing Account System
Facebook Login complements your existing account system. Give people the option to log in with Facebook alongside email, SMS, or other social login choices. Where an email address you get from Facebook Login matches one already in your system, you can log that person into their existing account without additional passwords.
This is a Styler template
for Dark SO
The problem is that new messages have crap style
09:04
it looks like awful condensed CSS
Right, I managed to find out the code it's using for new messages, which alasts for about... 800ms
so you have to click faster than Billie the Kid
is being used from one of those... uuuh... structures
go guess which one
cos there are about 30 of those templates with multiple instances of the same color
@mr5 Experience is experience. The fact that I haven't written much C++ in the last 20 years doesn't mean it goes away just because I'm using a different language. Languages are just tools.
No one cared that I don't have C++ experience. That's the easiest part of the job to pick up.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I used to program in C++ as well, but I think if I jumped into C++17, I'd have to relearn quite a few things
yeah but you still need to authenticate your app with facebook. Since this will be a new one it will show it to the users as a new one. But that can not be helped.
09:08
Right but that's still the easy part for an experienced developer
@Proxy ok so I'm not sure what the question is
If you control both the source and the target databases, can't you just lift and shift them?
li.L0,li.L1,li.L2,li.L3,li.L4,li.L5,li.L6,li.L7,li.L8,li.L9{padding-left:1em!important;background-color:#20201d!important;list-style-type:decimal!important}
This kind of BS is what grinds my gears
That can only mean it's generated
yes, might be that
mr5
mr5
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I mean, in terms employability, some employers I heard don't want fullstack or prefer to hire specialized people
hopefully it's just the aftermath of compiling SASS
09:13
sass shouldn't rename class names though
@mr5 As you said, I've got a big enough portfolio so that branching out to a different area (in this case, lower-level cloud infrastructure in C++) isn't hurting me in any way. Also, having this company on my resume really, really can't hurt that either.
mr5
mr5
how about for ~5 years? Do you think switching language at this level would hurt my career?
@Neil nah but li{ a[1-8] { ... }} will turn into li.a1,li.a2,...li.a8{ ... }
Switching, as such? Not really, no. It changes the career, but a change could be good or bad, depending on what you change. If you spend a couple of years writing COBOL, it can certainly push you career in a specific direction.
i can @TomW
from fb prespective that will be a new app which is okay, you can not avoid that.
Thanks for help
09:20
I'm not sure I really helped but yw
I have the most useless architect running this project lmao
he can't even read JSON, yet he tries to convince us he "knows everything down to the finest grain"
sound board is always nice to have
Json is easy to read
Chuck Norris read all the JSON
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan dealing with a headscratcher for cloud infrastructure atm. I'm a project lead and it's new to me, and I'm trying to set up the backlog
Defining requirements as work items for backend stuff is quite hard
09:22
To the point that it was decided as the recommended format for if people request their data through GDPR
If it can't be actually formatted in a readable way
took him 3 days of ranting about "the web service is too generic, we have no way to know what it does" until I eventually got tired and asked for it. Takes 10 minutes to see all it does is convert a SOAP request into a SQL sentence and runs it in the local DB
1000 lines, 700 of them are comments in German.
That sounds generic to me
the other 300 are a chain of ifs and try-catch without any exception handling.
How can you not pinpoint what the insert sentence does when sent to the SOAP server in 3 fucking days
Sounds like some dodgy arbitrary sql execution
Seriously, 20 minutes in I already know where exactly is the user group. Spoiler alert, it's not a VARCHAR tuple
09:25
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan we have an emerging design that uses a lot of shared components, and to get an interface fully working takes a lot of them. I don't want 80% of the work items to be under the first feature/epic just because we need to do everything before we can finish anything
It's condensed along with another 49 user details into a CLOB.
And the thing about integration is that until it's fully finished it doesn't work at all.
Useless to a user.
@HéctorÁlvarez yeah but why would you do that?
@Neil there may be a reason, but I completely ignore it. Ask the guy who created the dark SO template. This wouldn't happen if SO had a dark theme, which I guess 90% of the users around here are currently using
Never understood why while backgrounds are staple
it destroys eye sight, even if risk prevention manuals state otherwise.
still no captain squirrel
panics
mr5
mr5
09:30
delegate void ActionType<T>(object sender, SourceEventArgs<T> e);
var actionValue = GetPropValue(valueInterface, nameof(SourceEventWithMode<T>.Action));
if (actionValue is Delegate action)
{
	action.DynamicInvoke(this, eventArgs);
}
is this how you properly invoke a delegate property in reflection?
He's a lazy bastard, he'll probably rock up shortly
@mr5 There's just a minor mistake I can fix for you
please delegate void ActionType<T>(object sender, SourceEventArgs<T> e);
var actionValue = GetPropValue(valueInterface, nameof(SourceEventWithMode<T>.Action));
if (actionValue is Delegate action)
{
	action.DynamicInvoke(this, eventArgs);
}
never forget to say please, and thank you on callback
:o)
ew, dynamic
What's wrong with dynamic
everything
09:33
[citation needed]
mr5
mr5
@HéctorÁlvarez I wouldn't thank it still since it's not working yet :/
Nov 11 at 16:15, by Héctor Álvarez
Fun fact: Did you know that elephants are born at 100Kg? That makes them the 2nd biggest babies in the world, only after Wietlol arguing other languages. :)
@mr5 Maybe it's not working because you didn't thank him properly
OH GOOD
That's an everything is screwed message isn't it
I'd never use Azure over AWS
09:36
It's not like AWS doesn't have outages
That's from a few hours ago, though. Things seem to be up for me.
Yes, just over an hour later they posted this
which squirrel made Jack again?
I used AWS very little, and Azure quite a bit in the last couple of years. I think AWS still wins out in features and perf, but Azure is certainly catching up, and certainly leads in terms of usability/management/APIs.
Azure Support Thanks for your patience while our teams worked to resolve the issue surrounding service availability. Engineers have confirmed that this issue is now mitigated. More information will be provided within the Azure Portal and the Status History here. status.azure.com/status/history - @AzureSupport, 2019-11-20 04:31
09:38
Oh when I linked it, Twitter was showing 24m ago
@TomW AWS has a lot of outages... but they only last for milliseconds since they automated recovery :D
oh wait, that was the factorio team
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan how about SDKs?
Wait no it was like 3 hours later
@TomW Seemed to have been an outage for 2:40h with Azure Front Door, which is... a bad component to have crash on you.
The summary from the status page though:
Summary of Impact: Between 00:57 and 03:40 UTC on 20 Nov 2019, customers and services utilizing Azure Front Door (AFD) services were impacted by an infrastructure service failure. This resulted in a loss of connectivity to multiple services reliant on AFD.

Azure Front Door services provide Edge caching and network entry point services to the Microsoft global network. This issue impacted a large percentage of Microsoft Services, though not all services were impacted. Many impacted services were able to initiate fail over from the AFD platform, providing immediate mitigation to their customers.
Front Door?
09:40
See the second paragraph
That's a pretty broad statement. "We pushed an update. It had bugs. We rolled it back".
Some sort of network infrastructure
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan what's your take on Netanyahu?
@Squirrelintraining Not touching that with a stick. :)
wtf?
googles azure front door
09:41
It's an API Gateway and management entry point for your app.
It's fine though, the superior region of Europe was asleep so nobody even noticed
im like "*****, give me my english docs"
switches to en-gb
"***** please"
mr5
mr5
09:42
bit*h lasagna it's working now!!!!
THANK YOU
Have you tried selecting the langauge in the drop-down in the footer?
bit*h lasagna, that's a new one
mr5
mr5
why are you guys not reading the manual in your native languages?
09:42
en-en isn't a language
en-us or en-gb is the way to go
mr5
mr5
@Neil nope. I got it from 9gag
@Squirrelintraining What is that, sounds like some kind of tribal god.
And if all you get is the code, 1033 is en-us
mr5
mr5
iirc, it's from a Twitch streamer
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I am still clueless, what does Azure Front Door actually do?
09:43
@Wietlol this got redirected me to en-us
@mr5 ah, somehow not surprised to hear that
its like api gateway in aws
I summon thee Netanyahu, lord of terror and demise, to claim the souls we havested for you this winter.
@mr5 because I read docs in english, or I dont read docs
in fact, I also dont read english docs, but at least I pretend to be
@Wietlol We know, if you did you'd probably stop making your own everything.
mr5
mr5
09:44
imagine reading software manual in your native language. every jargons will have to be forced to translated.
nothing but pain
@Wietlol It's a service that manages incoming traffic to your cloud servers and apps. You can use as a reverse proxy, for instance - your users don't access the server directly, they access the FrontDoor endpoint, which forwards the request to the internal unexposed services and returns the results.
It looks like a bundling of already-existing things
i see
Application Gateway fits that description
Hello, sorry for the offtopic...
I'm reading about GZip files, I was assuming it was something like a Zip file, but it seems that GZip is intended to compress single files, is this correct? because it seems stupid
09:46
It can make security easier (for instance, you only need SSL between users and the FrontDoor service, and your internal service can use plain HTTP. You can do basic access control, login management and so on there, instead of having each service handle it.
gzip is, iirc, a compression concept
mr5
mr5
@miguelmpn file may refer to folder?
for example, if you have this big, partially sort of recurring, file, gzipping it could reduce the size by a lot
gzip is just a GNU (read: free) compression software which used the DEFLATE algo
> gzip is a single-file/stream lossless data compression utility, where the resulting compressed file generally has the suffix .gz
09:47
Basically like zip
I have several filenames
you tend to gzip files like say, old logs
@miguelmpn Gzip was built to compress a stream. It doesn't really care about files. Usually, the stream you're compressing is a file (so you'd take file.dat and comrpess it to file.dat.gz)`, but gzip doesn't care.
then you'd use zless or zgrep on gzip files
Because of that, the gzip protocol/specs don't deal with internal file management. If you want to compress multiple files and retain their original names, sizes, etc, you would use a dedicated tool to join them (say, tar) then gzip the tar file to a .tar.gz file (or .tgz).
09:48
Deflate is pretty ancient now
so it's possible to grab a bunch of files by filename a add it into a single GZip?
From wiki: gzip is not to be confused with the ZIP archive format, which also uses DEFLATE. The ZIP format can hold collections of files without an external archiver, but is less compact than compressed tarballs holding the same data, because it compresses files individually and cannot take advantage of redundancy between files (solid compression).
tgz, I've seen that before
I'll search
I remember when there was .arc file format
that was a long time ago though
@miguelmpn On linux, you'd use tar with the -z parameter sto automatically tar the files together + gzip them.
@Neil Back in the BBS days I would collect every archiving software I could find and compare them religiously.
09:50
yeah, you typically tar and zip files
we had to tar and zip all our source before submission at my university
I remember when ARJ came along and was considerably better than ZIP - it allowed me to copy some games onto a single 1.2MB floppy!
Then RAR came and blew them all out of the water.
yeah, ARJ
it wasn't arc
There was also ARC :)
winrar felt like the single most pirated/unlicensed software ever
I'm too young for these memories
09:51
ARJ had built-in support for splitting archives across multiple floppies, which made it much better than PKZIP.
I didn't know anyone who actually owned a license to winrar
yeah, that was the big advantage of arj
your winrar has expired
oh rly
ARC is a lossless data compression and archival format by System Enhancement Associates (SEA). The file format and the program were both called ARC. The format is perhaps best known as the subject of controversy in the 1980s, part of important debates over what would later be known as open formats. ARC was extremely popular during the early days of the dial-up BBS. ARC was convenient as it combined the functions of the SQ program to compress files and the LU program to create .LBR archives of multiple files. The format was later replaced by the ZIP format, which offered better compression ratios...
yeah for like 10 years
Who doesn't use 7Zip at this point? It's better, faster, has wider support, and it's free
09:53
@HéctorÁlvarez Yup. It does anything WinRAR does, but better.
Oddly, it seems to be very popular amongst programmers, but I don't know many non-programmers who use 7zip
The only thing it's missing is CTRL+C the files and CTRL+V somewhere else like Winrar does
could also be because most non-programmers I know don't really use computers that much or don't care to learn
@Neil Most non-programmers I know don't use any archiver at all, and if confronted with a ZIP file simply see it as a folder opened by Explorer
And that's fine.
I dont use an archiver either that much
I have one because I get zips a lot from certain places
09:55
@Neil I can't be bothered to click the "No I don't want to buy yet" button every time I want to unzip a file, which should be natively supported by the OS at this point, but oh no, let's make it only standard zip files, who needs tarballs, or 7z files, or the proprietary ones?
but I rarely make a zip
that's fine until your father-in-law calls you one day and asks why it doesn't act like a folder
@HéctorÁlvarez honestly, it would be easy for Windows to simply integrate support also for 7z files, tar files, etc.
ahá but I have the perfect solution for that. I don't have a girlfriend, will probably never do at this rate. No GF, no waifu. No waifu, no whatever-in-law because I'm a single child
But I think they don't want to acknowledge that they exist frankly because it isn't their format
yet dotnet core is supporting grpc
09:57
shrugs and installs 7zip
And this is why 7zip is a thing
also, who made Jack again?
he is still bork
shrugs an uses winrar
Capn Squirrel
where is he ?
09:58
Jack works fine
@Wietlol Still does more stuff than Wietbot at this point...
Apart from his questionable interaction keywork
cpt went overboard and wasnt seen anymore
jack, lenny @Wietlol
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
09:59
Holy shit that was typed worse than me
@HéctorÁlvarez that is because Wietbot is offline atm
@CaptainObvious look at sandbox
Jack, lenny @Wietlol
....Come Again?
@Wietlol There's a big difference, culturally, between the Windows teams and the ASP.NET teams.
10:00
how come?
Looks like forget isn't implemented
But also, adding TAR support to Windows is... pretty pointless. It's needed by 0.01% of users, and specifically, by a subset of users who know how to install an archive manager.
There was a fairly scathing article I read recently that basically insinuated that the Windows team is where all the assholes end up
I don't know if "assholes" would be the right term (I've talked with a couple of nice people there), but definitely its where a lot of "old Microsoft" mentality still remains.
mr5
mr5
internal class EventComparator : IEqualityComparer<ISourceEventArgs<object>>
{
    public bool Equals(ISourceEventArgs<object> x, ISourceEventArgs<object> y)
    {
        return x.GetHashCode() == y.GetHashCode();
    }
    ...
}
10:01
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan that hasn't stopped Microsoft before now
mr5
mr5
Do you guys think this is a good idea?
There are services for things I don't think I've ever used
mr5
mr5
Comparing two objects by their hashcode?
@Neil Yeah, but apparently enough people asked for them to justify the investment. Or, perhaps, enough people asked for it at the right time. Adding TAR support in 1998 might have gotten through. IN 2019?
10:03
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan meh, they have their reasons for sure. I just don't think they're very consistent with their reasons
@TomW Whereas in the Azure-focused teams, there is a lot pragmatic, "use what works", cooperate with open source mentality.
@mr5 looks bad
what is ISourceEventArgs?
@mr5 Not really, no. Hashcodes aren't identity.
in most common cases, you combine the results of comparison on the members
Absolutely. The third party stuff that becomes a supported service on Azure is great to see
10:04
so, return x.Obj.Equals(y.Obj)
When Azure started out, I think most people never expected it to support Linux VMs as first-class options. But now? It's unthinkable to not have it.
mr5
mr5
meh, it just doesn't work 😠
Harry is keeping cpt squirrel tied up in his basement
he was insulting him one too many times
mistery solved
@mr5 If ISourceEventArgs is a class you control, write a proper equality comparer that compares the proper fields (or use some other method for structural equality). Don't take the GetHashCode shortcut.
how do i get dragged into conversations when im just minding my own business
10:08
just for fun
dont mind it
but srly where is he
@Harry Ever heard of Godwin's law?
anyway
life goes on
same applies to you apparently
shrugs
mr5
mr5
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan ok will do. let's see if this HashCode<T> really works
10:10
i told you before that the picture of a roach is triggering me
are you calling me hitler?
I cant help it
its not a real roach
oh...
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan xD
10:13
it is literally from fallout
That's what they all say
also waht wa second ping i had?
mr5
mr5
Harry is a mosquito ffs
ah this was it.
Look up nethanyu
Is some guy from isreal who has got a marble or two loose.
mr5
mr5
10:15
Whenver I hear Nethanyahu, it reminds me of the singer of Sunshine, On Nature, One Day
I thought harry was just a rat
oh...
Harry aint no rodent boi
rodents gonna rodent
roaches gonna roach
see?
hans gonna be 1984 years old
10:16
theres a big difference
that would be terrible
imagine all the bullshit i would have to witness
I would be in this chat for atleast another 1500 years
ugh
you overestimate mankind's capacity to not self-destruct, sir
I think he also overestimates his age
I could be wrong, but I don't think he's over 400 years old
I need help
Don't we all
mr5
mr5
Me too m8
10:19
regarding this error
It is an error to use a section registered as allowDefinition='MachineToApplication' beyond application level. This error can be caused by a virtual directory not being configured as an application in IIS
@TomW Interesting article. And it does seem to resonate, from my (limited) experience inside. It makes sense that the Azure org is the most removed from the cultural sicknesses because it was under Nadella for so long.
@CaptainObvious agree . I have been trying for few days to solve one issue in my web service but I can't solve it .... :((
Have you considered configuring your virtual directory as an application
@ZMAX You had one issue!
well roaches will outlive us
10:21
@mr5 ye, equals should be member equality
Anyone familiar with DevOps pipelines? I have a scenario where I would like to set up some AAD roles in an automated fashion, but the problem with automating that is that role assignment allows that principal to let anybody do anything
So I'd like to be able to optionally run a pipeline stage as the login of the human, admin user that triggered it
so it's like them doing it, but they don't have to think
Normally a service connection principal won't be able to do AAD stuff, because the developers have access to configure what that connection does, and so developers could script the creation of any roles they wanted and that's non-environment-dependent so would include prod
I have some basic experience but I wouldn't know how to do that
I can build by projects and push them through to Octopus and that's about it
Hi lads, I have a question. I got an async method, that sends out a request. this method is called a bunch of times, but i only ever want to run 1 at a time. Now i cannot use await and a lock so i am puzzled how i can achieve this...
https://gist.github.com/sommmen/0b5b9461c59e2da034eb042a3ca324a9
@sommmen You want to run them all, but one at a time?
Not run it async?
10:34
^
or did you simply not want to call it if it is already running?
dont call the method a bunch of times?
@sommmen You can use some async-aware locking mechanism (like SemaphoreSlim) to hold a lock and release it when the single-instance method completes.
It's not too hard, but can take a couple of tries to get right.
I've written some similar things. Wait, I think I've posted them at some point somewhere.
blocking queues would be the proper term
What you can do is keep a Task instance for the ongoing request. When another call comes in, you check if the existing Task's status is Running, and if so, return an error/do nothing/etc.
oh no, that isn't a blocking queue
10:41
There are several different possible behaviors when a new request comes in before the previous one completed:
1. Discard the new request.
2. Queue the new request after the current one.
3. Cancel the current request and start a new one.
Each has its uses, each has its caveats.
I had to do somethign similar for the warehouse picking
If they did multiple scans quickly, and they were sent to the server together things broke, but queueing up the scans and sending one after the last one finished worked a treat
@Neil several jobs get posted which are all at some point calling this function. I wanna make sure the client just always handles 1 request, and not more at some point in time
@sommmen so how do you want to handle a second request while the first is being processed?
then you need a queue
does it get ignored, does it get run afterwards, or is it an error?
10:49
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan i read as much online. Trying to use tasks to reduce code lol
reducing code is not always good
@Neil well basically like i would if i could use a lock, just wait
if your requirement requires code, it requires code
that is probably fine if you don't expect there to be a flood of requests
you could simply make second+ requests wait
if you think you may receive a flood of requests, you should probably queue them instead
@Neil seems a lot of overhead for what i want tho but maybe i am approaching this the wrong way
like if i used a traditional approach with a background thread, i'd just be a lock around each method of my httpclient class and that'd be the end of it
10:54
if you block the http request, then whoever is making that request is sitting there with a loading animation waiting for the server to respond
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan yeah like making sure there is just always one request task running
Again, this can be find if you expect it to not be the norm
Otherwise, you shouldn't block the request, just save the request into a queue to be processed one at a time
Oh, here it is:
4
Q: Task Wrappers for starting operation only if previous task has finished

Avner Shahar-KashtanI've written these two wrappers around Tasks, to help with common scenarios in our code where methods are called repeatedly, even if the previous operation hasn't completed yet. There are two common scenarios: An operation is triggered several times by the user (e.g. clicking a checkbox filters...

Another option is to use Rx.
Every request adds another request to the observable sequence. And you use observable operators like Throttle and such to synchronize them.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan if i wanted to go fancy i'd make a dataflow pipeline or something but i feat my colleagues will not understand the code and ill be stuck with engineering on this forever :<
if they don't understand, teach them
just don't write overly fancy code. it should still be done as simply as possible
11:00
Very awkward
> Do you feel that these methods clearly express their purpose and usage?
Yet it has been upvoted and not "Closed due to primarily opinion-based"
welp thanks for all your suggestions i'll try and make something work
Definitely far from my experience, not only as a former questioner but also as an also former reviewer
ahoy mates o/
giggles
@HéctorÁlvarez you're like 100% former
we have lost one of our squirrels
lets mourn him
11:05
f
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan "Asked 2 years, 5 months ago", yet no answer :<
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan isnt there an async/await based queue thingy?
in basic terms, you could queue up processes
basically queueing up callbacks
but, callbacks could easily be converted to async/await, no?
11:23
@CaptainObvious if you know any C# eval library, that can take in a string at runtime and evaluate it, call me
obviously, the code must be C#
and must support C#7 or C#8
and must support stuff like this
String Foo(String foo) {
    return foo.ToUpperCase();
}

Foo("Hello, World!")
declaring functions/classes and a code block in one
cscs like I said yesterday
Hmm they updated the time tracking backoffice and my graphs are now called [object Object]. giggles
@CaptainObvious but that is scripting in C#, but not C# scripting in C#
> The syntax is a mixture between C#, JavaScript, and Python.
I think you can use roslyn to do it actually
11:39
hmm... could be
the examples dont really show making new classes/functions in the script, but at least it is evaluating expressions in C#
guys when you actually start a long C# discussion this gets boring AF
even the squirrels left
Yeah but I think you can go, "Oi roslyn, compile this!" and then execute it
:(
11:53
@Squirrelintraining Yeah, I wasn't really pleased with the two answers I got. One simply misunderstood the goal of the classes, and the other one... meh.

« first day (3322 days earlier)      last day (1853 days later) »