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12:01
But that's like an hour and a half away
i know :(
Just helps me get through the day by waiting
and also the queues generally die down
we are right next to Uni of liverpool so
students
students everywhere
@CaptainSquirrel Four-five, depending on your definition.
12:19
wtf
why is my message from last year suddenly pinned
!~shiba
lol you cant get out !
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan damn son
@Harry lol
@CaptainSquirrel Over 1300 people working here, so...
12:25
yeah, that makes sense
do they have diffferent food at all of them?
or is it generally the same menu type stuff
lol super Tuesday...what a joke
wtf is super tuesday
I feel like i'm the only socialist who can laugh about it
it's a day where several US states vote in the primary
people suddenly "decided" they like Joe Biden
Yeah. There's one kosher/dairy (sushi and salads, mainly). One kosher/non-dairy, one non-kosher (both of those with rotating menus. (There was Thai in one, English in the other today). Then there's the new Hummus place opened last month, and also a sandwich place.
12:28
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan @Wietlol I think this is where my confusion stems from.
Like @Squirrelkiller says asynchronous != parrallel.
@MyWrathAcademia Where? Your reply link is broken.
There's a good analogy in this answer: asynchrony is like sending an email. You've performed an operation, and you'll continue working on that operation the minute you get a reply. But until you do, you're free to do other things - but you're still only doing one thing!
In your case, the operation that your Main() performs is "Handle Task X". You do the first part, then the second. Then you send an email for confirmation. Task X is now stuck - you can't continue. So you await that asynchronous operation. Task X is now in an awaiting state. But you can go do other things - Task X "released the thread", which can be used for other tasks.
@Squirrelkiller @AvnerShahar-Kashtan sorry for the missing link. I believe this is what I was referring to
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I didn't really understand the term asynchrounous.
I know now that asynchronous simply means not synchronous. So where as in a synchrounous program the program executes a series of synchronous method calls on some thread (i.e. executes a series of method calls line by line irrespective of whether data in the method being executed is ready or not), in an asynchronous program the program executes a series of method calls line by line only when (i.e. as long as) data is ready? source
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan is the above right?
@Freerey joe biden? yes, lets pit old creepy guy against old creepy guy
it'll be the election of the century
@MyWrathAcademia ...kinda? It can be seen as true but it missing the point.
@Hans1984 i was a teenager
before my birthday in july
12:36
async void Stuff()
{
    var f = File.ReadAllBytes("myfile.txt"); // synchronous.
    var af = await File.ReadAllBytesAsync("myfile.txt"); // asynchronous
}
@Harry nononononono, you are a teenager
im 21 in a few months dickcheese
@Harry oh, okay
Imagine making a sandwich:
You are one person. Let's pretend you are a stereotype abiding man who can not do multi tasking.
You get the bread.
You put the bread in the toaster.
You now got to the fridge and get cheese. At this point, you're waiting for the bread getting toasted and rummaging through your fridge.
When the toast is toasted, the toaster throws out the toast. This is your notificaiton. Now either you're not done getting the cheese, then you continue gettign the cheese. Or you already got the cheese, then you were waiting for the toast to finish.
(see full text)
I thought he pinned a recent message
12:37
@Harry you spelt 12 wrong
What's the difference between these two calls? The first one calls the ReadAllBytes method, then waits, blocking the thread, until it returns. The second calls the ReadAllBytesAsync method, passing in some sort of signaling mechanism (nvm which, for the moment). When the method returns, it signals, and then the method continues.
it says its from june...
I didnt look on the date to be honest
lol
usually messages stared pinned here are recent
thats why I assumed
12:38
thats why i was so confused lol
Should have known better since its from the insane squirrels
anyway
while my message was removed by some mods
insane
how dare you
i am perfectly sane
I mean nuts
12:39
nuts?
where????????????
eating nuts so to speak
@MyWrathAcademia The main difference between the two scenarios is whether the calling thread block (is sync) or doesn't block (is async). But there's exactly the same number of operations going on.
Jack, nutz
Mar 12 '18 at 17:38, by Rudi Visser
Mmmmm, nutz
12:44
@Neil for a sec I thought you were implying the other old creepy guy was Bernie and I was boutta roll up my sleeve
hah, no, he's just old
at least the other two old guys know how to comb their hair
Sanders always seems like his hair has been blown by a strong wind though
usually when that happens to me, it either looks amazing or exposes my bald spots even more
At least the two of the three old guys have hair
one of them just has a shitty toupe
and a spray tan
12:49
speaking of this reminds me...thinking of making a character in the vein of Vivian James, except she's a Bernie bro
gonna shove her down 4chan's throat, much as Stan Lee did with Tony Stark and comic fans of the 70s
lol i just got a phone call from a number that hung up as soon as i tried to answer
when i tried to ring back, the number isn't recognised
wtf
spoofed call
get those all the time
I got no motivation, I need another vacation
hey that actually rhymes
lol
ok question: I got a wpf async event handler thats supposed to fetch some results and put em in a DataTable so I can put that into a DataGrid
hang on, let me gist the code
problem is, that the ui thread still gets blocked
is the part where I set the ItemsSource the problem?
13:03
hi o/ what did I miss the last few days?
hey
\o
A LOT !
too much chat history x) can't go trough it all
as for asynch await it's still my weak point
nothing happened
liar!
13:10
oh yea someone drew one of my characters last night and she looks great
lol looks like Oreo cookie
omg it does lmao
@littlemisscomputerscientist It does
13:13
Anybody able to answer a query regarding MVC with Entity Framework?
@Freerey wow that looks good. this someone knows how to draw I guess
@Hans1984 ouch
@DAustin don't ask to ask, just ask
ok lol
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan what point am I missing?
13:18
@Hans1984 yea she does; her art's over on @TheScarletOne1
@MyWrathAcademia That "data is ready" can be misleading, even if true in an abstract sense. "Data is ready" here means "when the async task has signaled completion"
anyone have that problem where Visual Studio always goes into "Not responding" mode when compiling or exiting a debug?
Sorry had a user storm into my office with abug
anyways
shit happens
Excluding the obvious committing to memory overhead by using .ToList()
Would there be a significant performance gain by removing the query from the Model (using .ToList()) into the view and using IQueryable<T> instead?
@CaptainSquirrel I have no memory of this scene
I seem t o have gained sweet f.a. converting these old DataTable methods to EF
which i find a bit strage
lol
fk it, I'll give it a try and report back
just wondered if anyone knew
13:26
I mean
if you are really worried about performance using .ToList(), that's not your issue
nah it's the page load time is a bit high
was hoping by removing the DAtaTable assignments I'd save some load time, didn't seem to do squat lol
The issue isn't with the server
it'll be the data being sent from the server to your client
so gonna bypass the entire method now and just call the ctx in the view and see what happens
13:28
I think you've probably got two options here
Already using a DTO
Pagination or lazy load it after the page has loaded
limit the amount of records being returned for each request is probably your best bet
yeah tbf I think I'm trying to load too much data
You definately are
if you are having page loading issues,that's the problemo
I've had to dela with this in the past
it's just odd that i didn't get any benefit at all lol thought DataTables were a inefficient old way of working with datasets
oh i agree, tbf it's 3.5seconds
its just odd that i didn't get any kind of improvement by switching over to EF with a DTO over an SQLCommand pushed into a DataTable
oh well, back to the drawing board lol
13:30
why is that odd?
Well the datatable loads all the columns, whereas the DTO doesn't
it's not a huge issue, was just wondering if I'd missed something
omfg i did miss something
2n+1 ffs
?
I understand n+1
but... 2n+1?
2 lists iterating the same thing one after another...
@DAustin EF isn't nesecarily fast. But it is easy which is sortas the whole idea
That said, it's still fairly fast
yeh I know it's not exactly the quickest around, certainly not for giant operations
but for simple stuff, like you say, it's so easy
13:37
@DAustin DataTables aren't inefficient in and of themselves. They're simply a container for data.
If you used to pull all the data from the DB to RAM and then queried/sorted/sliced it, and now you switched to EF but you're still doing that - you won't gain anything.
Yeah, trying the Iqueryable<T> approach now
hopefully skipping loading to RAM might help a bit
Good morning, sayeth the ghost.
I has a couple of questions for y'all.
Oh, hey Madara. I thought you suspended all activity when you resigned your modhood, didn't you?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I have indeed. I've taken a long break to cool off my frustrations over the company's conducts.
Fair enough.
13:42
Those frustrations aren't quite quenched, but I feel like I can interact with chat without it being a too-painful reminder.
what be thine questions, good sir?
With C# 8's non-nullable references, I can guarantee that no nulls are passed where I ask for things
nope
@Wietlol Sorta
you only provide compiler warnings for those that have them enabled
13:44
Hello everyone
you can still compile and run when passing nulls
@Madara'sGhost well you are quite welcome whenever you want to pass by
and those who havent enabled the settings wont even see any notification iirc
@Wietlol Fair enough, but suppose I treat compiler warnings as errors
13:45
I have a project "RealProj" in which I want to enable this feature
pls dont ask about optional parameters with default argument values
crosses fingers
Holy shit Madara's temporarily back
but what is the question?
But I also have a project "RealProjTest", in which I want to disable this feature, and have it disabled for that "RealProj" as well, when used in the context of the test.
Am I right to assume that this will work how I intuitively expect it to work?
That I would be able to pass nulls, in a test, to classes from RealProj, and not have compiler warnings, even though the RealProj configuration states that non-nullable references are enabled?
@Madara'sGhost Where are you setting this? In the csproj itself, as a PropertyGroup?
13:48
lmfao
If you were running the testproject then the whole thing will be in that domain? I would have thought that the nullableness (?) would be domain specific
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I am not sure myself. I am adapting Misko Harvey's lectures on tests and dependency injection to work with C#.
@CaptainObvious Not necessarily, it's a compiler flag.
Oh, hmm
I hadn't really looked into it that much
I want to be able to pass a null in a test, but not allow nulls to be passed in production, basically.
13:49
@Madara'sGhost What are you trying to get out of that?
Those warnings are so annoying, lambda closure capture, params heap allocation, and more...
What even happens if you pass a null to a non-nullable?
so changing that double iteration slightly (it still has to double iterate the list) just dropped the load time from 3.5s to 0.35s
Because you'll be writing your methods under the assumption that you won't be getting nulls.
what the actual f?
13:50
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Passing a null in a test is communicating to the test's human reader that those dependencies which I've passed nulls for, are irrelevant for the test.
@CaptainObvious You still have to do a null check for public methods where you can't be sure your caller send you a non-null value.
An example being a House object which accepts a Door dependency, and has a Paint() method for which the Door is irrelevant.
Oh wahts the point in that then
When I test Paint() I want to pass null for door, so that it's clear in the test that the door dependency is irrelevant for the Paint() test.
@Madara'sGhost I think a clearer approach would be to ensure that your dependencies are interfaces, not concrete classes, and pass in a A.Fake<IDoor>.
That would be pretty clear that it's not there to do anything.
13:52
Madara!
Hello o/
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Can you not make assertions on Fakes?
@Madara'sGhost I would assume that be correct
@CaptainSquirrel Hello! \o
how is life treating you?
@Madara'sGhost but you might want to make a real dummy object actually
13:53
@CaptainSquirrel Very well, actually! I'm switching jobs soon, my stress over SE has greatly diminished, too.
null is not the best version of a dummy
@Madara'sGhost So not a real fake, just make a class called Irrelevant<T> : T where T : interface (I hope that's valid syntax), so you can always pass in an Irrelevant<IDoor> that does nothing.
is a ternary statement more efficient than if... else if... else? cus that's all i changed and I'm reading a 7x average page load time reduction...
@Wietlol Exactly. My Irrelevant<T> is a dummy object.
13:54
@DAustin Not by itself. But if you've rewritten your conditions, you might have fixed a bu where things were called more than once.
@mr5 Are those bananas?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Sure, that's also a solution to this problem
mr5
mr5
Have any of you tasted this thing?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Not Irrelevant<T>.. you should name it IRelevant
mr5
mr5
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan no. It's fried dried fish
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan class MyClass<T> : T is very bad for C#'s compiler
13:55
@Madara'sGhost Good! Less stress is the best stress
it might even cause a new virus across the world
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Nah the conditions are the same, in the same order too, not gonna complain though
if there is such a thing
ironically, Wietlang can do it :D
@Wietlol It's a test, you're allowed to perform unholy abominations there
13:55
its invalid syntax tho (in C#)
or... whatever... a compiler error
@CaptainSquirrel There is! I've traded one set of stress factors to another, set of fewer stress factors, so that's great :D
Indeed indeed
A couple of months ago I wrote some code that generated dummy implementations - pass it any interface, it will dynamically emit a new class that implements it and does nothing.
basically changed this:
if (f.isChild > 0 && f.ParentCustomerId > 0)
                {
                    f.Overdue = (Now - getDueDate((int)f.ParentCustomerId)).Days;
                }
                else if (f.isChild == 0 && f.CustomerId > 0)
                {
                    f.Overdue = (Now - getDueDate((int)f.CustomerId)).Days;
                }
                else
                {
                    f.Overdue = 0;
                }
to this:
x.Overdue = x.isChild > 0 && x.ParentCustomerId > 0 ? (Now - getDueDate((int)x.ParentCustomerId)).Days : x.isChild == 0 && x.ParentCustomerId > 0 ? (Now - getDueDate((int)x.CustomerId)).Days : 0;
However, back to the original question, @AvnerShahar-Kashtan, would it be possible to selectively enabled said compiler null checks based on whether I'm coming from the test project?
13:57
@DAustin Are any of these f/x variables lazy EF properties that pull data when accessed?
nah they've been shoved into memory with toList()
@Madara'sGhost It might be possible to do it when compiling the test project, to override the values for dependencies, but I'm not sure.
as the method getDueDate() can't be translated into SQL (obv)
@Madara'sGhost Sounds like you've been to StressExchange
@Madara'sGhost as I said, I think your expectations are correct
13:59
so once the results are loaded into memory, I can then calculate and add the Overdue property
with that code above
but Visual Studio might use the flag differently
@DAustin how many results do you have?

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