« first day (3432 days earlier)      last day (1745 days later) » 

16:00
WP?
Please don't say Windows Phone.
WorkPlace
Wild Pikachu
I have to ask, what's the (amusing) obsession with squirrels?
Is it a C# inside joke?
Inside to this chat maybe. I'm not clear on it's source either.
16:12
c# in a nutshell?
tl;dr we were once only one
now we are legion
Squiggle was the original squirrel
And then i was born, along with @BlackSquirrel, @Squirrelkiller, @Squirrelintraining & @ProfessorSquirrel
@MyWrathAcademia people around here get pretty squirrelly if you ask too many questions
mr5
mr5
it took me 30 minutes to find this class HttpClientHandler
I was using the wrong class DelegatingHandler
</rant>
@CupOfJava (☞ ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)☞
I need to check the oldest creation date for the users you listed and then search for commemts about squirrels from that time period.
16:15
Fucking copypasta
@mr5 That's 0.56 letters per minute, tsk tsk
@Neil oh yeah Neil, did you look up the Nikola Tesla space elevator I mentioned?
What do you think?
@MyWrathAcademia hard to say if it would be more or less realistic than the more traditional space elevator
mr5
mr5
seriously, nothing comes up in Google when I search for "C# httpclient intercept request/C# httpclient how to implement httpmessagehandler"
try limitting your search to stackoverflow?
mr5
mr5
16:18
yep. that didn't work as well
(\____/)
( ͡ ͡° ͜ ʖ ͡ ͡°)
\╭☞ \╭☞
mr5
mr5
until I stumbled on a comment where that class was mentioned.
I found this: https://thomaslevesque.com/2016/12/08/fun-with-the-httpclient-pipeline/
with the search C# httpclient handler
(☞゚ヮ゚)☞
mr5
mr5
if only I have the access to our base class (which I build) in our office.
16:19
{\__/}
(●_●)
( >🌮 Want a taco?
mr5
mr5
I'm basically rewriting what I wrote in work now.
@Neil I don't know much about that concept but I think that an orbital ring elevator can be done without needing the amazing properties of a theoretical carbon nanitube.
@MyWrathAcademia magnets?
@BenMann what about Magnets?
elevators are cool and all but I want to be launched into space by a giant slingshot.
2
16:23
@JonathonChase you don't plan to come back?
you mean a glorified trebuchet?
@MyWrathAcademia I don't plan anything
does he look like a guy with a plan?
@MyWrathAcademia you'd only need to lug several thousand metric tonnes of material into space, that's all
Space, I love Space, and so does my wife. She told me she needs more of it
16:25
Had to look up trebuchet. Cool weapon.
Yeah, like a more primitive catapult.
mr5
mr5
@Wietlol catapult?
@Neil We built the ISS, it can't be that hard getting materials into space.
no!
get your inferior primitive tools out of this room
mr5
mr5
Trebuchet : Catapult
16:27
no!
@MyWrathAcademia hard wouldn't be the right word.. costly is probably more accurate
that's sort of the entire point to a space elevator
but also why?
would you dig a really deep hole and launch up, or launch perpendicular to the earth's axis?
I mean for megaprojects in space you'd probably want to source your materials from space and do your construction in space to save on the cost of getting heavy things off the planet. So clearly an early goal should be chains of Sp-Ace Hardware.
16:31
We've been looking for an unobtainable material to solve the space elevator and space travel forever. We should just invest in making atleast one super man level human. This person can easily "lug several thousand metric tonnes of material into space" and carry a transport container full of Elon, Bezos and any one else rich enough to pay him for a space trip to mars.
ah, if there were such a man, how much would it cost for services that he uniquely can provide?
I think the space elevator is more realistic than a superman
@MyWrathAcademia just expensive
16:33
@Neil but... if we automate the construction of said robots I mean men, then it is a slightly different situation
Plus you've also got the falcon heavy rockets that can be reused for multiple missions
but also why?
@Wietlol but how much would it cost to automate the construction of said robots men?
what would you use it for
mr5
mr5
ahh
16:34
If you built a space elevator and lowered it to the surface of the earth, would it pull the entire thing out of orbit?
mr5
mr5
finally. dotka time
probably not much more than the research to get only one
Getting people from the ground to space I imagine.
@CupOfJava what, a space elevator? It reduces the cost of sending anything to space 100-fold
@Neil but why
16:35
mining meteorites could legit be a business strategy
@mr5 dotka?
they're full of rare metals afterall
Space mining sounds like a safe gig.
@CupOfJava why mine meteorites? To make money presumably?
mr5
mr5
@Wietlol dotscha 2
16:36
@JonathonChase until your transport vehicle is damaged beyond repair and you are stuck on a meteorite to god knows where
why wouldn't you just make a base on the moon to do that
it costs money to send anything into orbit from earth, especially a moon base
and, if you were to send anything from the moon back to earth, you'd need to send extra fuel to be able to do that
it cost money to build a huge tube to space
The idea is that the tube is an investment in future cost reduction
16:37
unless you could figure out a way of exiting moon's orbit using just hydrogen from frozen water
@Neil I guess it depends on how much effort transporting stuff to space takes for him. Although if such a man existed, paying him for space travel would be the least of our worries. Power corrupts and aboslute power corrupts absolutely. We would be paying him fort our continued freedom.
@CupOfJava I thought you said there was no need for money
No need for money for you
haha. Oh
@MyWrathAcademia you don't generally pay for effort, you pay in accordance of demand :P
which is why high-effort low-demand businesses don't really exist
16:38
@JonathonChase maintenance would cost so much
@CupOfJava if the cost of maintenance does not exceed the savings it generates then it's profitable.
it's a tube to space
Yes, eventually we will want lots of things in space.
made from metal
it's difficult to say with any certainty how much money ultimately a space elevator would save, but assuming our future involves expanding to new planets, it is most definitely worth it
16:40
@CaptainSquirrel If I remember correctly as long as the other end of the space elevator reaches geostationary orbit the acceleration in the opposite direction to Earth's gravity should stop it from crashing down.
if we just wanted to say we founded a base on the moon, it would still probably be worth it, considering the enormity of money that would require
@Neil Are meteorites all the debris that surrounds earth?
@MyWrathAcademia It would have to exceed geostationary orbit by a bit
@MyWrathAcademia well no, I mean the meteorite belt
but I assume you could create drones to do this fairly easily
@MyWrathAcademia in the opposite direction or moving fast enough in relative speed to the earths rotation?
@MyWrathAcademia technically it would be meteors asteroids, not meteorites
16:43
meteorites are meteors that have already hit Earth
asteroid: just floating around space
meteor: on a collision course
meteorite: already collided
ah wait
asteroids are typically orbiting something; meteoroids are the ones floating around
but it's called the asteroid belt
not the meteoroid belt
ugh, I always get those confused, like stalactite and stalagmite
We are already building robots that can collect defunct satelites and other debris orbiting the earth. So unfortunately I don't think that can be used to garner support for a space elevator.
@Neil tits sag, that's how I always remember stalactites are the ones hanging
You are welcome
stalagmite has a g for ground
@CaptainSquirrel I'm not certain about the technical details. I haven't researched space elevators in a long time.
16:48
@HéctorÁlvarez I got it stuck in my head that stalagmite is on the ceiling because it "mite" fall
but I realized that was wrong but now I'm helpless to remember properly
Change the rule into it "mite" stab you in the foot
I'll try to remember the tit sag thing :)
@MyWrathAcademia There was an idea for launching things into space using a magnetic rail pointing towards the sky
So like a magnetic slingshot? I like this idea.
I think it would be impossible to make such an idea work putting a human inside
the forces alone would be insane
but it could be useful for anything else
@Neil What sort of thiings were they looking to launch into space?
16:53
@MyWrathAcademia supplies, satellites
anything really, provided it is light enough
@Neil How can they ensure those supplies, satelites arrive safely? I'm guessing they will be inside a shell?
That opens when it reaches it's destination.
@MyWrathAcademia metallic shell, yeah. it can have a parachute so you wouldn't necessarily lose it each time
Cool.
@Neil How difficult do you think it would be to maintain a space elevator?
maintain how? make repairs?
For something like that, if there is even a microscopic crack the whole thing could fall from space.
Not just repairs. Preventative maintenace
17:02
well you'd build it, and then you'd improve on it afterwards in such a way that a microscopic crack wouldn't send the whole thing into space
Making sure it stays in great condition.
once you have that initial thread, everything else becomes relatively easy
including strengthening it
There are even millions of space debris flying about at bullet speed. I dont know what the probabilities are but one of them could hit the space elevator considering it's such a big target.
probably extremely low
though admittedly it would be disastrous should it ever hit
Yeah it would not be a pretty sight.
I just looked again and Obayashi corporation are still saying that they will have the space elevator ready by 2050.
17:07
thought it was 2025 :)
haha, I don't know where I got that from, I was too anxious. Japan still has the 2020 olympics to take care of so I should have known one of their construction companies would need more time.
2050 is definitely more realistic
still, I'd like to know where they plan on getting the money for that
Space taxes
it would have to be an investment by a lot of countries. It's bigger than any single country
@Neil I actually think that cost and an unobtainable material are not the only barriers we have when it comes to building a space elevator.
C4d
C4d
17:09
Hey guys. If I append \.. to a path (dependend on the os), I go one directory up. What can I append to stay in the same directory? It can sound stupid, but I'm serious about it. Is there anything that refers to the current directory? Like `dir1\dir2\.` ?
@Neil I think one major factor is that we are scared.
@C4d . refers to the current directory
We've never even built anything a quarter as big.
C4d
C4d
@JonathonChase but at least on windows `path\.` is invalid
Hmm missprinted. path\.\
@C4d cd C:\.\.\.\. works fine for me in powershell
17:12
@Neil The Japanese government is helping to fund them but Obayashi is one of Japans biggest construction companies, I'm sure they can raise the funds.
works fine in command prompt as well
C4d
C4d
I tried in the explorers address bar.
Is explorer's address bar your use-case, or are you accessing the path programmatically?
C4d
C4d
Programmatically. I thought it would behave the same. Didnt expect to get different results with cmd.
I see. Cmd and Powershell are really working. Thats helpful.
.. works fine in explorer, not sure why . doesn't.
17:14
@Neil I wouldn't bet on them reaching the 2050 target. Japan has a passion for precision. They won't cut the red tape unless it is absolutely ready. It took them quite a long time to complete the Akashi Kaikyo bridge and I'm sure it was late.
C4d
C4d
@JonathonChase Yeah dir1\.\subdir1 works. Thank you very much :)
@JonathonChase I'm pretty confident on Unix command line but powershell looks alien to me.
C4d
C4d
:D
too verbose :)
@MyWrathAcademia nix command line isn't too tricky, just another tool to learn
The slashes might go a different direction than you're used to, but powershell supports that as well
I've been getting to like powershell for command line scripting though.
17:19
Tfw only gigabit networking
Oh, I read that backwards @MyWrathAcademia, or you flipped it.
>only
that's super fast what you talkinga bout
I use github.com/mikemaccana/powershell-profile to give my powershell some nix flavor.
It's on our local network
We don't even have a 10G core
@JonathonChase nope, didn't flip it but I understood what you meant.
17:21
one nice thing about powershell is you have the .net framework bcl available
what's bcl and why's that an advantage?
C4d
C4d
I hate that blue background-color with powershell :(.
Mine looks like a normal terminal
@MyWrathAcademia "a,b,c,d".Split(",") | % { write-host $_ }
@JonathonChase Does that mean that you can use C# in powershell?
$rand = new-object System.Random; $rand.Next(0,100)
Kinda sorta. You can use .NET types in powershell
17:24
guys don't get those stupid overstuffed oreos; they're not good
Can you load random .net dlls?
2 hours ago, by Freerey
besides being a moron
who starred this?? xD
@CaptainObvious Sure, you have access to reflection so you can load an assembly.
There's some horrific code in one of my .net projects and I'm wondering if PS will do it
uhoh
Then just use that assemblies types as they're now loaded
17:26
Oh bollocks it'll have to wait
My start menu has shat the bed
I can do this. I defeated the giant space baby. I don't need a jetpack. I am Gordon Freeman! One....two...………what comes after two?
oh yes
wonder if Alyx will get an expansion that lets you play as Gordon, a la Opposing Force....but that wouldn't make much sense, since he was still in stasis
I wonder if Adrian Shephard will ever be used again.
okay so real question
using an object as a datasource should work, right??
17:32
A datasource for what?
aka,
gvGrid.DataSource = object;
I'm gonna need a face mask soon. Any ideas for something edgy :O
I don't understand....it seems to work like..halfway?
It needs to be an IEnumerable, IListSource, or IDataSource
17:33
so I was aware of those, but I'm not sure I've ever seen them used
if the object implements any of those interfaces then yes, it can be used as a data source.
lemme see if I can find a way to convert an object's data into an ienumerable
Well, is it a singular object, or a list of objects?
it is a list of objects; what I'm doing is I have a Waiver object that can contain multiple Pattern objects
a list is generally already an IEnumerable
so you should be fine to bind
17:35
gah idk
what makes this confusing is I had to make these objects arraysw hen instantiating in the Waiver object, like so:
public Pattern[] pattern = new Pattern[patCount]; // where patCount is determined by a datatable loaded with a sql query result
Mmm, public mutable fields.
there is then a method to load the data into the Pattern object with a for loop
but I also just realized one way I can make this work a bit better
(nothing too relevant tow hat we're talking about, though)
posted on March 09, 2020 by Phil Haack

Facebook, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon just told its Seattle area employees to work from home for the next three weeks to reduce the risk of spreading the coronavirus. Lucky for them, I just wrote two posts that will help.

17:51
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I don't understand why the following code gives the accompanying output because if an exception is thrown in GetAsync or by the statement ct.ThrowIfCancelRequested() then I don't expect the method call DisplayResults(url, urlContents, ++position); and any other statements that come after an exception is thrown to be executed since when an exception is thrown in an async method a Task is returned immediately and the exception is stored in the returned Task.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Or are the results displayed up until cancellation is requested and the operation is cancelled. Is this what the output is showing and I'm just misreading it?
// *** Provide a parameter for the CancellationToken from StartButton_Click.
async Task AccessTheWebAsync(CancellationToken ct)
{
    // Declare an HttpClient object.
    HttpClient client = new HttpClient();

    // Make a list of web addresses.
    List<string> urlList = SetUpURLList();

    var total = 0;
    var position = 0;

    foreach (var url in urlList)
    {
        // *** Use the HttpClient.GetAsync method because it accepts a
        // cancellation token.
        HttpResponseMessage response = await client.GetAsync(url, ct);
Output:
1. msdn.microsoft.com/library/hh191443.aspx                83732
2. msdn.microsoft.com/library/aa578028.aspx               205273
3. msdn.microsoft.com/library/jj155761.aspx                29019
4. msdn.microsoft.com/library/hh290140.aspx               122505
5. msdn.microsoft.com/library/hh524395.aspx                68959
6. msdn.microsoft.com/library/ms404677.aspx               197325
Download canceled.

1. msdn.microsoft.com/library/hh191443.aspx                83732
2. msdn.microsoft.com/library/aa578028.aspx               205273
Looks like it's printing until the cancellation is called. I'm guessing whatever is calling your function is handling the exception thrown.
@JonathonChase thank you. Here is the code in which AccessTheWebAsyncis called:
private async void StartButton_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    // This line is commented out to make the results clearer in the output.
    //ResultsTextBox.Clear();

    // *** If a download process is already underway, cancel it.
    if (cts != null)
    {
        cts.Cancel();
    }

    // *** Now set cts to cancel the current process if the button is chosen again.
    CancellationTokenSource newCTS = new CancellationTokenSource();
    cts = newCTS;

    try
    {
        // ***Send cts.Token to carry the message if there is a cancellation request.
@JonathonChase So am I right in thinking that "when an exception is thrown in an async method a Task is returned immediately and the exception is stored in the returned Task"?
Tim Post on March 09, 2020
Each year, Stack Exchange donates $100 on behalf of each of our volunteer moderators. This is a long-held tradition that began in 2009, and we’re excited to continue it today. We’re pleased to announce that the donations have been made and the funds are at work helping these really awesome causes.
@JonathonChase Therefore any code that follows the line of code (i.e. statement) where the exception was thrown in the async method is not reached?
18:06
did @Feeds take cocaine this morning?
Cocainum? :0
Well, a task is always returned immediately.
Cocain has more aliases than a verbose unix command.
@JonathonChase Can you elaborate please?
An async method always returns a task immediately. you can await that task, which will block execution until the task is completed or cancelled or throws.
@JonathonChase Do you mean that a Task is always returned immediately when an exception is thrown in an sync method?
@JonathonChase unfortunately I have to go. Let's continue our chat tomorrow :)
18:52
it just occurred to me that it's been 3 years and the Switch STILL doesn't have a web browser
 
2 hours later…
20:36
 
3 hours later…
V.7
V.7
23:54
12
A: How to set the timeout for a TcpClient?

mcandalAnother alternative using https://stackoverflow.com/a/25684549/3975786: var timeOut = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(5); var cancellationCompletionSource = new TaskCompletionSource<bool>(); try { using (var cts = new CancellationTokenSource(timeOut)) { using (var client = new TcpClien...

How to check if connected and transfer data using such implementation? ... can't get right now ...

« first day (3432 days earlier)      last day (1745 days later) »