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16:00
var t = Regex.Replace("ApiPageModel", "([A-Z])", " $1").Split(new char[] { ' ' });
Works great, thanks :D
Talking about me? I never thought myself that remarkable.
@RoelvanUden Out of curiosity, try it with $0.
Doesn't pan out, apparently you can't use a value in a replace without grouping.
why the hell did i even get banned for something that wasn't even remotely offensive
Now that was offensive.
16:01
Can't blame me.
yeah, i dont give a fuck
haha @Steve
remember, no one likes you? ;)
@steve its not just us - someone flagged your comment, then every 10k+ user in the chat got notified
so blame the system
no, i blame all those 10k+ users
yeah, that does seem rather odd to do.
16:03
good... I'm one of them.
Wait, if someone is flagged once every 10k+ user in chat has the opportunity to ban that person?
@steve please don't flag every possible thing again
They get notified.
@Billdr we vote whether its a valid flag or not
16:04
And they can choose to flag, counterflag, or ignore.
Regardless of the room's unique culture?
if enough valid flags get acculumated, 30 min bad
there is no context given
just the flagged message
i'm not going to
That sounds like a flaw.
then take it to meta and make a suggestion.
16:05
ridiculous.
i think its been drilled to death on meta
the classic case of nobles vs peasants
Steve oopsed again.
probably has been. But I tend to validate flags for offensive stuff... and if it's obviously not offensive, then I counter flag. It has nothing to do with "nobles vs peasants".
After 5 minutes. Not good :(
16:06
@steve :(
ok driving to work
I'm talking meta
thats like saying go vote at the presidential election, your vote counts
@KyleTrauberman Have fun. :)
Ill be back in ~45 minutes asking for more blog name ideas
Just use Idea Generator FFS.
Kyle's Krazy Kode blog.
16:08
I HATEHATEHATE names like that.
Yes! And then make a partnership with the Kaos Komputer Klub.
haha. reminds me of that bash.org transcript? HOW CAN U TELL IM THURTEENN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!?????????
The KKKKKK alliance. Imagine all the hate mail you'd get!
That's what I'm up against.
16:09
to go?
@TheDramaLlama can now rage about our documentation system as well.
BatCave, CodeCave... batmanish.
you awake me from my Friday slumber... FOR THIS???
1 works, 12 works, go doesn't work, goo works, -1 doesn't work, -1234 doesn't work.
Thereby placing a curse on all people who use two-letter API functions, and people who get negative error codes.
16:14
what are you doing?
what is that @KendallFrey? if you don't know what a variable is, but its commented somewhere in the system, you can search it with that tool?
16:25
@klut No, it's only for documentation.
yeah, so is "go" a variable that is used in code, and you're looking for what documentation it has? @Ke
No, it's an API function.
api.go?
documentation: went or stayed
SomeApiObject.Go(there);
followed by a call to Do(something)
16:34
Perhaps, though that method doesn't exist.
If I were Slim|Buffet|Gates rich, I'd spend my money teaching people in India how to write English.
"We are having following requirement." A requirement is a job.
Wow... just wow
16:41
This recruiter, whom I've told to bug off, sends me "requirements" a few times a day. The positions are never anything I'm remotely qualified for, and they're never in my state. I can only assume she didn't understand me when I said "I'm not interested. Please stop emailing me."
Yea. I'll give you an upvote.
okay just making sure before i get reemed a new one like the last time I posted something. thankfully it was removed haha
If it wasn't for the rep cap, Jon Skeet would literally be getting several thousand rep a day.
:O
Why is this guy so revered?
Jon Skeet's code must cure cancer.
16:51
Because he's the epicest programmer ever to touch a keyboard.
I thought that was John Carmack.
He probably has it written, and is waiting on it to compile.
howdy from 25 miles away from where I used to be.
thanks for the counter-downvote
Jon Skeet facerolled once, and now we have Java.
16:52
Jon Skeet's code CAN divide by zero.
Mine can too.
1.0 / 0.0 returns infinity.
0.0 / 0.0 returns nan.
Ahh, the pleasures of floating-point numerics
LOL FOR SURE
AZ.
AZ.
Anyone helps me for a regex match? I want to find the "1.3a" in "whatever you put... + [use_version:1.3a] other random text..."
ok, got a blog name
now I need a witty tag line
16:55
"Jon Skeet in training."
WHATS YOUR BLOG NAME?
@Kyle - Coding while true
Jon Skeet Jr.
I"m just going to call it
LOL
using Kyle.Trauberman;
16:56
NOOOO
SO BORING
Ripoff!
how is that a ripoff?
I was referring to JS Jr.
oh
but seriously
using Kyle.Trauberman;
what do you think?
Does it have nested libraries?
16:58
Uses code, which is cool.
I like it
THERE ARE A MILLION BLOGS WITH PEOPLE USING THEIR NAMES AS THE BLOG NAME, HOW ARE PEOPLE GOING TO REMEMBER YOURS?
Then you can title your blogs as libraries :)
using Kyle.Trauberman.blogname;
if you google "kyle trauberman" I'm the only result
I own that search
LOL
16:59
posted on August 17, 2012 by Eric Lippert

No tech today, but this is too funny to not pass along, so consider this your fun for Friday. What would happen if Anders Hejlsberg and Barbara Liskov were forced to share an apartment in an "odd couple" sitcom? (*) Apparently I'm the "Kramer" of this sitcom. I hope I'm played by Ryan Gosling. Additional suggestions on casting the principal roles can be left in the comments. (*) A singl

sec, registering a domain.
kyletrauberman.com?
RACISM
yea
17:00
I own trauberman.com
so I'm going to put the blog at kyle.trauberman.com
That's ... interesting.
nope, still no content.
Team meeting now
is the add compare confirm pattern called something more formal somewhere?
17:02
add compare confirm pattern? :/
fuck
Yeah, for data entry. User adds, data is compared to closest related item and displayed, and the entry is confirmed by the user.
//waiting for ban
It is part of data entry qa :P
@Steve I can speed it up a bit, if you like.
17:06
just waiting
don't hold your breathe
Um... something like that gets flagged?
yes, we aren't adults here apparently
not unless your name is steve
@TravisJ Do'nt mispell you're words.
17:09
Do'nt is spelled correctly, so is you're.
So is breathe.
so what is this the grammar chat room now
But, you're and breathe are typos nonetheless.
@KendallFrey - It is not a misspelling, so much as the wrong word.
And do'nt isn't spelled correctly.
17:10
sure it is. ' is punctuation
@KendallFrey nonetheless*
you spell with letters, not punctuation.
In EF, is there a way to update a row without manually setting each column?
Ah, new project..
Simply to remove all ajaxcontroltoolkit and put normal html in it..
How fun..
17:13
@Billdr - You mean like an update?
Throwing exceptions is a pretty expensive operation @kult
If the validity test occurs often, it's going to be a major bottleneck
@AndréSilva we're foced to use ajaxcontroltoolkit :(
That's my only comment
@TravisJ I mean exactly like an update. Do I do it with linq then?
kult? lol
17:13
but what are the chances it throws one vs. doing a conditional check every time?
@Billdr - This is what I use:
public void Edit(TEntity te)
        {
            dbSet.Attach(te);
            context.Entry(te).State = EntityState.Modified;
            context.SaveChanges();
        }
Conditionals are cheap
yep, exceptions are super expensive
And that'll overwrite the existing row?
It will change the values of any fields which have been modified
17:14
if it gets thrown once in every 100,000. or 100,000,000 what is the bigger toll?
Overwriting would probably imply a new primary key
Doing a few conditions all the time is probably faster than one exception some of the time
Okay, we tried that approach and it barked because I didn't have the entity key.
whatever an entity key is.
can has codes?
sec
17:16
You can try to balance the performance tradeoffs if you want, then it ultimately comes down to best practice
Or at least, how are you obtaining the object you are editting
I don't think failing a validity test qualifies as an exceptional situation
2
@Steve You guys are forced. One day you'll see how bad it is and someone just like me will be forced to remove it ALL...
And testing like that with a try { } catch { } has a nasty smell
Just my $0.02
The object initially comes from the database, is passed to a few views as a model, and then comes back after the user makes some change to it
17:17
@AndréSilva I've never heard a good thing about it, i should have a meeting with some people to consider putting in a different standard
I build my programs not to ever throw exceptions. If one is thrown then something so serious happened that it probably would crash anyway.
@Billdr - Does it have a primary key?
@Steve People use it because most don't know how to use proper Javascript and are lazy bastards..
Hey, does anybody know why the regexp '/(\w+) (\w+)/' isn't matching the string 'abc ø'?
Yea, the primary key is intact/never surfaced to the user.
@AndréSilva i know how to use proper js, its not that bad :(
17:18
@Billdr - Oh, I see. The problem is that when that object comes back it is detached from the database. You need to fetch it from the database again, and then edit that one. It is being converted from a Dynamic Proxy into a POCO so you need to get the Dynamic Proxy back.
@Izzey What exactly do you want ?
@Steve Ajaxcontroltoolkit is bad.
So I'd have to fetch it and then update each column individually?
That's kinda what I was looking at before, and not wanting to do.
@AndréSilva no, i meant writing proper js isn't hard
@Izzey because ø isn't a \w
what would I use then?
17:20
Hmm. Perhaps try fetching it, then setting it equal to the updated one, and then doing the update code.
@Steve No it isn't, but most old developers think Javascript is evil because they are used to windows forms. And when they see javascript, they run away and rather use simpler stuff..
Either way I believe it has to be fetched again.
It does the same. Somewhere my model is losing the entitykey value (it gets set to null)
@Izzey (\p{L}+) (\p{L}+)
17:22
I'll just have a huge ugly block of assignments.
I think...
@Izzey \w matches just string and numbers..
@Billdr - Is this a one time thing, or is it being done in multiple situations?
\W matches everything that isn't string and number..
Three situations.
17:22
@AndréSilva javscript isn't evil, but a lot of times when you write stuff you're reinventing the wheel, which is evil, so thats why a lot of developers slide towards frameworks like jquery
@KendallFrey still not matching :/
I was hoping to get some reuse out of this method, but I'll live.
i love javascript, and use jquery when it helps make my code smaller
@Steve Well, when developing for small projects, Ajaxcontroltoolkit and jquery aren't bad because performance isnt that important
@Billdr - If it is for one object, and not a list of them, you could use reflection to determine the fields and then copy those over.
17:23
@Izzey Using .NET, right?
But do a benchmark and you will see what I mean.
@KendallFrey Nope, but regexp is usually the same for all languages, isn't it?
I'll take a look. Thanks @TravisJ
@Izzey No. Many languages are lacking features, and many have extra features.
Are you using JavaScript?
17:25
Pelr
Perl*
Perl doesn't support Unicode by default. regular-expressions.info/pcre.html#supportucp
yeah
That's PCRE. I'm not sure if that's what Perl uses.
uh huh
Wait. "Perl supports Unicode starting with version 5.6." What version are you using?
17:27
@walkingTarget I'd agree with you, it may not be the best practice. i just read up on it and it says: if it's 99.9% of the time going to be valid, then throw. and also, don't use it for validation checks :p oops
@KendallFrey 5.12
IM SO TIRED, DAY HURRY UP AND MOVE FASTER
:( Can you upgrade?
@KendallFrey I think 5.12 is newer than 5.6, since the newest version is 5.16
Oh, yeah, maybe. Damn decimals.
17:31
^^
@Izzey thats so strange
OK, maybe...
((?:\w\p{M}?)+) ((?:\w\p{M}?)+)
Nope :/
Try abc ø directly.
nobody on my entire team is here, there are like 6 or 7 people gone today from my team alone, and half the office is gone, i should just go home, nobody would notice
17:35
Insert cheesy image here God would notice!
i think security might notice too
@KendallFrey Still not working :(
Are you specifying / before and after? I don't know how regex works in Perl, but you might not need them.
Perl people in C# room?
$a="abc ø";
if($a=~/((?:\w\p{M}?)+) ((?:\w\p{M}?)+)/)
@RoelvanUden It's a regexp problem ;)
17:38
hard
Just FYI Perl/JS/PHP/.NET all are quite different in regex.
are
if($a=~/abc ø/)
letters
What about that?
17:39
work
s
stupid norwegian letters :(
/abc \u00F8/?
hola
meetings suck
word
@KendallFrey nope
And you're positive it's the letter ø and not something else?
17:43
100% sure
à WTH?
here's an awesome blog title: Laziness Driven Design
@Izzey Is that where you're testing it?
LDD!
@KendallFrey doing it in a perl script too
woo, /((\w|[øØæÆåÅ])+) ((\w|[øØæÆåÅ])+)/
17:46
Suggestion: replace (\w|[øØæÆåÅ]) with [\wøØæÆåÅ]
@KendallFrey Thanks, works perfectly now :D
Application.Current.Dispatcher.Invoke
that starts a new thread right and lets the function inside run on that thread?
ir, a new Action
I think it runs on the thread that the Dispatcher is on.
^ It does. It does a thread switch and then uses the Dispatcher thread.
17:57
That's it. I'm going back to LAMP. Thanks, EF.
lol
just use ado if you aren't liking ef

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