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mr5
mr5
12:14
ded chat
[Hans1984] same over here
mr5
mr5
chat ded
@Squirrelkiller what are u tryna do?
[Hans1984] The same thing we do every night mr5. Try to take over the world !
[Captain Obvious] oh right yeag
12:38
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] off topic> programming
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] one of my colleagues use string.Equals() instead of == EVERYWHERE
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] who else does this?
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] than my heart stopped for a beat when I saw CA2251 analysis rule, but it's completely different
[Hans1984] yes programing questions is what we call Off-topic over here
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] eggzaktly
[Hans1984] OT=Off topic
[Hans1984] OT= On Topic
[Hans1984] 🤔
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] botopic
mr5
mr5
prolly he was used to Jaba
in Jaba, it is wrong to use == on string
13:06
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] wtf wrong with Jaba
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] I thought it's about C's ancient string handling
@Botler Strings are objects. So they compare based on identity as other objects do: new String("hello") == new String("hello") is usually false. Note the "usually". The more general case of str1 == str2 might be true sometimes. If the strings were interned. Or str1 = str2 or something. But it's not necessarily true for two different strings with the same content.
Fun.
(not)
So, to make it even more fun, the correct way to compare string by value is to do str1.equals("hello"). Which can throw an exception if str1 is null. The safer way to check that is "hello".equals(str1)" which like Yoda sounds but more safe is.
But if you have str1.equals(str2) the safe way to do the comparison (Java8 onwards) is to do Object.equals(str1, str2) which is OK, it just took so long to include this rather basic utility as part of the standard API. Might have been better to get better strings but...that might be too much to wish for.
mr5
mr5
13:44
Or just use Kotlin
I'm not using Java any more anyway, so kind of moot.
If I come back to JVM-land, I'm definitely interested in Kotlin. Also Scala.
mr5
mr5
But Kotlin might pull something from this new project from Jaba
I'm not sure how Kotlin coroutines would work with this upcoming Jaba's project loom
> Project Loom will make coroutines obsolete
There you go
Just as soon coroutines has just been finished, it's already obsolete
> Recently there was a good article about the State of Loom. This article explains why this approach is superior to other approaches like C#'s async/await, Rx or Kotlins coroutines.
they serve different purposes
@mr5 not really
and in one purpose, where coroutines were used, fibers (loom) would work better
13:58
[ntohl (MR.TaNk)] I like how Scala is designed
 
9 hours later…
mr5
mr5
23:23
I'm installing Xcode
it's been like this for the past 3 hours
take note, it is installing, so it's doing file stream work, right?
App Store doing absolute dog shit work as always
@Wietlol do you know how to have early access of project loom?
oh there is an early access: jdk.java.net/loom

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