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18:00
@KendallFrey 1. Yes. 2. Yes.
@KendallFrey To protect me from myself.
But what if you don't make mistakes? :P see above image
GIT: A seatbelt for programmers.
4
@Billdr What I told you about testing the code is about the same thing you will read in books
@KendallFrey I make sure that if I fuck something up, I don't want to give up because I forgot to use version control.
Even though my code is perfect and I never have to use Intellisense.
18:01
one more strength with version control is that the code is more portable
check it out to usb
@KendallFrey Why would you not? Its not like it is hard.
No, but it does take extra effort.
Not that much once the repo is up?
@JohanLarsson Thanks for taking a look. I'm not sure making an interface is really the right thing for me, but I'll look into it when I get a chance.
Well how often do you commit?
@KendallFrey Depending on what you use, it's anywhere from clicking a couple times, to pressing the up arrow and enter in command prompt.
18:06
No commit message?
@techblog I've tried sending this message via Google and I've received the attachment successfully. The PDF I've received was readable
I try to commit hourly. I take a 5 minute or so break and commit, get a drink of water, etc.
Hi peoples.
@Billdr I'm no expert, you might want second opinion. But I'm sure enough that I would be surprised if the dont tell you the same thing
I commit every time I make a significant change. Fix a bug, remove a feature, add a feature, etc.
18:07
One interesting question is how often do we actually roll back to old code?
Revert is one thing, I'm talking really looking through the history to find a good state
@JohanLarsson I've asked my lead about the EF initialization inside methods - he said to do it this way. Hence my reluctance.
It depends. Sometimes I put a message, most of the time I don't. I generally only do a message on major features or break throughs(Such as I complete a section of the project, or I finally nail down x bit of code that has been eluding me), but when I'm initially building something, I tend to let the message go because it's assumed what I committed is initial version.
@PicrofoEGY do you have any idea what is this error "4.3.2 Service not available, closing transmission channel" ???
@techblog Here's the code I've used to send the message: gist.github.com/e0db64febece15fba470
@PicrofoEGY If it is working with google then it means there is some problem with domain?
18:08
@Billdr Is he a tester?
@techblog Not really, I'm searching this problem now
I'm not entirely without messages, but I don't think 'I made the connection string' is a worthwhile message, and neither is 'Included the global method that I change the font size with.'
@JohanLarsson We don't have dedicated testers. So... he is as much as I am, I guess.
@techblog I do not think there are problems with the domain
@JohanLarsson He is the one telling me to write unit tests for this.
18:09
@Billdr He never wrote a unit test then?
'I updated the connection string to reflect the new database', or, 'I fixed the method to change the font size to fix the issue where it was rendering at 75% the size' is.
@JohanLarsson Not sure where you and he are diverging.
I will maintain, until the day that I die, that I have no idea what I'm doing.
@Billdr I'm pretty sure that he is a better programmer than me, but testing is a different animal that ordinary programming
@Billdr Someone asked me how I can say that, and I just simply replied "I haven't written code to write code, so I have no clue what I'm doing."
@techblog I believe this article from Microsoft Support describes your problem (support.microsoft.com/kb/284204) See Persistent transient failure (4.X.X numeric codes)
18:12
@SpencerCole Haw. Nice.
@Billder I would recommend you do this: ask if you can hire a consultant with a lot of exp from testing
@JohanLarsson heh. Do you have a card? :p
@techblog This is the description of your error: The message was not delivered because of Administrator action through the queue viewer interface in Exchange System Manager.
Yea, any budget we get is going into another jr. position.
@Billdr def not me, but should not be too hard to find
I dont mean full time for half a year, a couple of weeks to teach you and to get you started
My feeling is that it will take some stress of you
18:14
Alright. Well, I'm going to pack it up so that I can write some c. Then I'll be back here while I bother @LewsTherin and @AndréSilva.
As it is now you will either say that the code cannot be tested easily or fail, neither is good
@JohanLarsson Yea, probably. But instead I'll learn how to write unit tests tomorrow before the deadline of <wheneverMyLeadArrives>
@Billdr I really recommend to start easy, write dummy code if need be
@JohanLarsson Thanks for the tip. I'll keep it in mind.
ta for an hour or two.
90% of all the test I write are easy, if a test requires a lot of acrobatics it is a good sign that the design is poor
18:19
@PicrofoEGY Thanks a lot for the help...i'll try to resolve this issue!
@techblog I hope I was helpful. Good luck :)
@Billdr Yey
18:45
I didn't not just spend the last 10 minutes looking through the lyrics of The Fresh Prince of Bel-air and see if I could easily convert it to programming...
I need a new project asap.
@SpencerCole Project about what :D
A new project here at work to work on.
Anyone know of a way to skip a [ScriptIgnore] tag one time?
@SpencerCole I need a new project as well :D
but I have no ideas
I know what my next project is, but I don't want to start it quite yet.
18:48
I was thinking about a program that splits RAM to VGA memory but I do not think that it's possible unless the card is bult-in.
Mainly because I still have to get the stuff from my boss.
@SpencerCole I have no boss here haha :D
I have 3.
My Manager, the Manager for the .NET team(I'm actually a Mobile Developer), and the Technologies Manager.
@SpencerCole I do not like the word "Boss". I prefer "Leader" :D
That doesn't work as well for me, because I'm the leader of the team.
18:52
My boss is the guy that sits next to me (my team lead), and the director of engineering, who reports to the CEO. gotta love startups
We're a startup, and they decided from the get-go that they would go for a structured management style. Which means layers of managers that aren't really needed. Not that it gets in the way or anything. All of them are pretty cool about everything.
@SpencerCole as long as there's no excess cruft of middle management, structured management is fine
0
Q: php mysql insert sql sql injection

Cialis Ccialismy code problem sory. $yeri=no filtre; mysql_query("Insert Into deney (vid,yazan,email,yorum,ip,tarih,durum,yeri) values ('$id', '$yazan', '$email', '$yorum', '$ip', Now(),'1','$yeri')"); How can I update data at the attack site to this inquiry? How do I get this precaution. How do update the...

Is it just me, or are they asking for help on performing sql injection?
Nope, I just can't read.
19:16
Is it possible to build a viewmodel purely out of reflection?
viewmodel to model that is?
I was writing code for that today, did not finish it
sort of
oh, you wrote build. I read bind
I have a few classes in a model, and I want to construct a viewmodel out of them with reflection because it would allow me to not use some of the scriptignore constraints
I am trying to see if I can get around this:
0
Q: Skip [ScriptIgnore] just once

Travis JEnvironment for this situation: asp.net mvc 3 c# Entity Framework 4.3.1 JavaScriptSerializer I have come across a situation where it would be nice to include a field which has been marked up as [ScriptIgnore]. The field, if left without the attribute, would constitute a circular reference and ca...

hmm not sure I understand
19:22
What part should I clarify?
could you implement ICollection and create an add method that adds foo to bar before adding it to the collection?
It is a parent child thing right?
No, it is a [ScriptIgnore] thing. The graph is properly constructed. It is just that when marked with [ScriptIgnore] the serializer skips the property.
But I wanted that property to be included. Otherwise I have to go and then serialize every single one of the associated objects in a list and then reconstruct the whole graph (very messy).
in xml there is a property public bool shouldserialize[PropertyName]
maybe there is something similar for json?
But if it tries to serialize after the first pass it will get caught, and then throw a circular reference exception
Today I ran out of work. So they threw me head first into unfamiliar code to fix a bug. The moral of the story is, don't run out of work.
19:30
You are going to work yourself out of a job at that rate.
I have a feeling my question was too complex, and will take several months to get a half correct answer
moving on..
I get that feeling a lot.
@TravisJ slowly I begin to understand (watching tv)
why does bar need both fooId and foo?
could fooId be enough and a way to resolve a foo by id?
Because 42.
Foo is the object that gets loaded when a Foo exists with FooId == Bar.FooId
It is an entity framework convention (note that Foo is virtual).
These relationships are 4n
@JohanLarsson - FooId is enough to resolve a foo, however that requires manual compilation of the object graph which turns into a lot of round trips with the database.
It is ideal to only hit the database once with a huge, complex mess of conditional inner outer joins.
@KendallFrey How is your Java?
19:38
cold
Not good.
That will be great.. finally something he doesn't know
YAY
Ha ha kidding
Java is the easysauce.
hey, someone please... this is driving me crazy , what is wrong with this ???
Dim GIUDuserid As Guid
            GIUDuserid = New Guid(HttpContext.Current.Request.Cookies("UserID").ToString())
19:39
@TravisJ I still feel that Foo in the bar class should have scriptignore
@SpencerCole So you are good with Java then?
I'm not horrible.
the value of the cookie is this ""49b6ddf6-f70a-4358-a51d-7677bd7e1a3a""
what the hell ??
Can you explain why InputStream.read() returns an int and not byte? I am yet to find a satisfactory answer.
Anyone familiar with XenServer?
@LewsTherin ask on SO Proper?
19:42
@ScottSelby As in, double double quotes?
@KyleTrauberman So many duplicates will most probably get closed.
I think hopefully Cookies("UserID").Value.ToString will fix it - i've never had to do that before though
single double quotes?
@LewsTherin Here's what I get from it
19:43
the quote were just because I didn't know copying the value in VS came with quotes
@LewsTherin It's using int so it can do boolean -1 if there is nothing to return, that way 0-255 can be the 'byte', since it does -128 to 127 inclusive.
@LewsTherin also, didn't i answer that yesterday? it returns an int so you can check for end of stream (-1). then cast to a byte to get the byte value
Yes, but -1 is in a byte
That's my confusion.
It... is?
you're consusing the data types
kendall, this is JAVA
19:44
-128 to 127
Java uses signed bytes?
Yeah
@KyleTrauberman ?
@LewsTherin int != byte
No, -1 is in a byte, but you're looking at -128 to 127 as the byte, which is, in a sense 0-255 as an int, with -1 being end of stream.
O NOOOOOOOOES
19:45
int 128 - 255 == byte negative 128 - 0
@KendallFrey - .Value.ToString() fixed it , why is it that most of the time that works without specifyign .Value?
Mmn.. right.
Byte: values from -128 to 127, but no way of saying 'end of stream', but int, 0-255, and -1 as end of stream.
-1 int isn't in the valid range of byte values
So -1 in byte form yields a positive value in integer format?
19:46
so it can be used as a marker for end of stream
I always do like - string Name = Cookies["Name"].ToString()
@LewsTherin yes.
-128 to -1 is 0 to 127 on int.
what is the size of int in java?
32 bits, i hope.
32 bit i think
19:47
0 to 127 on byte is 128 to 255 on int.
Probably depends on the machine
@KendallFrey @KyleTrauberman correct
@SpencerCole Right.. I see
pretty wasteful then?
19:48
Thanks
@JohanLarsson how so?
int in java == Int32 in C#.
use 4 bytes for 1 byte + 1 bit?
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/datatypes.html short: The short data type is a 16-bit signed two's complement integer. It has a minimum value of -32,768 and a maximum value of 32,767 (inclusive). As with byte, the same guidelines apply: you can use a short to save memory in large arrays, in situations where the memory savings actually matters.

int: The int data type is a 32-bit signed two's complement integer. It has a minimum value of -2,147,483,648 and a maximum value of 2,147,483,647 (inclusive). For integral values, this data type is generally the default choic
Then byte is an 8 bit version
@SpencerCole Last question.. if read downcasts to an unsigned int.. how does it return -1?
ints aren't unsigned
19:50
double negative ftw
Maybe not in Java.
I'm afraid I don't understand your question.
Ah ok I get it now thanks.
@SpencerCole Are you not familiar with unsigned integers?
I still don't understand why C# and Java don't have it :S
We don't use them in Java.
19:53
We can't anyway, I think you have to hack it.
@LewsTherin Because they're overly complicated.
umm, c# has unsigned ints
uint
uint ?
Ah
Dang, of course :P
I don't use unsigned :D
uint = unsigned int ?
Wow :D
I didn't know this
Thanks guys :D
there's also ushort and ulong
19:54
I completely forgot about uint
or UInt32 actually :)
@KyleTrauberman Yeah I know that :D
I'm pretty sure if I started using unsigned ints, I'd break my programs. I, coming from java, use -1 as a return for int based things as a default for 'fuck yo shit, I'm not working'.
Short : 16 Bit Integer
Int : 32-Bit Integer
Long : 64-Bit Integer
right :D ?
19:56
@PicrofoEGY Yep!
@SpencerCole What's wrong with unsigned ints?
@PicrofoEGY correct
@LewsTherin Nothing, but I use -1 for far too much.
That's great :D
@SpencerCole Ah I see. Yeah not good :D
19:57
@PicrofoEGY those are aliases for Int16, Int32, and Int64
lowercase types in c# are just compiler sugar if i remember correctly.
@KyleTrauberman Is it always that size with C# and Java
If I didn't do java and got used to -1 as my return for 'i'm done', I'd use them.. Maybe.
Isn't it machine dependent?
Thanks Kyle :)
19:57
int is machine dependant?
Int32 is not
@LewsTherin its always that size
yes, it can be
atleast for c#
if you use int it is based on the platform you compiled for
Yeah, must be for managed language.
19:58
@KyleTrauberman That was my thought.
if you use int32 it's always 32 bit :)
@Pheonixblade9 Ah yeah, makes sense :)
@Pheonixblade9 Same with Java's 'int', it's always 32 bit.
Learning is fun!
Fun fun!
Fun is fun :D
19:59
Fun is fun when fun is fun
I had a buddy who didn't realize he couldn't do unsigned int's in java. He was pretty angry.
@LewsTherin That would cause a Stackoverflow exception by the way :D
You guys got me in the mood to answer a Java question :D
I told him "Pretend it can't go below zero."
Now I feel wronged somehow =/

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