@Mr.Squirrel.Downy ERROR BEEP BOOP: You exceeded your current quota, please check your plan and billing details. For more information on this error, read the docs: https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides/error-codes/api-errors.
@Mr.Squirrel.Downy ERROR BEEP BOOP: You exceeded your current quota, please check your plan and billing details. For more information on this error, read the docs: https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides/error-codes/api-errors.
@Mr.Squirrel.Downy Potentially. But not really by itself. By itself it only controls how templates are being replaced. But if there is something that handles international pluralisation rules, then you can apply it when formatting the placeholders.
not "crownd", what that "crown" is used with the "Tightening Curse", the spell will shrink the "crown", causing great pain to the wearer. This curse was used by Tang Seng to restrict Wukong's behavior in "Journey to the West".
In Black Myth, it is metaphorically referred to as "rules and regulations from authority". The protagonist accepts it, which means giving up resistance. That wasn't Wukong's choice. so it's bad ending.
By the way, when Wukong first wore it, Tang Seng "cheated" him, even though Tang Seng often said "出家人不打诳语(monks don't tell lies)".
I'm going to use this prompt instead: A scene depicting a unique moment where a chatbot, an artificial intelligence, is humorously interpreting getting its monthly pay. The chatbot, an anthropomorphised robot with sleek silver color and glowing eyes, is represented in humanoid shape, sitting on an office chair holding a document in its metallic hand. Emulate the document as a symbolic paycheck with a large dollar sign printed on it. The background is a typical office setting with modern ...
Visual Studio 2022 v17.11 introduces a new Add Unreal Engine Class dialog that lets you easily add common Unreal Engine classes to your project. You can also choose to which module to add your class, so you can keep your code organized and modular. To use this feature, you need to have an Unreal Engine […] The post Easily add Unreal Engine classes to your C++ project appeared first on Vi…
@Feeds XKCD #3004 Explained: A water well is a hole dug in the ground, deep enough reach underground aquifers. They have been used for thousands of years as a source of water by people who don't live close to usable surface water sources like rivers and lakes.
TIL that Dictionaries are not thread-safe. My problem... I'm not implementing them directly, but using a namespace, and its features, which implements it T_T
Never had to worry about multithreading before, but apparently it's an issue with this code that runs a DirectorySearcher and loops through DictionaryEntries
@CaptainObvious I assume 'some weird dictionary', AKA whatever is implemented by DirectorySearcher and System.Collections here
I have not written my own dictionary implementation here, just used what is built into the namespaces I've used
So, I feel like I'm running into a limitation with only using highly abstracted tools, and don't know enough about the underlying implementations to build my own implementation at the same abstraction level to deal with this limitation
That's my hunch, anyway. Like I said, I've never had to deal with multi-threading before, so I don't exactly know what my problem is, or if it's even actually related to multi-threading. Just going based on what I've found from the MSFT docs and googling so far. For ref, the code: i.sstatic.net/zOsczc95.png
I'm not limited by old versions of C# or .NET, so if there's a new replacement for those things I'm game to scrap this and implement the modern equivalent, or at least try to. This is just all I found when I went looking for how to query Active Directory for users in .NET
(if only SO implemented version labels for answers...)
@CaptainObvious I did see some posts about HashTables vs Dictionaries, and Dictionaries being added in C# 2.0, but DictionaryEntry seems like it would be a... Dictionary, rather than a HashTable, no? Then again, this is MSFT, so naming things has never been their strong suit.
@CaptainObvious I'm querying Active Directory via the LDAP protocol call. I'm not sure whether that's AD Domain Services or something else. I need to query Active Directory itself, although I could theoretically query Azure Active Directory/Entra ID. I just don't have access to create an AAD/Entra app and get the secret key and all that jazz on my own, so I'd have to request that from our security team to even attempt that.
The goal here is to give a 3rd party application a file of demographic data that includes username and employee number, which we store in Active Directory as our source of truth for that info
It works half the time, but I've found I can reliably reproduce an issue where this AD code will put absolutely wrong data into the datatable ADUsers, meaning mismatched keys and values. When I started looking into why, I found (from my understanding) it's most likely due to it not being thread-safe
Yeah it's probably not thread safe. Most obvious thing I would say is try not to multi-thread it, and don't use async with it either. If it is threading related, that might sort you out. Alternatively make sure you're not using a static instance or something to do your lookups
Alternatively, try the Novell LDAP library: github.com/dsbenghe/Novell.Directory.Ldap.NETStandard - Might not be any better as it seems to also be built on an old foundation but it's community maintained so you might have better luck
Thanks, and yeah, the fact that DirectoryServices is apparently very old (although I see it has recent-ish updates) is another good pointer toward the potential root cause
May end up having to ask a question here on SO if I can't figure it out 😬
S.DS is one of those things where it's "maintained" in that they update it when new .net comes out, but there's no efforts to modernise it whatsoever
Actually as the code for it is rolled up into the dotnet runtime repo I think it's kinda collateral that it gets updated. Looking at the source on github, it's almost all things like formatting changes, warning updates, etc. not much really of substance
yeah, that whole namespace is probably ripe for overhauling, but 'backward compatibility' concerns probably make it not worth the effort, given MSFT probably wants everyone querying against cloud products these days anyway
Actually, thinking about it further, since I can reference the parent SearchResult object from inside the foreach loop that checks DirectoryEntry entities, I might be able to just do without that child foreach loop altogether, which might solve my problem...
I feel like ligatures in programming fonts is a bad idea. Writing code is already difficult enough, I don't want custom 'special' characters to display instead of the actual characters I'm typing
it seems like inflicting the whole 'greek question mark to troll your coworker' pain on yourself
Man, these fonts are ugly. If only there was a Segou UI monospaced font. Maybe I'm biased from staring at it for years but it sure is gorgeous compared to Consolas or Cascadia
Yeah, found lots of references to it. Annoyingly, it is not available for download directly anywhere, or included with any version of Windows (wth Microsoft)
Found an application that did include it though, but it requires VS 2010 or equivalent as a pre-req T_T