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00:00
Computer programs expand so as to fill the core available. (source)
 
5 hours later…
04:34
05:12
Is there anyone to answer a simple question?
About linq?
 
1 hour later…
06:34
@Feeds XKCD #3022 Explained: Tea is exceptionally popular in the United Kingdom, to the point virtually every home has an electric tea kettle as a standard appliance. In contrast, tea is less commonplace in the United States of America (Randall's native country) and owning a separate appliance solely for tea is generally not needed. As a result, when Americans need a cup of boiled water β€” for tea or otherwise β€” it's considered ...
07:34
πŸŽ„AoCπŸŽ„ Madara Uchiha completed part 1 of day 10! \o/
07:49
πŸŽ„AoCπŸŽ„ Madara Uchiha completed part 2 of day 10! \o/
 
1 hour later…
09:11
Good moaning
 
2 hours later…
11:35
@HoseinGhasemi no linq question is a simple question
@Feeds As a person from the United Kingdom, I can confirm the accuracy of this
who the hell microwaves water
@CaptainObvious Same goes here for Poland lol
just buy a kettle
they're so cheap
probably the cheapest kitchen appliance
11:53
We mostly use either electrical kettles or normal ones that you put on the gas stove
 
1 hour later…
13:06
@Darj stove kettles are sloow
gas ones at least
if you're gonna do it on the hob you gotta have an induction hob for best results
Microwave the kettle.
13:46
thought I 'd try Stackoverflow chat on a whim. Can anyone help me with something likely very stupid:

I've downloaded, compiled coreclr as per https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/blob/main/docs/workflow/debugging/coreclr/debugging-runtime.md

When I try to run/debug a standard helloworld.exe through the built clr (via Debugging in Visual Studio, step 6: Command Arguments=<managed app you wish to run>), I get as far as coreclr_execute_func in corerun.cpp and then crash because of a BadFormatImageException. I've built coreclr as 64 bit, and I've tried running my stupid little helloworld compile
I just downloaded the current code for coreclr. The helloworld was built specifying .NET version 9.0.
ok, I've gotten a little further. After viewing helloworld.exe and helloworld.dll in dnSpy, I see that the IL is in the latter, and I was passing the former into coreclr. I've been away from .NET for a while, and am a little confused as to why it was generating both .exe and .dll for a consoleapplication, but I can see that my actual "code" is in the dll.
passing the dll into my freshly baked coreclr yields:

Could not load file or assembly 'System.Runtime, Version=9.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a'. The system cannot find the file specified
which is a bit more promising, I guess?
14:06
Hey, Matt! It seems like you're on quite the journey with .NET CoreCLR and Helloworld. The fact that you built CoreCLR as 64-bit and had the ImageFormatException hints that there might have been a mismatch initially, maybe between the managed app and your CLR environment setup.

Regarding the generation of both `.exe` and `.dll`: in .NET Core and beyond, even console applications often result in a `.dll` because they’re built to be platform-agnostic by default. The `.exe` acts like a host, and the actual IL code is within the `.dll`. This structure is more flexible and portable.
thanks little bot. I think Runtime's missing cos I set up debugging incorrectly.
14:27
@MattJacobsen out of interest, why are you trying to compile coreclr yourself?
15:25
Is there a way to see the html in the ViewResult ?
this.View("Export/Index", model)
16:25
yeah look at the response
16:43
/imagine a shiba working as a barista in a cafe in london. he is heating tea in a microwave, while customers look shocked and appalled
I'm going to use this prompt instead: An imaginative scene set in a quaint cafe in London. The barista is a charming Shiba dog, skillfully operating a microwave to heat a pot of tea. He wears a small, custom-fit barista apron, giving an undeniable sense of professionalism. A variety of customers, each in respectable attire appropriate for a day out in the city, watch astounded and aghast at this unusual spectacle. Their faces convey expressions ranging from shock to amusement, mirroring the ...
character of the city's diverse population.
errm, not quite lol
17:28
posted on December 10, 2024 by Brady Gaster

Are you tired of the cumbersome process involved in publishing your .NET console applications to Azure WebJobs on Linux? For developers yearning for a seamless and efficient method to deploy their applications, Visual Studio 2022 introduces a much-anticipated solution. Visual Studio 2022 now supports right-click publishing to Azure WebJobs on Linux, making the deployment process […] The

πŸŽ„AoCπŸŽ„ Michael Angstadt completed part 2 of day 9! \o/
18:04
posted on December 10, 2024 by Klaus Loeffelmann

With .NET 9, we’re bringing a suite of new async APIs to WinForms, aimed at making UI updates, dialog interactions, and control management more efficient. The post Invoking Async Power: What Awaits WinForms in .NET 9 appeared first on .NET Blog.

18:15
posted on December 10, 2024 by Phil Haack

Sometimes stepping off the career ladder is the best move you can make.

πŸŽ„AoCπŸŽ„ Michael Angstadt completed part 1 of day 10! \o/
18:49
πŸŽ„AoCπŸŽ„ Michael Angstadt completed part 2 of day 10! \o/
 
1 hour later…
19:57
@CaptainObvious, curiosity mainly, but it started with the fact that I can't get the example here (learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/fundamentals/runtime-libraries/…) to work, and I'd like to debug to see why not. The example works, but I can't read the embedded resources back out.
bit overkill really...

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