« first day (739 days earlier)      last day (4438 days later) » 

17:00
err - no i'm talking about the 27" monitor i game on to be used for my VS session :)
@ScottSelby That's nothing, 80'' projector as monitor
i'll need to get a new desk and new space to sort a 42" tv as monitor!
projector as monitor is horrible.
probably a new job too!
@KendallFrey What's this rambling? Of course it's not
Yes it is.
@KendallFrey Have you tried it?
I did once for a few minutes to play a game.
> So give us a try Reddit, spin up a little something so we can keep you up all night long.
@rlemon haha
I want a projector to play games in my bedroom
watching movies while laying on my bed. Super Lazy mode
17:06
hrmm. one sec
Yea... I've never seen a top ten list on reddit. That was more of a digg thing.
ffs
websites... y u no want to load
not even google
nothing but SO is working for me right now
@Billdr there is a subreddit for that
@rlemon all you need :)
@KendallFrey @KendallFrey - You think 1000 lines of code in one .cs file is nothing? Ouch man, you should probably start refactoring.
or at least use partial classes
17:13
I wasn't referring to .cs files, I was referring to classes.
I'm sure there are plenty of heavy-duty classes that have no reason to be split.
lol nice try.
No reason for 1000 lines in a class either. A .cs file holds the class.
Unless, as Kyle pointed out, you use partials. Which is a good point really.
.cs file != class.
Should I say it a third time? A .cs file contains a class. Where else would you have it? (Non compiled of course)
17:16
Every class is contained in one or more .cs files, but one .cs file can have 0 or more classes.
Dang Kendall, lay off the drugs. You have been way off lately.
@TravisJ he's being pedantic.
There is no relationship between a source file and a type.
he's Kendall "Mr. Pedantic" Frey
17:17
@rlemon Why you no make sure by pinging :D ?
FYI, ILSpy gives 4000 lines to the AppDomain class. Do you think it should be split into 10 classes?
A type? It is a definition.
What do you mean?
AppDomain is 4000 lines, with 3000 lines of comments.
Only 1000 lines of comments.
17:21
Even still, that is a core lib, so it is understandable.
I fail to see the difference between a .NET core library and your application's core library.
Yeah, I can tell. Hey, if you want to write god code go for it.
That way you can have one method wrapped in a try catch that just uses goto for exception handling. Isn't that how your app works?
@PicrofoEGY did, just reset the router
couldn't ping out before
Sure gave that impression.
17:24
now ping google is 200ms+
@rlemon I think that's a bit slow, Google here is 36 ms :D
that is my point
So IMO, 1000 LOC isn't very much.
normally I get 20-40ms
1000 LoC is puny
17:25
Perhaps someone on your network is downloading
if you think 1000 LoC is large you should hop on my rage train about jQuery
In one place? Lol, I would hate to maintain that.
9000+ LoC
1000 lines of code?
@rlemon - I had to edit the jquery.min file for their ui
17:25
really? yhou think that's large?
<Topper>
@RyanTernier - You have a class which is larger than 1000 lines?
@TravisJ Why? If you can't handle a simple 1000 lines of code, maybe you better get another job.
my modbus class is like 3000 LoC with partial classes sprinkled in
@TravisJ yea I have a class that has upwards of 20k lines of code
17:26
sometimes the files get larger. code folding is nice for this
Code folding is a godsend.
How do you expect any of that to be reusable?
High coupling is bad
#region IS A GODSEND
#endregion
@TravisJ Take a 40,000 XML Schema file, and make a C# Object out of it ;)
#region ANTI PATTERN
#endregion
17:27
oh don't assume I'm doing tight coupling
We have an Oracle STored Procedure that's about 2000 lines long
Forcing myself to continue to believe that no component's job is that special keeps me virtuous, I am convinced that you should always try hard to avoid nE3 LoC, even if you acknowledge that it will sometimes happen
because of the massive amounts of business logic it's doing
With 20k lines of code, I highly doubt that there is loose coupling in that class.
ohhhh enterprise developers and their bloated convoluted sprocs... how I miss those days
@TravisJ Where do you work? At your mom's grocery store? :P
17:28
IT's auto-generated code. WHen We update the XSD, we just update the class =D
@RyanTernier - Isn't that more of a serialization process than actual code?
@TravisJ Come work with large health systems one day, you'll understand, then cry, then make a stand to "MAKE IT ALL BETTER (tm)", then cry
@RyanTernier - Large systems just need more abstraction.
It takes me 10 minutes and 5 lines of code to fix a bug, but it will cost $1000 to make that change.
17:30
Too many people using old depricated design patterns in the health industry.
Medical record systems are so out of date it is appalling. So it does not surprise me that there is bad practice there.
@TravisJ No. Too many requirements and rules. If you change one thing, you need to verify it didn't break anything else
I agree there's a lot of refactoring and updating that can be done, needs to be done. But this is all .NET code i'm working with atm.
I won't talk about the DB2 and Mainframe code...
My script is almost done processing and I'll show you something scary
@Ryan - If it were not so tightly coupled, you wouldn't have to worry about it breaking other places.
@TravisJ The system "can" be better, unfortunately it can't be because no one will pay for it
I am firmly of the belief that almost any complicated system can be reduced, provided a person who is both a brilliant developer and an unchallenged domain expert is given free reign over it - which basically never happens
HL7? I am fairly certain I sent in an HL6.
@Ryan - That I can believe.
17:33
New to C# chat? Read The Wiki
2
message expires tomorrow
refreshing
TBH, I get tired of that.
Whenever there's a new release scheduled, I will ensure to get budget to refactor some of it, and remove technical debt. But sometimes it's cheaper to just re-write it all (which is being planned)
Maybe putting it in the room description would work better.
I <3 VS 2012!
17:35
The only thing cool about VS 2012 is Code Analysis, which is a royal PITA.
WHat I've learned through my coding life:
VB.NET : holds your hand and tells you you're handsome, everyone else is evil, and you are amazing
C# : Helps you do pushups, spots you when you're doing bench presses, and is your wing man atthe bar
BizTalk : Sucker punches you and kicks you when you're down after it shoots VB.NET
Why does it take 2 undos to undo a return in VS?
@KendallFrey Intelitrace is kinda nice.
What's that?
room topic changed to C#: C#: Where we don't need glasses. Read the wiki. [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
17:36
Let me be honest for a moment.... I never read the Wiki... I'm sorry, it's not that I have anything about rules or reading.... I just HATE ORANGE LINKS!
@FreddyFlares 1. return 2. indent
blah
can't do links in the description
PRetty much take an exception on your production server, give the data to a developer and they can load it up with all data/stack trace etc. at the time of the exception to see what went on
@KyleTrauberman goo.gl/sw1w5
17:37
> C#: Where we don't need glasses. Please Read: goo.gl/sw1w5
@rlemon ?
ok
room topic changed to C#: Where we don't need glasses. Please Read: goo.gl/sw1w5 [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
lol
http://
room topic changed to C#: Where we don't need glasses. Please Read: goo.gl/sw1w5 [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
stupid copy paste
It should at least say what it is, instead of READ THIS PLZ
@TravisJ [text](url "optional title")
17:38
dammit, work projects, y u no interesting
room topic changed to C#: We don't need glasses. Read the wiki: goo.gl/sw1w5 [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
I say work projects. There's only one
@RyanTernier I don't always debug, but when I do, it's usually just for fun.
Also, link the leaderboard so they know who's awesome. :p
17:39
(pst, I'm awesome)
@TravisJ
Project LOC: 5,414,733
File count: 12,928
Largest file: 55,878 (BizTalk file)

you don't want to see tight coupling haha
@Billdr its on the wiki
I only debug in prod
or if its not, it should be
@RyanTernier! You do BizTalk?
17:40
but we should not forget about this
9
Q: Chat Easy Input Tools - Provides keyboard shortcuts for common text formatting commands

rlemon About Provides keyboard shortcuts for common text formatting commands, reducing the dependency on mouse usage. Current version does not have a configurable set of hotkeys but later versions will. How to use. All of the following commands are run if the user has focus in the chat input area. ...

use it!
(you = your project team)
then you don't have to think about formatting
@TomW Yes
it's a keycommand away
A big Hello to all online members
17:40
I have a phone interview for a role that's mostly BizTalk development on Friday. What the hell do I say to sound competent?
A small reply back return "<small>wuddup!</small>"
@KyleTrauberman It is now.
@Billdr just added it
I knew the word but had no idea what it was until last week
You broke my edit!
17:41
@TomW just spit out some BuzzWord soup
@rlemon i linked to that on the wiki
The guy interviewing might be competent
@Billdr lol, edit conflict!
@TomW BizTalk is a beast, it's finicky but it's quite amazing.
@Tomw Did they say you should know it, or that you'll be doing a lot of work on it?
@RyanTernier they're hiring for a position basically doing it, but I think they're happy to take a new starter
17:43
Read some quick write ups on it.
"I can totally AJAX your MongoDB Responsive Web Drupal system. But I will need to Ruby out some Python Scripts with my Visual Studio Professional MSDN Canvas. If you would like I can jQuery up a few plugins for your Scalable HTML5 Drag and Drop. But only if you want... I don't want to over complicate things like if we were to use VIM to C-emacs S-ublime T-ext 2... ohh yea.... XAML. " i'm done
I have a fair understanding of XML-related standards, which is apparently about as specific as they want
the thing is, it's quite hard to find information that will actually tell you i) what it is and ii) how to do stuff
all the promo material is BUSINESS MONEY NUMBERS
Understand the lingo, learn what:
-Service Oriented Architecture is
-Enterprise Service Bus
-WCF + ASMX
etc.
I like my response better
XML and XSD are required for biztalk
you need to know what they are and how to use them
BizTalk essentially is a big flow chart,
and you tell it what to do
17:45
There were some samples in a whitepaper. They were vomit-inducing.
three-line xpaths embedded as plaintext in a flat document, tons and tons of them...I have no idea what it represented, but it didn't look efficient
When you're filling out /// comments, what do you say in the <returns> tag?
what it returns?
just "bool" or "void"?
Seems kinda silly, since the signature has that.
17:49
@Billdr describe what it returns
/// <summary>
/// Invokes the specified URL.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="result">The result.</param>
/// <returns>An XML Node with the results that were processed like a boss. What do you think was returned...a unicorn?!</returns>
protected XmlNode ProcessResults(XmlNode result)
"a bool indicating whether option X is turned on or not"
I like mine better
me too
because unicorns
Ok, question. You have a web service that gets hit say 100k times a day. You want to save every message that comes in, in case you have to replay it in the future.
Would you use a framework (Internal or 3rd party) to log the messages, write them to file on the current thread, use a separate thread, or write them to a database?
17:51
probably a log file
or if you want more than just logging functionality, a database
Every XML Web request must be it's own file/entry
i.e. "replay them later"
Yes, let's say a broker had an issue and 100 messages didn't get processed, we have to get those messages and replay them.
Sorry for the delay, thanks for the input.
then I'd say a database
17:53
Database is the fastest, saving to The hard disk is expensive, even if it's on it's own thread.
using a Logging framework to manage the saves etc. is nice, but same issue as writing to the hard disk
Problem with the DB route, is if the DB is down, then you don't get to write your messages, which means you need the fall back of just streaming them to the hard disk.
hey @rlemon
Single points of failure == bad
you still here?
hey random pinger
if the db is down, wouldn't the app be down?
17:54
:) sure am
your my js expert
thinking of getting some ice creme
back in 78.662 seconds
can i set a onchange event to the value of a hidden field ?
Starts stopwatch
@Kyle - Yes, however if we save messages we can replay.
17:56
ahh gotcha
separate database on a separate server cluster with mirroring?
and if you don't think thats enough, write to disk too as a redundant backup
that way if the db fails, you can always manually load up the files from disk
back
Stops Stopwatch
I was using System.Timers.Timer - by my count i'm exactly on target
3 minutes > 78.662 seconds
@ScottSelby did you try?

« first day (739 days earlier)      last day (4438 days later) »