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18:00
I tried
JavaScriptSerializer s = new JavaScriptSerializer();
string json = s.Serialize(a.ToArray());
return a;
And what happened?
I think I found the problem , a is anonymous object
I remember reading that the default json serializer doen't like that
This is a thing with generic classes:
        [Test]
        public void StaticTest()
        {
            Zneak<int>.Value = 1;
            Assert.AreEqual(0, Zneak<string>.Value);
        }

    public class Zneak<T>
    {
         public static int Value;
    }
a is anonymous. a is legion.
I can't keep my eyes from glossing over as I try to read knockout/mvc tutorials and tips.
@JohanLarsson Yeah, what of it?
18:05
good to know
Did you expect otherwise?
no but I read about it
going to a place where there's less random noise. bbiab.
bbiab? be back in a bit ? ._.
if my shit works on the first try, I'm a self proclaimed fucking wizard
18:17
++
aww
meh, you need to pass values for parameters with a default value when you use reflection
I wonder what that feels like ....
have something work on the first try
lol
that would have been seriously awesome
my code's a mix of dynamic code, generics and reflection
the chances that would work on the first time were very close to 0
i've seen stuff on History Channel with Nikola Tesla , where they would build a whole power plant all from his head with no blue prints, then he'd go on vacation before they turned it on because he knew it would work
thats pretty badass
I did too much C++, I tried to do string x = 0
18:27
you didn't get squiggly lines for that?
Sounds like there is a serious anti-pattern brewing
nah, that was in my reflection call (where you pass in objects)
why does that make a difference?
you pass an object array
aren't you still flubbing away the typing on a literal?
18:29
so that was like method.Invoke(foo, new object[] { bar, 0 });
where 0 was meant to be null
oh, so you didn't actually write the first line?
well, in my head, that's what I was trying to do, but the compiler couldn't stop me this time.
hey, my wizardry seems to be working
what happens if I have json array sent from ajax , how do I iterate through it? normally I am used to having a name then array like { 'name' : [...]} this time it is just {[....]}
zneak y u no write strongly typed wrapper
it used to be a strongly-typed wrapper, but it's seriously very inconvenient to extend
the dynamic code is meant to take away most of the pain
the kind of object where you need to do everything in triple when you want to add stuff
so instead of doing everything in triple ourselves, the dynamic code fills the gap
and now extending the class is basically free
18:36
well...fair enough
bye guys
cya @kush
18:55
Hi, so I'm creating a datetime variable,
DateTime date = DateTime.Now;

I insert this into my sql server 2008 database with the column type of date, however, the time is getting removed, its only displaying the date, am I doing something wrong?
Is there no datetime type to use for the column?
yes, you need datetime
oh
before sql server 2008, there was only datetime
they introduced date and time in 2008
okay cool thanks
18:57
so you could have either separate
Don't forget to check for formatting of datetime too...
I'm not too worried about how it looks, its for a shitty school project, i just wanted comments to be ordered by time as well as date
anyway, thanks
19:15
#$%@%^ 11 days. :(
I don't want it to come!
I need a time machine so I can go back in time or freeze time.
but what is it?
Thread.Sleep(11 days);
Kyle.Age++;
meh, your just a kid still
I'll be 30 next year.
My IQ will be 30 next year
2
(planning to do some serious work to increase it)
19:19
lol
you're going to gain 29 points in one year?
you think I aim too high?
set your goal at a reasonable level
try for 2
If you really work at it, you could go for 3.
:P
we have to wait and see
I thought IQ is something you were born with...
partially
19:24
@KendallFrey Go to sandbox chat.
Depends on the test too I think
@KendallFrey Nevermind, I'm going to smoke. hold 5 minutes
But IQ definitely decreases with age, of that I am 100% sure
@JohanLarsson I don't think it's supposed to.
It has equal chance of going up or down.
By definition.
I don't follow, going up with age?
19:29
The average IQ is 100, regardless of age.
can someone point me to a great book for a beginner C# developer please?
C# for beginners
sry new to this... @Kyle -- from amazon?
19:30
how much experience do you have with developing outside of C#?
I read that book
by read I mean skimmed through it , copied some of the code , head first are usually good books
kindergarten-level writing, good for total noobs
which is why I asked how much experience he has.
I love tedious technical books!
@Kendall - What is your IQ? I'll bet its up there.
According to iqtest.com, 149.
I don't think that's reliable though.
I can't recall any result from anyone that was less than 140.
Hard to tell, the whole process has been questioned too.
I usually get 136-142 depending on where I go
19:36
kendall , say I have a class called tblEvents , it is made from a Sql Table called tblEvents , there are about 45 columns , I want to make a class like tblEvents but I only need like 12 columns , I'm worried passing the full 45 parameters through json everytime will be bad , can I inherit tblEvents - inheriting will give me everything from the parent , right?
@ScottSelby - Doesn't 45 columns seem like a bit much? Passing items to json is easy, just make a class that has the fields you want to pass in to the view, fill it from your 45 columns, and then serialize the 12 or however many you decided to keep.
yea...
that is what I am going to do I guess
Don't be afraid of view models, they are your friend. However, depending on which serializer you use, it may just skip the null fields (the ones with no data) and then only serialize 12 of the 45.
You can decide to only query the 12 of 45 by using select new I believe, although I am not good enough with that technique to provide an example off the top of my head :(
no , I don't think so
If I did select new , then it is still anonymous type , and it needs to still be casted to an object to be sent and read in view
so If I casted back to tblEvent even if I only selected 12 , then its still going to send the 45 properities , just most null
dbOrRepo.Select( item => new Model { val1 = item.val1, val2 = item.val2 } );
type of syntax
19:44
@TravisJ - yea that looks sexy
That is what I was saying though, if you pass those null values, I think your serializer might skip them.
no, it doesn't
ah
ok, then you might need a custom model :P
that is exactly what I was looking for , because sometimes in this code i'm going to need to join tables for queries and didn't know what type of object that would be , that new model will fix that - as long as that is legal code (you didn't just make that up , did you?)
I didn't make that up, but I am not sure if that is the exact syntax. I know you can do that.
19:48
lol
That actually looks like the right syntax though.
i'm lazy , i just ask instead of try
here is some valid code:
.Select(a => new
            {
                KEY = a.Key,
                VALUE = a.Count()
            });
similar type of deal, except I told it to use an exact model instead of an anonymous type.
but then for intellisense in View , you have to register the type of Model , don't you ?
Why? all you are passing in is json right?
build the model, serialize it, pass it in and have the view accept it as a string
19:51
@KyleTrauberman I have worked a bunch with Javascript and have built a number of simple c# apps, what i really want is a book that is not too complicated but gives me a good place to begin learning some of the more complex elements of C#. For instance, i guess i must be completely stupid but i didnt know until i was reviewing some code this morning that i could use the following --> i += 5; AND.... i = n++ + ++n; I want to learn more super cool things like this. Makes life
a whole lot easier!
that'll work
var viewmodel = assumedFilled();
object vmJson = viewmodel.Serialize();
return View(vmJson);

@model string;
<script>
 var jsonString = @Html.Raw(Model);
</script>
I think that should work
It is really important to use object for strings that you pass into the model
Anyone know if Azure has "Canada" (or country) only model? So documents/data etc. never leaves a specific country?
because if they are of type string, then the View will overload the wrong method
@RyanTernier I hate sites like that, just saying.
19:53
@KendallFrey Not sites. Data.
yea , that will work , but if it is not json , if I am just calling a controller that returns a view , then I can't do something like @foreach ( var a in Model) { a. intellisense wont help here*
But... where will the data be hosted?
@KendallFrey Example, It's illegal for me to send any internal document that I use in this office through google, hotmail, yahoo etc. because that document "could" be routed through a US server
if any type of data that I work with touches any part of the States, the patriot act is in effect and they could legaly seize it
19:54
We got a <Canadian equivalent of FBI> agent in the room.
Health Data.
The patriot act is only for data that was protected for us citizens , im pretty sure they can do whatever the hell they want with international stuff
@ScottSelby Not really. If say a persons demographic information accidently got sent through a US Server, the US gov can't sieze it by that nature alone, they'd use the Patriot act to get it, which they do all the time because htey like to have this information
Pretty much they have the ability know to just send a guy down to get it, where as before they'd need a warrent
FOr US citizens it's the same, they just ask for it...really.
@ScottSelby - Correct, that would not help. You would have to assume the structure in javascript and then construct it from there.
@Ryan - Wait, you mean that there are still side affects of Bush's bad decisions? :P
@TravisJ NOooooo, I would "never" say that.... ;D
20:06
Going home. I'm out.
20:26
posted on December 04, 2012 by Scott Hanselman

Darn it all. I didn't want to like this little computer. I've always been a "MOAR POWER" laptop user. For me, laptops are desktop replacements. It's less about the carrying and more about the "setting up in a remote place and having all the power of your desktop." My main laptop has been a Lenovo W520 for years. It's got dual SSDs, 8 (logical) processors and 16 gigs of RAM.

Does the basic version of win8 come with IIS like win7 did?
What do you mean by the basic version?
I doubt WinRT will have IIS...
home premium, whatever the out of the box version is
damn win7 is cheap now, thank you win8! :D
Yeah, I don't think RT will have IIS, but what about the basic version that comes on desktops?
Linux is free. Windows is a ripoff.
Linux doesn't run .net or I would be all over that.
20:31
Um, what?
mah-noe
I am fairly certain there are windows processes that asp.net takes advantage of, and as a result, you cannot host on linux.
I wasn't thinking of hosting, but yeah, ASP.NET could be hard (though I doubt impossible.)
If all else fails, try wine.
(I like how that makes sense even out of context)
lol
Yeah, I was talking about hosting. I wish there was a way, because linux is way cheaper, but that's life.
win8 does come with iis8
I want to host a web app from my tablet.
lol, image was a little too high res tho
I had to scroll =/
20:39
What kind of giant screen have you got?
The screen is large, but the resolution is set at 1024*768
Please tell me it's not an LCD...
I just got an OOM exception. I'm pretty sure it's not my fault.
@KendallFrey - It is an 8 foot projection
Could have been a better pic for mac as seen by linux fanboys, but still lol
Can someone tell me wtf is going on here???!?!?
20:43
We are chatting about C#.
@ScottSelby - canhazcode?
your supposed to wait untill I finish typing my question
You did finish typing. 5 times.
I thought your first question was your question :P
it was a pre-question , now your making me type more pre-question
20:44
And we like it.
That's the way
I have a value returned from Sql - type is DateTime , it is returned good into c# like this {11/2/2012 8:30:00 PM} , that after JavaScriptSerializer gets done with it it looks like this "/Date(1354654800000)/"
Oh, I got this :P
btw, that is seconds from 1929 or something random like that
I think I remember reading something like that
20:46
function ConstructDate(date)
{
return new Date(parseInt(date.match(/\d/g).join(""))).toDateString();
}
or just change the object from DateTime to string ??
that will give you a nice date back from "/Date(1354654800000)/"
Or use .ToShortDateString() or equivalent c# side
but that is a huge pain in the ass, whereas just converting it javascript side isn't so bad
oh , nice it actually is different then ToShortDateString()
Tue Dec 04 2012
I like that better , I need to be able to pull the time out too though :(
I like that better then c# version , just need to mess with it to get time
@ScottSelby watch out for JSON vs. C# date formatting. You lose a lot of performance when you have to go between the two
@Pheonixblade9 - that comment would of help about 2 hours ago
lol
20:56
^_^

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