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22:00
@Billdr Well, you should use it :)
Other options, FASM, TASM, MASM, GAS
nasm -f bin myFile.asm returns nothing.
Those are the first ones I think of.
I think it was winasm.
Oh, that. Yuck.
I think that might be a MASM IDE.
@KendallFrey Returning to the Card interface.. It would depend on where you want to place the card. For example, in a run, an ace can go before the two, or after the king. How should I implement that?
22:02
Did you see my interface?
Something like bool IsPlacementValid(Card before, Card placed, Card after) { return (before.GetValue() < placed.GetValue() || place.GetValue() < after.GetValue()); }?
I would also need to check for before or after being null, but that gets the idea across
Ew, no.
Aww. And I thought it was good =[
Though you could implement IComparer to define different sort orders.
This wouldn't be on Card it would be somewhere else
22:05
It depends whether you need a value or just a sort order.
Both, it's a run
And Ace < One and Ace > King would both return true
Well, the sort order can be determined from value.
Ohh.
Yeah =]
So, how about a function that takes 5 (or other) cards and determines if they form a run?
Ok yeah that's good
So in my code for checking if a set of cards is valid I could have something like bool IsValid(params[] Card) ?
Don't know the syntax for that off by heart
Looks right to me anyway
22:08
params Card[] cards
I am constantly reminded I know so little xD
So I could so something like... class CardSet { public bool IsValid(params Card[] cards) { //logic here } }
Yeah, but it could be static right?
That would be ideal.
I already have a collection class called CardList that I will use for the player's hand and the base type for CardDeck, so would I just make a new CardList to pass into IsValid instead of the array?
I suck at architecture
Yeah, something like that.
	mov ax,nbr1
	mov bx,nbr1
	mul ax,bx
22:13
Right, brilliant, thanks =]
Is there anything that jumps out as wrong there?
Nope, looks good.
syntax error : ,
on the mul line
I call bs.
What flavor of asm?
Ohhh
drrrrr
I don't know?
22:14
I wonder if mul doesn't work with an accumulator.
Try just mul bx
that builds, I guess.
I so badly want to comment on that...
But I know nothing about asm so I'd best not =P
I'm back. @Pheonixblade9, contain your women.
6
Would take more explaining than it's worth
@TravisJ never!
22:19
:P
@Pheonixblade9 At least keep us updated?
@Billdr - mul implicitly uses the ax register
@Billdr -
"the destination operand is an implied operand located in register AL, AX or EAX (depending on the size of the operand); the source operand is located in a general-purpose register or a memory location

The result is stored in register AX, register pair DX:AX, or register pair EDX:EAX (depending on the operand size), with the high-order bits of the product contained in register AH, DX, or EDX, respectively. If the high-order bits of the product are 0, the CF and OF flags are cleared; otherwise, the flags are set."
@KendallFrey Better to shuffle the deck in the constructor with the Shuffle function or remember to call Shuffle at the start of every game? And of course every round thereafter or whenever else it was needed.
@Sean I'd say shuffle manually.
@KendallFrey Ok thanks =]
22:20
Personal preference though
I can't type.
I agree, I was just hesitant
@TravisJ Thanks. I need to figure out why my includes are failing, then I'll be in a better position to grock what I'm not understanding.
Right now I think I will only want to new CardDeck() at the start of the game, but I can't say for sure that I won't do it any other time. Although I can't see why I would.
22:22
@Billdr What a brilliant word!
Grock?
Yeah ^_^
I like it.
So do I! =D
LOL TenOfSpades.. ElevenOfSpades... JackOfSpades.. Wait what?!
Hey, you got a pair :)
22:25
facepalm well, it executes. It displays a character that might be the number 4 ASCII encoded.
Makes no sense though xD
@Sean lol
@Billdr What character?
♦ <--does that look like a 4 to you?
Hang on.
@Billdr Looks like a diamond. Can't tell which one though.
22:25
no
ascii 4 is an EOT flag
I wonder if I can line by line debug with this thing.
guess not.
with masm you can
Yup, that's the number 4 in ASCII.
@KendallFrey Thank you sir.
Any idea how I can get that to display as the number 4 using StdOut?
(I think that's coming from windows.inc, maybe kernal32)
That is the number 4? Is that what the flag prints out?
22:29
Hmm. the inverse of atoi, which might or might not be itoa
Ooh that's annoying:
private Card(string name, int value)
    : this(name, value, value)
{
}
Empty body, does my head in
@Billdr - You could add 48 to it (which is where ascii numbers start)
itoal is included in one of the libraries I'm using.
lets see what it does.
throws an error. Neat! :D
Hmm.
Try printf.
not a valid command with what I'm including.
22:35
Well, include it anyway.
stdlib.h I believe.
@Billdr two doesn't look like a real word any more...
I know how that goes. lol
What are you doing to cause that?
    AceOfSpades = new Card("as", 11, 1);
    TwoOfSpades = new Card("2s", 2);
Then copy paste TwoOfSpades 11 times
Two was everywhere
goddamnit, now it's printing ☺
22:39
lol
Aww @Billdr it loves you!
@Billdr Please hold.
@JohanLarsson NO UPDATES FOR YOU
@Pheonixblade9 lol, but why? What did I do, what did I not do?
smiley is 1.
22:43
oh, the command where I copied the value to memory went away.
If you want to annoy yourself and/or laugh, type a partial name of a class property/field in VS2012, press ctrl-space to get suggestions up then click to switch to another code window. Go back, try to do the same and watch as no suggestions appear, even if you delete back to and including the .
You have to close the code window and re-open it to get it to work again
@JohanLarsson if I told you, then it wouldn't count.
I'm still getting used to pressing tab to select intellisense instead of enter.
I got used to that a long time ago when switching between IDEs and/or text editors that do suggestions
It even works in browsers with dropdowns and such, and I've found that most autocomplete implementations on the web use tab as the "I've found it!" key
Or at least support it, not sure if it was the only key that worked
@Pheonixblade9 good to have aggressive @Pheonixblade9 back at least
22:48
Yay, back to fun projects.
Me, aggressive? Fuck your entire family!
:D
Also <3
@Pheonixblade9 I would think scary rapist, not aggresive
@Sean just your mother
You'd best not, she might enjoy it
@Sean Very likely. I'm either vs or eclipse... I'm pretty sure eclipse lets me use enter to confirm a selection. Web IDEs never worked out well for me.
22:49
And I would not hear the end of it.
@Billdr Eclipse is the daddy for Java! I've not used any web IDEs
Eclipse is great. It has all sorts of stuff that you need to buy Resharper to get for VS. I've heard good things about IntelliJ and IdeaJ, as well.
Screw everything about NetBeans, I hate that IDE
Did I scare off @JohanLarsson with my horribleness?
@Billdr You know you're using (int)DateTime.Now.Ticks in your Random constructor? Are we at dates that will just automatically overflow? Or would the CLR throw a runtime error in this case?
@Pheonixblade9 no not at all, was enjoying it fully. Just busy with some wpf
I was doing some funky stuff to use a seed that wouldn't be immediately apparent, and I cast to int in case a double showed up.
Sorry, I mean here: new Random((int)DateTime.Now.Ticks);
Or have you added more code since then?
22:54
var rng = new Random(DateTime.Now.Ticks); would work just fine.
I added more code before I shared it, I deleted some stuff and forgot to remove the cast.
Oh, right. I didn't even look at the overloads
Because it doesn't have any
throws a wobbler unless you cast to int
can anyone help me with my very easy question? stackoverflow.com/questions/13733945/xaml-binding-to-property
whatever you put in there has to be an int. If there's a chance your seed isn't going to be an int, you should cast to it.
But if the default constructor just uses the same, I don't need to bother with a seed do I?
XAML is too smart for me, imslavko.
I'm not going to judge you if you do. @Sean
22:56
glad to see you viewed it :)
@imslavko I think you are missing INotifyPropertyChanged
@Johan so my property should implement it? Just never did binding before and examples from microsoft do not use it
@Billdr I can't think of anything that would be better that I can feasibly implement.. I suppose I could create a guid and convert the bytes to an int or something
@imslavko If you want the binding to update it is the standard way I think
var rng = new Random(); var betterRNG = new Random(rng.next() + rng.next() + datetime.now.ticks + yourBirthDate+yourAgeWhenYouLostYourVirginity); and so on.
23:00
Well yeah, I was worried about long to int overflow though
@Johan: thank you, I will search in this direction
Oh stupid me ffs
hence the cast to int
I am a retard, ignore my stupid ass >_<
@imslavko honestly dont know hat happens when the property is static
23:06
private void Swap(int firstIndex, int secondIndex)
        {
            Card temp = this[firstIndex];
            this[firstIndex] = this[secondIndex];
            this[firstIndex] = temp;
        }
There's no problems with that is there? It's not going to create loads of copies of Cards is it?
don't you mean this.Cards[firstIndex]?
@TravisJ No =]
@imslavko I wrote a reply with a minor variation to the other guys (static backing field)
speaking of backings, Is @CCInc around with his magic svg->png converter?
@TravisJ That class inherits from CollectionBase so it has a fancy indexer thingy
23:21
@Billdr maybe, why
Ok my shuffle thing isn't working =_=
        public void Shuffle()
        {
            Random rng = new Random();
            Random betterRNG = new Random((int)(rng.Next() + rng.Next() + 194687523 + 946582317));

            for (int i = 0; i < 52; i++)
            {
                int r = rng.Next(0, 51);
                Swap(i, r);
            }
        }

        private void Swap(int firstIndex, int secondIndex)
        {
            Card temp = this[firstIndex];
            this[firstIndex] = this[secondIndex];
            this[firstIndex] = temp;
There weren't any of the back sides of the cards in what you sent :O
Will probably put the code from Swap into Shuffle but it's still not working
Oops
Do you have a back you need to convert?
I downloaded the svgs, lemme see...
23:23
I do CardDeck deck = new CardDeck(); deck.Shuffle(); then loop and display, but they're in the same order as I put them into the deck in the constructor
well I thought I did, but I can't find it...
I'll use @Billdr's code where he removes and re-adds
the code I had done 8+ hours ago? :p
Sorry i dont have my computer right now, cna you wait a little?
@Billdr Yeah but it still doesn't work D=
They all come back in the same order, I don't understand why
23:28
My code does?
The only difference is that I'm using the class as a collection
Do you think that would matter?
dunno
Oh wait you copy the collection and re-build it...
Yeah it won't work the way I have it, no bother
In knockoutjs do I just define the viewmodel in the js file?
Yay! It shuffles!
23:40
wewt
Should not be coding this late, I have no brain at this time of night
mmm beefsticks
Every click I'm shuff shufflin
Well that's the easy bit done
@TravisJ Do you have an afro?
Now all you need to take care of is the parity bit...
@Sean - lol no
23:41
@Billdr This is what it was converted to: dl.dropbox.com/u/51707084/Blue_Back.png
@TravisJ You get to be his infinitely suckier sidekick when I get the image in my head then, sorry bro.
weird
I guess I can paint a logo onto it or something, thanks.
@Billdr What kind of back are you looking for?
Any of those would be fine. I want something that looks like a card.
I think I am not as productive from home...
23:44
@Billdr I don't want to seem like I'm scrounging here but could I have a copy of those SVGs at some point? And a link to something that could tell me how to use svg images in .Net?
@Sean same way you'd use a jpg. sec, I'll throw it in my dropbox.
@Billdr Oh ok.
heads up, IE8 and earlier does not support svg.
I shall have to re-do this as a WPF application. Not like I've done any of the UI yet so it's no bother
23:45
@Sean I got the cards from sourceforge and converted them from svg to png
@Billdr Chrome =]
yar
Wait will this work in WPF for desktop?
dunno, I don't see why not.
Okidoki =]
@CCInc Argh wait?
@Billdr Why would you use PNG over SVG?
23:47
because IE8 supports it
@Billdr NEVERMIND! You're doing it on the web
@Sean I got them from sourceforge.net/projects/vector-cards and converted them to png for billdr
God freaking damnit
Using my powers :D
@CCInc Thanks man, my brain is mashed
@Billdr Sorry if I'm confusing/annoying you
23:48
Not at all
I convinced work to let me spend the day writing a blackjack application. I'm in a good mood.
I'm going to bed now
night
I can't do this any more
I shall have to pick up tomorrow
@Billdr Still on that "bitcoin" site?
yea, that's the end goal.
23:49
@Billdr Thanks for the bits and pieces to get me started, appreciate it =]
right now I'm trying to figure out knockout.
yarg
Whats knockout?
it kind of sits on top of jquery to give you a mvvm model
how do I run diff using git extensions?
Night guys! Have fun and take care, cya later =]
23:50
pulls data from an api, shapes it, binds it to DOM objects, farts it out to the screen without page refreshes.
I'm starting to get worried that Kyle is going to pass me on the star leaderboard. I don't remember the last star I had.
@JohanLarsson What do you mean? If there is a conflict, it will let you pull up kdiff
You all are very close, within 15 since last update
@CCInc I want to see what i have changed in my running code, using SVN I can select show changes
@JohanLarsson For one file, click on the commit, then on the bottom screen, click the "diff" tab, right click on the file, then choose "open with diff tool"
@CCInc yeah, that worked, ty
Not super nice, must be other ways
likely
23:59
Heh, thanks.

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