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18:01
QUESTION: IF an exception is thrown from a web service, the clients connected to it don't recieve the exception, right?
ANSWER: I don't know.
holy shit, kendall doesn't know :o
QUESTION: CAN I disable R#'s View Usages for Find All References?
Great JavaScript, just great. If you have a variable declaration that goes out of scope, it actually is not undeclared. It basically sticks around for the remainder of the entire method you're dealing with.
@Gabriel about this EF ->
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11003088/nhibernate-vs-ef-4-1/11015957#11015957
18:03
@RoelvanUden Yeah.
Pwned by JS :p
For all the nice things JavaScript has, there is an equivalent of completely retarded bullshit.
if (x)
{
    var y = 42;
}
console.log(y);
18:04
BOO JS
^^ Must read
oh god what did I log into
BOO C#
GTFO rlemon
:P
@DavidDV Thanks, I'll read this and Kendall suggestion. :D
18:05
rlemon has 1337 canvas text splitting skills
hehe
in fact, I wrote a blog article on it
var textHeight = ctx.measureText('m').width
I know :)
I am a horrible writer. trying to get better. please don't judge (or only do so constructively) - If you come with pitchforks and torches please only do so before 9pm. The wife gets cranky if my nerd folk wake her.
18:07
it looked better then my text wrapping function for canvas
:)
It was the product of 4 hours work/testing and some collaboration from the regulars in the js room
I still don't like the nested while loops but I cannot think of a more efficient way to determine the break points.
Have a project where ppl can design views/forms in a .net application, and I render them in Canvas
@rlemon It's rather nice, rlemon.
Also doing scrollable panels in canvas :p
^ ouch
really?
18:10
Ugh, I dunno if I want to go get food, since it's cold outside, and I'd have to walk to the Subway...
This is why I need to get the hell out of Wisconsin, lol
    function drawScrollBar(ctx, x, y, controlWidth, controlHeight, neededHeight, offset) {

        if (neededHeight < controlHeight) return;

        var iconSize = 16;
        var scrollX = (x + controlWidth) - iconSize;
        var yTop = y;
        var yTopScroll = yTop + iconSize;

        var scrollLength = controlHeight - (iconSize * 2);
        var areavisible = (controlHeight / neededHeight) * scrollLength;

        loadImages(scrollBarImages, function (images) {

            ctx.drawImage(images.scrollup, scrollX, yTop, iconSize, iconSize);
stuff like that :p
@DavidDV seems like that would be overkill. multiple canvas elements in scrollable containers seems more performant.
yeah but performance is no problem
^ I only say this because I read a lot about indie canvas game dev and they all suggest a marriage between canvas and other HTML elements for performance reasons. Interactions on the canvas with click events can be slow at times
My creativity for designing and building a game is ... non existent.
yeah I know but still
18:12
yea if it works for you and is fast I would defiantly like to see that. That would be a very nice script.
I'm sure the other js game guys would love it. especially the ex flash guys who are used to UI toolkits.
Is it possible to initialize an array from another array? The following doesn't work, is there maybe another way?
Byte[] Barr = new Byte[] { 4, 5, 6 };
Byte[] Barr2 = new Byte[] { 1, 2, 3, Barr };
yeah butt I'm doing a project for displaying pharmaceutical drugs discovery type info
@Lennart Gotta loop through yourself.
lawl, the Doom 3 source was GPL-released on my 20th birthday.
Or, if you want a slow, concise version, use LINQ.
18:14
@Lennart Or Linq, Barr2.Union(Barr).ToArray()
@RoelvanUden Ewww Union.
more crazy canvas stuff @ -> lutzroeder.com/html5/textor
Ewwww. But it works :P
It loses ordering I think.
Eve
Eve
var Barr2 = new Byte[] { 1, 2, 3 }.Concat(Barr).ToArray();
But it's so slow.
18:15
Slower, but a one-liner.
Eve
Eve
Nobody even tried to fix my code. Is it so boring?
Great. After lunch, I have to figure out how to pull up a modal dialog box with the existing JS stuff in the system (which I'll probably have to redesign myself) and get it to pass properly through the frustratingly-undocumented tangle of Struts redirects.
@Eve Well, you should use byte instead of Byte.
Also, var is unnecessary.
Eve
Eve
Not that code.
18:18
why byte over Byte?
byte is a keyword
Eve
Eve
How do you quote messages in here, first of all?
Copy the permalink
9 secs ago, by Kendall Frey
Copy the permalink
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/7013932#7013932
18:19
/
@Pheonixblade9 No.
Eve
Eve
42 mins ago, by Eve
    unsafe class Horror
    {
        IntPtr* _pointer;

        public void Store(ref int value)
        {
            //using a fixed() block is possible and working
            //But won't work for managed types
            var reference = __makeref(value);
            _pointer = (IntPtr*) (&reference);
        }

        public int Obtain()
        {
            var reference = *(TypedReference*) _pointer;
            var type = __reftype(reference); //throws ExecutionEngineException
            var originalValue = __refvalue(reference, int);
the horror
Eve
Eve
It cuts the code...?
@KendallFrey you can't say no to me, baby
18:19
The byte keyword is an alias for the System.Byte data type.

They represent the same data type, so the resulting code is identical.
IntPtr*? HOLY FUCKING SHIT
@Steve The resulting code is the same, but the C# code is better.
@RoelvanUden I think I use the Union, thanks
why though?
i'm not disagreeing, i'm jus trying to understand why?
Can I refactor a class to another file?
How many times do I need to explain it? sigh
I don't know one good reason to use the type name.
18:21
do you know one good reason not to use the type name?
Using the keyword avoids having to specify a namespace.
Eve
Eve
Keywords have a nice color!
That too.
isn' the using System; already in 99.99% of applications?
there we go, a reason
Where did @Ellie go?
18:22
Morning n00bs
lol, so the color is nicer, thats why to use byte over Byte?
are you sure that byte isnt a primitive vs keyword?
positive
Eve
Eve
@Steve I do that also to avoid having to press Shift and the letter.
Still, using a keyword maps to a primitive type in the compiler, whereas the compiler needs to determine that Byte is a primitive before it uses it.
@ChadRuppert byte is a keyword
18:23
@Eve haha rue
thats what i think the difference is too @KendallFrey
Eve
Eve
And you can't use types when declaring the base type of the enum.
That too.
WTF why do I have 3 app.config's?
Eve
Eve
The more, the merrier?
18:25
I agree it's prob what @Steve said
forgot his age lol
...
I love how ASCII-art titties are a big part of XSLT code:

`<xsl:value-of select="normalize-space(.)"/>`
You're never too young...
ooooo
18:25
...
lmfao
how many cycles difference are we talking about with byte vs Byte though anyways. I would think the compiler would be smart enough to use the more efficient if they amount the same thing anyways?
Sticky . key?
@ChadRuppert the compiler does the EXACT same thing with byte vs Byte. The only difference is that you can add extension methods to Byte, I believe, whereas byte is a primitive.
@ChadRuppert It's a lot like int vs long. long works fine, but can be slower.
18:26
yeah, that makes sense @Pheonixblade9
Byte works fine, but byte is cleaner, and probably faster (slightly)
you'll never notice the difference, its just nerds and their micro-optimizing
;)
i doubt its faster if the compiler makes the swap anyways.
@KendallFrey Since when is byte vs Byte like int vs long?
@RudiVisser +1
18:28
Since I made up the analogy.
@RudiVisser +1, int vs long is totally different
that's a cast
or implicit conversion
18:28
No.
How do you figure, @KendallFrey ?
for (int i = ...) vs for (long i = ...)
Which is better?
int and long are two totally different things. an int is (generally) a 32 bit integer, whereas a long is (generally) a 32 bit floating point number
BTW @ChadRuppert, byte is the same as Byte ie. uint8
long is 64bit int
18:30
depends on the iterations. int is going to be less memory intensive than the long.
@Pheonixblade9 WTF HAVE YOU BEEN SMOKING
lol, whatever it is i want some
long is not a floating point.
Uhm... is C# completely different from C in that regard?
18:30
short = int16
int = int32
long = int64
there you go
In C, long is an int.
I can't name a language where long is a float.
long is never a float.
wait wait kyle can
18:31
I thought long == System.Int64
"that language which refers to floating points as long"
In C, long is specifically a 32+ bit int.
this is exciting, what is it kyle
lol, guess I was thinking of double. I wasn't smoking anything, I swear!
AKA "TLWRTFPAL"
18:31
@CCInc In C#, yes.
@Pheonixblade9 ahhhh, it happens :)
wait wait, what about dword
I was thinking of double :P
@ChadRuppert Screw off, Assembly
18:32
;)
@ChadRuppert dword = ulong (32 bit in most C compilers)
@ChadRuppert void DieShit(uint8 y) => void DieShit(Byte y)
Jesus Christ, I got an A in my computer architecture class less than a year ago, wtf is wrong with me
@Pheonixblade9 lots, apparently
@RudiVisser I like your version of FooBar better
18:33
@ChadRuppert byte x; = .locals init ([0] uint8 x)
@ChadRuppert Byte x; = .locals init ([0] uint8 x)
@Pheonixblade9 I do agree :)
Same at runtime, but before compile time, it's way different.
hi all
hi @Nitin
$introduce @Nitin
@Nitin Welcome to the C# room! Please read the wiki.
@KendallFrey byte vs Byte? How so
18:34
$help
anybody from Revit api developer?
@RudiVisser I don't feel like explaining it again.
@RudiVisser don't you understand aliasing already?
It has nothing to do with aliasing.
18:36
But it is aliased. Byte.MinValue actually goes to byte.MinValue
Nitin from Navi Mumbai,
@RudiVisser Isn't it the other way around? :3
@RudiVisser Nope, vice versa.
@KendallFrey Not according to IntelliSense..
byte is alias of Byte
like int is alias of Int32
18:37
Not alias.
byte is a primitive type.
@KendallFrey YOU SPEAK SEMANTICS, SIR. I CHALLENGE YOU TO A DUEL
msdn says that byte is a alias keyword for Byte.
The primitive type does not contain Byte functionality.
It's hard to explain it without IL.
@ChadRuppert I get excited every time I see your name because it sounds like "Lippert"
@Pheonixblade9 Kendall is our resident pedant.
18:38
whats a Lippert?
Pedantry has its place
public struct Byte : IComparable, IFormattable, IConvertible, IComparable<byte>, IEquatable<byte>
@ChadRuppert Eric
@ChadRuppert Eric Lippert
Eric Lippert used to work on the C# compiler team at Microsoft
18:38
Eric Lippert is a principal developer on the C# compiler team
yeah, def not me.
@Pheonixblade9 *was
He would be the one to ask
@Pheonixblade9 was
I just copied that directly from his website, that man needs to update his blog
@Pheonixblade9 Which one?
right panel
His MSDN one? That's old.
18:39
hes not a ms employee
so he can't update that
try this one: ericlippert.com
@Pheonixblade9 read the most recent blog post on that blog
then go to his new blog: ericlippert.com
gotcha
I am actually friends with someone who has worked at MS for 21 years
he's my bike training buddy, lol
he's been working at MS for as long as I've been alive... I'll be sure to say that next time I see him to make him feel really good about himself
( . Y . )
18:49
@Feeds Are we going to ticker feeds?
no
it spams lots of posts initially
What did you change?
so ticker to avoid spam
18:50
You should add my blog's feed
Where what?
where is your blog, doofas?
I'd need to write a feed export first
But when I do, you should add it
18:51
harhar
My blog had a feed from day 1.
That's a rubbish blog
18:52
It is.
because the layout sucks?
cos it's empty
and that, yes
Because null
And:
Widget Tag cloud not found.

Sequence contains no elementsX
Also, the penis icon :)
18:53
haha
When is a bool not a bool? - I stopped reading then
Took you long enough to read it.
Was afk

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