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18:00
@Kyle Hmm, more like "need some guidance to find my own path"
guidance with what?
like a tutorial?
How to start Code First asp.net c# EF4 or 5
=P
@Kyle like a tutorial or sample code.
@KendallFrey Well I've eaten the intestines of a cow, and I'm guessing that the intestines of an elephant will be worse.
well, the asp.net/mvc tutorials has a section on EF with some code first stuff: asp.net/mvc/overview/models-(data)
@KyleTrauberman Thanks, going to take a look =)
18:02
the nerd dinner site uses code first: nerddinner.codeplex.com
\o/
Thank you very much sir ^_^
did I ever mention how much I hate reading excel files?
Don't tell anyone, but I've broken our code. I hope I can fix it before anyone finds out.
3
18:12
because the few ways Microsoft offer to read them are terrible, ugly, disgusting and unstable
like both using OleDb and the Excel interop will either leak stuff inside an existing Excel process or leak the whole process altogether
I'm serious, if you read stuff from Excel with the interop and close your process without doing voodoo, you'll leave an invisible Excel lying around
crisis averted
I search for excel processes & kill them when they still run after I close my my form
but I can't work in another excel while using the program xD
I like LINQ to your mother.
18:14
it's not because yours has a one-to-many relationship that everyone else has it, Kendall.
Huh? Did you say something, or were you just making noise?
I need to be able to get some worksheet attributes, so I can't really use the OleDb approach
(which LINQ to Excel undoubtedly uses)
@zneak I certainly don't envy your position
can you read the file directly as xml?
it's not pretty XML
18:18
Excel files? lol
yes, Excel files
Excel file = zip file containing a gazillion xml files.
ok I have never looked closely
I'd use epplus but it's lgpl and all gpl variants scare me a little for non-FOSS stuff I do
I think you can use gpl software if you include it as a separate component of your application and call it via a cleanly separated interface i.e. calling the external .exe using a new Process. Ugly I know but hey.
18:37
Zneak, are you doing this for yourself, or for your company? THere's a good number of good API's (you pay for em) that can access excel documents without loading up excel
it's for my company, but I'm not sure it's going to be worth it to get a paid license
it's something some of our guys really want but management isn't too hot about
tfs.visualstudio.com > github for your own non-open source crap you don't want the world to know about.
and you don't want to use OLEDB?
I need to tell which sheets are visible, so OLEDB can't do it
although that requirement could possibly go away
I didn't even know you could "hide" an excel worksheet :P when did that come in haha
lol
dunno
right-click the sheet bar, click Hide/unhide
18:52
CopyFileEx is a bitch... someone stop me from just rolling my own file copy using BinaryReader/Writer and FileStreams...
no ones gonna stop me eh?
needs progress.
700mb files take a while to copy
users want progress!
File.Copy is what i'm using - but yea.. "not good enough" they say
oh well, make your own
TeraCopy. Because copying is a bitch.
copying locally? 700 mb should not take more than 10 seconds
18:56
Rolling your own does make sense. And it takes, what, 10 lines of code?
@JohanLarsson Depends on your disk.
700MB is a lot of ones and zeroes.
why, god dammit, why? How can it possibly be complicated for someone with enough clout as microsoft to write a decent copying algorithm for their own damn OS?
we use hamsterdisks (TM)
@KendallFrey I was thinking vanilla 7200 rpm
@JohanLarsson not locally to Compact Flash drives.
18:57
Again, TeraCopy...
@rlemon ok that sounds slow then
@JohanLarsson Who said 7200 rpm is 'vanilla'?
@JohanLarsson ohh it is.
they know it will be - optimizing for speed isn't a HUGE concern - if they can see it's still working.
@KendallFrey I say 7200 rpm is as vanilla as it gets
ofc if CopyFileEx does some magic I don't see and works lickity split vs rolling my own then yea - i'll fiddle with it for a day
18:59
would there be a point in compressing before copying?
@ChadRuppert How do you keep the hamsters running at a consistent speed? Use a flywheel? Or do you just have solid error-recovery techniques?
@JohanLarsson no, most of it would already be compressed.
@JohanLarsson Don't quite a few people still have less than that?
@ShotgunNinja complex gearing.
maybe you can find a crappy laptop with 5400? still, idk
19:00
@ChadRuppert I'd love to see a diagram.
but but but my disk is 0 rpm
trade secrets
also PETA would be angry
@JohanLarsson I'm pretty sure 5400 was an option for my laptop. It's less than a year old.
5400 is still default for low cost laptops
Afternoon, fellas.
19:01
ok I don't know much about laptops other than that they suck :D
Not if you get the right one ;)
I have tried a few high end laptops, firing up the CAD program on them have not been fun.
SSD + maxed memory makes any modern laptop sing
@JohanLarsson Maybe you forgot to budget for a video card.
19:04
1k $ video cards
in a laptop?
You were still missing something.
CAD cards are ridiculously expensive
didn't know they came in a variety that would shove in a laptop formfactor though
@ChadRuppert whoa got that wrong :D
19:05
There's nothing magical about a desktop. My laptop is faster than a lot of desktops.
I got the number for the $ very wrong
im guessing about 1-4k?
is there a syntax I can use to have a method pointer/delegate without preassigning the this argument and without reflection?
kinda like C++'s &Foo::Bar invoked with .*
Huh?
You want a delegate pointing to an instanceless instance method?
19:07
yes (obviously with a way to specify an instance)
I'd guess with composition (is that the right term?).
((Foo x) => x.Bar())
Something like that?
yeaaaaaahhh
yeah, in c++ it's kind of more straightforward
not just an Action<T>?
19:11
Yeah, unless you want to return something.
Func<T,TSomething> then?
class Foo
{
	void Bar();
};

typedef void (Foo::*BarMethod)();

/* snip */

Foo foo;
BarMethod method = &Foo::Bar;
foo.*method();
Yeah, unless you want more than one parameter.
that's pretty much what you get in c++ and what I'd like
@zneak lolwut. Go home, C++. You're drunk.
19:13
yeah, the syntax looks like it was designed by highly-intoxicated developers
OOC, why can't you use reflection?
I can and I will
I just wanted to know if someone knew something I didn't
Oh, good.
class Foo {
	public void Bar() {
	}
}

Foo foo = new Foo();
Action method = foo.Bar;
method();
Why not something like that?
because:
19:14
:P
Foo foo, frob, nicate;
BarMethod method = &Foo::Bar;
foo.*method();
frob.*method();
nicate.*method();
because the instance is now part of the delegate, and I want to be able to call the method on more objects than just one
That's just being silly.
depends on how many instances you have
I'm curious if you could possibly fool it into thinking an instance method is static.
YES!
> This method overload can create open static method delegates and open instance method delegates — that is, delegates that expose the hidden first argument of instance methods.
can you? I thought instance methods were marked as such by the clr
19:18
@zneak Yes, but they could theoretically be called as static.
You can create a delegate pointing to a method with no instance, and to call it, you must pass the instance as the first argument.
I guess it works, but since it returns an untyped Delegate, it won't be a lot better than reflection
Untyped?
No, it returns the type you pass in, you just have to cast it.
it doesn't have strongly-typed parameters, so there's no Invoke method
just a DynamicInvoke
oh
yeah, that works then
Quick! What's the difference between an argument and a parameter?
I say no diff
19:26
Actually, wrong.
let Zneak guess
I used to think they were the same for years.
I STILL think they're the same.
I know that .net parameters also include a name
but I wouldn't know if that makes them different from arguments
I am trying to implement MVVM in windows phone.. looking at this picture suggests data-layer should be a separate class:
19:28
I mean, I didn't know that arguments and parameters were 2 distinct concepts in .net
void Foo(int parameter)
{
}

Foo(argument);
Right there.
It has nothing to do with .NET.
but the article (allcomputers.us/windows_phone/…) suggests that the data fetch method is embedded in VM class
19:29
@vulcanraven I thought the Model was the Data Layer.
is it a good idea to have a separate class for DataLayer, if we have multiple models and their corresponding VMs?
that's probably the kind of difference the only people care about are the people who write parsers
@zneak Only because no one knows what the difference is.
@vulcanraven I'd say it depends on the size. If it is only 100 lines of code I say it is cool to have it in code behind. If it is an enterprise monster maybe not.
so how do you use this knowledge in your daily life?
I know I'd use it if I wrote a parser
19:30
@KendallFrey, true that. I have MVC background, so the hair-thin difference is confusing :)
I call arguments arguments and parameters parameters. No more getting them mixed up.
yes, that will probably help the people who write parsers to understand you
@vulcanraven I think what you want is User - View - ViewModel - Model - Data Access Layer - Those services.
@zneak I'm a pedant, OK?
sure, sure
haha
nice in the C# room tonight I must say!
19:35
we need more mad programmers
(mad programmers are like mad scientists, except they program)
I tried generalizing the data layer.. making the begin-request/begin-response method template-based .. unfortunately to communicate with windows phone's UI thread (dispatcher.BeginInvoke..), the response callback needs to be aware of the corresponding view..
I have been looking at functional programming a little lately, not much more than looking.
I don't think your DAL should be dealing with the UI at all.
when I read the article about good practices.. this guy suggested to keep it localized and simple (one method for the entire roundtrip): silverlightshow.net/items/…
@KendallFrey, true that.. DAL should be isolated
windows phone OS do not let you go side ways.. (WebClient may be.. but can mess with its strict asynchronous policy)
hello. is "." character allowed in subdomain names ? eg : is super.chat.stackoverflow.com valid ?
19:41
yes
and also in a domain ? what if super.chat.stackoverflow.co.uk ? how can network device make difference between subdomain and domain ?
there isn't a difference, really.
domains are considered your tld. where as .com and the rest are the internet's tld's
? there one DNS register per domain so it must make difference between domain and subdomain
So, I need some fake data and I'm running out of my own ideas. Now is your chance to be creative. haha. I need topics people would be trained on (i.e. Paper Shredding) at a company.
@tigrou Check out the info at this URL: publicsuffix.org
19:45
subdomain.domain.tld
you have subdomain.subdomain.domain.tld
parsing of TLDs is non-trivial
there are TLDs which contain up to 3 segments (and therefore 2 periods)
but in theory there could be more
co.uk, for example?
that why you cannot put anything you want just a subset : .fr .biz .com .co.uk etc...
?
Can we say "Urls are tokenized and parsed from right to left"?
also, Parliament.uk is a web address whereas most other *.uk addresses must be *.co.uk
@vulcanraven publicsuffix.org contains a data file and a set of rules for parsing TLDs
19:49
resolve tld -> resolve domainname -> resolve subdomain -> resolve sub-subdomain...
Nevermind, found some on my own.
@SteveKonves, thanks.
@vulcanraven URLs are split into 4 parts. The domain or hostname, the path, the query, and the hash.
hash?
@KendallFrey im assuming he meant "[domains or hostnames] are tokenized and parsed from right to left"
in which case he would be correct
19:50
@KendallFrey, that's right! :) in my previous comment ..correction Url <-> hostname
@tigrou, yeah the hash part of the Url.. try it in JavaScript "window.location.hash"
@vulcanraven ok hash here means '#'. i think of something else...
"#!" (like Twitter use) .. Google call it hash-bang URL .. Bing call it escaped-fragmented URLs
hash (or pound) #
Bang: ! or what I....
Bing: wtf, use google.
@RyanTernier, from SEO POV, nowadays search engine can even crawl the interactive ajaxifed content pages.. so escaped fragmented sounds formal.. hash-bang... yeah its cool :)
It's just strange to hear hash bang, where hash has always been # while bang has always been !
20:01
kiss-kiss, bang-bang ! !
The term hash-bang has nothing to do with urls.
I'm arguing the name hash-bang. it sounds so.. dumb
Binge with Bing
you can't use pointers with generics, can you?
because there's no implicit conversion between an unrestricted generic type and object and I'm not sure why
oh wait, that's a stupid question, my bad
you mean pointer with unsafe word or just references?
20:09
I meant big bad pointers, but that was an awful question
please disregard it
I get the feeling you are writing something very ugly.
how about dynamic?
it's really not ugly
zneak, if you're going to write something ugly in .NET at least do it in VB so it's incognito.
13
lol
    private Frob MappedSetting<T>(string setting)
    {
        Dictionary<string, object> mapping = mFoo.Bar<T>().ToDictionary(t => t.ToString(), t => t);
        return new Frob(setting, mapping);
    }
I didn't understand why t => t wouldn't work
20:11
what error is it giving you?
all types in .NET have .ToString()
you might need to dynamic it.
it's not that there's no conversion between T and object, it's that there's no conversion between Func<T> and Func<object>
the solution was just t => (object)t
it's not necessary for the conversion, but it's necessary for type inference
so it was a terrible question
it was a scary question
Bring up pointers like that
well, pointers are the only .net types that don't inherit from object and aren't boxable
so I was suddenly wondering if you could use them in generics
that would have opened a whole new world of hurt of possibilities
20:13
would it be more intuitive to write it like t => t as object or less ?
it's such a minimal change that I wouldn't really care
Already two no-repro bugs today. WTF, CSRs?
just two? man, no repro bugs are my daily bread
yeah, saw that on Ars earlier
20:31
yuck
20:48
yeah, thats gross
It's kinda neat.
I wish I could run some Windows apps on Android.
limited use with win8 out now though, isnt it?
Win8 is still not readily available on x86 tablets.
no, but the underlying api i thought had changed completely from the old win32 apis?
No, they are still available.
There's just more stuff.
21:00
i thought that was the whole point of winRT, to get rid of the old win32 apis?
Perhaps at some point, but you'd get Vista-like issues if they'd stripped Win32 support. Everything would break, the outrage would be immense, and Win8 would be even worse than it already is. They did remove some deprecated functions, tough, but most is intact.
sup folks
live from Software Quality Assurance class.
ok then. its RT is just the abstraction for the win32 api that people should code new stuff against (ostensibly). which wine probably should start wrapping soon. a wrapper for a wrapper for an api.. yummy
80% of projects cost more than their returns
WinRT is like WPF for C++.
let me rephrase that - not C++, but any native runtime.
21:20
hi guys
i have a dev server, production server......i want to have a source code in different server....
When are you going to stop asking?
while (true)
{
    PeterJennings.Ask(question);
    Thread.Sleep(random.Next(3600000, 36000000));
}
@ShotgunNinja - What type of projects?
@ShotgunNinja - In the first year, or over the lifetime of the software?
Notes from Software Quality Assurance class.
21:29
posted on February 04, 2013 by Scott Hanselman

I have a "whenever I get around to doing it" Newsletter of Wonderful Things. Why a newsletter? I dunno. It seems more personal somehow. Fight me. Still, it's one more site to check and it's a hassle for some of you  Dear Readers. Therefore, I will still do the newsletter, but I'll post each newsletter to the blog some weeks later. You can view all the previous newsletters her

Hasn't software changed in the past 12 years?
Software... software never changes.
The languages and tools come and go, newbies emerge, get smart, and become obsolete...
never
but software...
software never changes.
My software can turn into hardware in about 10 seconds.
2
21:30
Of course not. It isn't like an entire new market for mobile has spawned in the past dozen years.
In 2001 a mobile app was a pipe dream.
That's a line from Fall out
but war...
war never changes
Sometimes newbies emerge , troll, and become obsolete
The same problems and solutions of quality assurance remain the same as 10 years ago.
21:45
IMHO, QA is hard because the grunt work for doing good QA is boring, and nobody wants to do it
it's not a technology problem, which is why there's little improvement in the time period we're looking at
Searches for how to disable feature X.
Finds explanation on how to enable it.
closeenough.jpg
@TomW What about a gaming company?
What about it?
Who doesn't love playing games?
Doing the same level runs a billion times for each build will lose its appeal quickly IMHO
particularly a game that doesn't work properly yet, because it's an alpha
then there's walking through user stories in the (shitty) launch page or whatever your corporate berks have devised to make the game more annoying
and other such drudgery
Plus you won't always gets to QA a good game. You might be stuck with something like hello kitty. Imagine playing that 8 hours a day.
21:52
But to test software properly, you need to devise good test cases. Devising good test cases probably necessitates understanding how the damn thing is meant to work, in detail. That's just another word for formal specification, which nobody seems to want to do because it's not agile
@Will True. :(

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