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01:00
The answer applies even more to using a constructor as a replacement for main.
it does, absolutely
kind of, a constructor in the main class
which i did, which was wrong, but the idea remains the same
main method = tiny
I don't think there's anything wrong with putting the entire program into the main method, if the program is trivial.
True in this case.
If you have a complex program, it's probably a good idea to factor out much of it into objects.
thats true, you also don't need to follow any standard if its trivial, but its still a good habit to get into
01:02
But my opinion of the specific pattern where an application is run from within a constructor is that it's utter and absolute shit in C#.
usually you see something like this
How I simplify sqrt(12) + 6sqrt(3) + 2sqrt(6)?
in main
Program prog = new Program();
prog.run();
@KendallFrey Doesn't winforms do that?
and the run does everything, but i guess its the same idea as putting it in the constructor
01:04
XNA also I think
@LewsTherin No.
Probably XNA then
Pawnguy7: creating arguments everywhere, one at a time :D
It creates a window (or game object) which controls the program. It doesn't run just from within a constructor.
lol
01:05
@Steve That's fine, except for the fact that you're initializing Program.
I'd create a new class.
@KendallFrey program in this instance is a new class
@LewsTherin XNA is much the same as WinForms, except you can see the flow better.
@Steve Good.
In XNA, very little happens in the ctor. Much more happens in initialize, update, and draw.
Oh, crap, my fingers are outrunning my brain again.
Sparse arrays are fast.
Indeed
It depends in fact
Bad for memory good for speed
It's usually a tradeoff.
Yes.
01:09
When it isn't, no one notices.
I can't remember the last time I've done algorithms
does XNA... "control your loop", so to speak?
Yes, it does.
All your loop are belong to us.
As it were.
Hm. I don't like those kind of libraries...
I love XNA.
01:10
Not that hard to controll when to call update and render methods.
The learning curve is quite shallow.
I prefer something that offers function, rather than function AND make me fit it.
Compared to DirectX and OpenGL.
Of course.
I have a blue XNA xbox controller that I won at a conference by programming the best ai for a spaceship at one of the XNA booths
01:12
neat
XNA is a lot of fun
I didn't know an XNA Xbox controller was a thing.
I thought an Xbox controller was just an Xbox controller.
I have one, btw.
It has some of their style engraved on it
nift
I should count how many tabs I have open.
01:14
I just closed a bunch, I am only at 16
231
you win
231?!
i might have embellished by about 215
@TravisJ Obviously not
:P
01:15
or did you just faceroll the 1 2 and 3 keys and produced 231? :P
lol
Unless he is Superman
Or Flash
or Superflash...man
There is no way I could have that many Flash applications open.
Superflashman.. kill that superhero
01:17
I wonder if this is a good idea.
Say I have a byte that holds several pieces of data.
The first one is two bits long, and can hold 00, 01, or 10.
If and only if the first one is 01, there is a second piece of data that is X bits long.
Is it a bad idea to overlap it with the 0 in 01, since it's not used anyway?
Honest answer? Wtf are you asking?
I'm just thinking out loud.
Feel free to chime in if you have something to say.
I have no idea ha
I don't think it is as long as you are not overlapping 01 with something like 10 which could cause a logic collision.
Well, that would make 101, which is still fine.
01:21
oh I see, you want to push the 1 to the end, not the other way around
My first three bits can be one of these: -00, xx1, or -10, where x is either, and - is ignored.
would you not overlap if the base was 10 then?
The other way would be --00, xx01, or --10
I saw a good image the other day on how 2d/jagged arrays were stored in memory, anyone know what it is?
I should go, good luck with that Kendall
01:23
@CCInc Each element of a jagged array is a reference to another array.
Not necessarily a jagged array
It is a reference to another array
@TravisJ No worries, it's not a big deal. I'm just tired and contemplating nitty-gritty best practices.
Like on a 2d array, isn't each row put after another in memory so it can be stored?
@LewsTherin Derp, my bad.
@CCInc Nope, I don't think so.
That would mean slow lookup times.
How ARE they stored then?
01:25
Think of a 1d array
Each element has a pointer to an array (s)
OH yeah I remember now
In C#, are all variables, whether or not they are class members, initialized to a form of 0 or null?
jagged array == array of arrays
@Pawnguy7 Yes, I believe so.
If they are not initialized, the compiler will complain, rather than leave it until runtime.
I don't think it complains
IS that a yes or no?
01:27
Depends what exactly you mean.
@KendallFrey I don't believe so.
Well, in this case, I had...
Uninitialized variables cause compiler errors.
@Pawnguy7 Your answer is yes
@KendallFrey Uninitialized local variables
struct Point
{
    int x;
    int y;
}
01:28
There is not such thing as an uninitialized variable at runtime.
Would x and y be initialized to 0?
At least not that you can access.
Members are initialized to default values so no complaints
@Pawnguy7 Yes.
@LewsTherin I didn't say field did I?
So, class level members are initialized. But not local?
01:29
@KendallFrey Fields are also variables.
local variables are not initiliazed automatically.
@Pawnguy7 Yeah
@LewsTherin No, they're not.
I'm eating raw icing. DESPERATE
@KendallFrey Trolling?
private int i;
01:29
Of course not.
How the hell is i not a variable?
That's a field, not a variable.
:O
It is a variable, it is an attribute, as well as a member
I would define a field as a class member variable.
Variable
@LewsTherin It is most definitely not an attribute.
Attributes derive from the Attribute class.
01:31
Not attribute in that sense
Aren't attributes like Java annotations?
Yes
In object-oriented programming with classes, a class variable is a variable defined in a class (i.e. a member variable) of which a single copy exists, regardless of how many instances of the class exist. A class variable is not an instance variable. It is a special type of class attribute (or class property, field, or data member). In Java, C#, and C++, class variables are declared with the keyword static, and may therefore be referred to as static member variables. The same dichotomy between instance and class members applies to methods ("member functions") as well; a class may have bo...
(or class property, field, or data member)
I'm opening the spec.
Even consts are variables
I disagree.
01:32
Thinking about it.. it is weird to call a const variable a variable
Well, you're right according to the spec.
But that won't make me call fields variables.
FYI, it does not call consts variables.
Ah that's good
I think have seen the term const variables used in tutorials
Which is plain weird
Same here.
What? There's a whole section on variables in the spec.
Sheesus.
> C# defines seven categories of variables: static variables, instance variables, array elements, value parameters, reference parameters, output parameters, and local variables.
Even array elements.
What else would array elements be?
01:35
Just that.
Unless they are other Arrays, of course.
variable != value
Each element in array really represents a variable
me != very awake
@LewsTherin Depends on your definition.
I guess one could say a variable holds a value.
01:36
yeap
I think in C++ however you can write some shit to make each element immutable
Like readonly?
@Pawnguy7 And importantly it can change the value it holds
@KendallFrey Does readonly apply to the reference variable or to array elements?
That lol
Readonly wouldn't work on array elements me thinks
01:37
If I had 511 sheets of paper, I'd probably pull a Jon Skeet right now.
Certain array elements constant? Ehm...
I think you can make the array const in a way that you cannot modify the values through the array. Not entirely ummutable though.
immutable
Make that 527. Danged -15 base page numbering.
Did you know? VS 2012 comes with a copy of the C# spec.
01:40
I think I read something similar once
Peace out.
I always miss the debates about language features.
...maybe 10 more minutes.
I assume GetLength wouldn't work on multidimensional arrays? Or there is no method rather
If zneak doesn't have anything to say, I'm going to bed.
@LewsTherin That's precisely when it's useful.
Otherwise Length is sufficient.
01:43
I would assume GetLength requires knowing the number of dimensions
multi-dimensional arrays are a thing I really don't know enough.
Yes, but you can find that with Rank.
@zneak Same.. I never use it.
double[][,] FTW
lol
01:44
hm.
Yes, I have used a datastructure like that.
that's a multidimensional array of arrays of doubles, right
Wrong.
Good for you for reading it intuitively.
I read it un-intuitively, from right to left, isn't that what I was supposed to do?
01:45
How DO you read it?
what's the language where it's messed up then
A array of multi dimensional arrays
Storing doubles?
This shit isn't sending my messages
If A[] is an array of A, then it makes sense that A[][,] is a multidimensional array of A[].
parserfukin error
that's what I was saying, smartass
01:46
But it's not.
ah
But what IS it?
right
that's how it's messed up
I read it as an array of multidimensional arrays, say for storing an array of 2D maps.
The lanaguage designers decided to forgo logic and reasoning, and have array declarations match indexing order, not definition order.
01:47
Care to explain what it is, exactly?
indexing order? Wut
Because to access an array of 2D arrays, you do a[x][y,z]
this means that for A[][,] a, you'll write a[i][j,k] for indexing
So they made you declare it A[][,]
It's fucked up, I tell you!
makes you wonder if the Go type syntax makes sense
01:49
I don't understand why it is messed up.
Oh. Wait. Never mind, I do.
lol
Hate it when that happens :P
It's like saying a List<A[]> is an array of List<A>
Could always go A[][][] :D
01:51
unless you're scared by jagged arrays
Not uniform, of course.
Don't use an inferior data structure.
jagged is inferior?
If rectangular arrays fit, use em.
If you need a List, don't use a Dictionary.
yada yada
I am very tired.
Not the worst thing.
01:52
10 mins ago, by Kendall Frey
...maybe 10 more minutes.
In C++, you can go either A[10]...
@KendallFrey You haven't met tiredness
OR, 10[A], to access.
Yeah I know of that
01:52
night
that's actually a c feature
you can make it even funnier
int i = 4;
i[a]
Ah. Yes :D
Stop being interesting.
BYE
I heard, there was a language where there we no reserved keywords...
I cannot imagine trying to use that :\
well
it depends what you consider a keyword
say, if
Well, actually, it had keywords.
01:54
I could imagine using that
smalltalk didn't have an if keyword
It it just, you can redefine them.
It is like early languages where 1 could, in fact, equal 4, because you assigned it.
it had an if:else: message on booleans instead
and it would use blocks (much like the Objective-C blocks) to create closures
(the Objective-C blocks come straight from Smalltalk)
What are the Objective-C blocks like?
01:56
(much like everything else in Objective-C)
^{ /* C/C++/Objc code */ }
Where did smalltalk get them from?
pretty sure they invented them
So C stole them?
that or they were inspired from lisp
apple stole it
that's not standard c
I think it was a great steal though
C has braces...?
01:58
clang (Apple's compiler) supports that syntax
Perhaps I am misunderstanding the syntax.
you probably are
id block = ^{ puts("Hello world!"); };
block();
Ah.
I see.
Why is it that nobody seems to every talk about Objective-C? Maybe it is me
it's a very quirky language that people use more because they have to than because they love it
For Ios dev? :D
02:01
or mac os dev, although iOS is more popular
Understandable.
Tried Windows 8?
yeah
not a fan
Well, it looks to me like a tablet OS. But beyond that, the app store/market thing... I just don't see that being a desktop thing, but I am a programmer. Maybe "civillians" see it differently.
I really like it,
I don't like it on my computer that wasn't built for windows 8
it's probably fun with a touch screen
but I don't have one
02:03
Also - don't fix what isn't broken. The start bar has been there for years, and it WORKED. Sigh. Probably, yes.
I strongly dislike that the trackpad can be used to perform gestures because the trackpad uses relative positioning
if I make a big swipe it probably just means I want to move my cursor fast
not that I want to show the weather
Then the people supporting it, say "But wait, you can mod it to it has a taskbar using third party things." You could always do that... does not mean people want to.
I don't like the tablet paradigms because tablets are content consumption devices
and desktops can be used for content creation
Agreed.
and I'm on that side of things
so it feels like a kind of downgrade there
02:07
Mmn, I have a div layer that I want to shrink if the browser is resized, yet it should be able to wrap around contents
Is that possible with CSS?
No idea how to do it bootstrap
I don't think I understand the problem.
When if I resize the width of the browser, so that is decreasing.. the div shrinks and increases in length causing the content to spill out
Shrink you window right now
And look at the right side
See how it shrinks?
Ah.
I have no idea. That is pretty neat though.
Neat? :I
Yes. It sort of prioritizes the chat.
02:14
Right
min width and height
Hmhm.
Does it not resize automatically?
I wouldn't know, I am bad at such things.
Sigh. I cannot focus on programming anymore today.
Play a video game.
Any suggestions?
Wait, as in on the computer, or?
02:22
Either.
COmputer is vastly supirior tho,
I recommend 0A.D. for a RTS
Ah.
I once had an idea...
I have seen some games with fluid simulations.
But, you know, with blocks.
But I was thinking... could you do it with hexagons? Hm.
huuh?
Ehm... never mind.
 
1 hour later…
03:58
Hellow
@CCInc you around mate?
indeed
I need a lil help if you got a minute
ill try from tablet
tablet
?
04:00
k
I need some help converting an ASP.NET web site to an asp.net web application , anyone got a minute?
04:21
could some one explain the difference between an ASP.Net website and asp.net web application?
 
1 hour later…
05:35
Morning ppl
 
1 hour later…
06:36
@codebrain @code hey
@JohanLarsson Hi
@JohanLarsson I needed a lil help , got a minute?
hey kode
07:19
@codebrain how are ya
I am doing good kode..you ?
@codebrain stuck , but worse of all with trivial things :(
@codebrain mind helping a bit?
im tight in some work dude :(
ll be back in an hour
oh :(
well do ping me when your back
else Ill catch you tmw
yep i ll ping you mate !
 
2 hours later…
09:11
Sup y'all
Hi
nybody here?
Well this is largely a US community
with some Britons, Germans and a Dutch guy (me :P)
And they are asleep still
I'm guessing
09:28
:)
I have a small doubt..
Can I dynamically append a ajax calender etender to a a dyanamically created textbox?
09:41
is there any one who worked with perforce api .net
09:57
@kodeSeeker ?
@Action Yo!
BAWN GIORNO!

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