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user1174868
17:19
I have a fairly basic programming question about my code in java
pretty dead in here though :D
Ask the q and hang around for a while is probably your best bet
user1174868
I have a double array inside of a counter. It goes through the whole array. Anyways
if (Character.isDigit(board1[row][col]) && row > 0 && col > 0 && row++ < r && col++ < r) is the line, where r is 10 and I am getting an error when that a statement under that is executed inside of that conditional and I get array index out of bounds 10. The statement is trying to call row + 1
row++ < r looks a lil strange
@Jordan It's in the wrong order
user1174868
r is 10
user1174868
17:22
It should be correct though, I am using row in the call
why not row < (r-1)
user1174868
and r as a global variable
user1174868
Would it be different?
I don't know when row++ increments row but it does at some point
user1174868
the whole code is like 100 lines long
17:23
you know that row++ is the same as row= row +1 right?
user1174868
yes
user1174868
oh
user1174868
no
user1174868
I am not a smart person
problem solved?
user1174868
17:25
sort of
user1174868
I have a few bugs still
user1174868
thanks though
user1174868
I can't believe I didnt realzie that
Excuse of the day: It is Sunday.
and tomorrow we can use Monday
17:29
Indeed.
i need a teacher for programming, im obviously a retard in this
get a book
That, or keep buggering on until everything suddenly snaps into place.
I still fondly remember the times when I couldn't understand API docs.
Back then it was all Google.
It's still all google, just for different reasons these days.
user142019
Oh that were good times.
user142019
17:40
Programming felt like alchemy.
user1174868
I still don't understand API docs, they aren't descriptive enough
I remember raging at C for requiring dot notation one time, and an arrow notation the second time. Hell I never realized those were the differences memory. I was so naive. :-)
user142019
C# has the same. :')
The memory principles are the same, yeah, but someone who doesn't have a clue about that will not be bothered by it due to the dot notation representing every operation on each type of memory.
user142019
I had that while learning C++.
user142019
17:47
@RoelvanUden (*x). instead of x-> problem solved. :>
user142019
Go uses . for both pointers and non-pointers.
One of my favorite things to try and explain to people is how Java is strictly pass-by-value (and C# is pass-by-value by default). That combined with reference types is something of a brain bender. :)
user142019
You pass references (or primitives) by value. :')
user142019
If you understand pointers, it's quite easy to grasp.
user142019
17:52
But Java programmers don't understand pointers. :v
Most people attending my Uni don't understand pointers either mwhahaha
Hi all
Hi @LewsTherin
Hey hey
I come back after many daysssssssssssssss.
hw r U buddy...??
It has been a while indeed! I have never seen you :-)
17:55
Lol
@MRS1367 Tired.. but fine. You?
Hi @RoelvanUden
user142019
@RoelvanUden Most people attending my uni don't even know how to write a while loop. :|
I'm fine
@Zoidberg Touche.
@RoelvanUden Knockout rules! No bloody C# in my views. Except where I am creating forms. Bloody brilliant!
@Zoidberg A classmate in the final year asked me what a constructor is..
user142019
17:56
lol
I've a question in multi-threading...
user1174868
@LewsTherin Was he is construction?
@LewsTherin You can abolish C# completely and move to NodeJS! Happy times!
user1174868
lol
user1174868
17:57
How can someone not know what a constructor is and get a CS degree? Or was it not cs?
user142019
We once had to write a function that generated a random string of a given length. I used recursion instead of a for loop and none of my classmates I showed it to understood it.
I want to create a thread until a for loop run
@RoelvanUden I tried NodeJS, but I just don't like it. I'm not sure why.. too much Servlets resemblance maybe?
and I want to use from for loop counter in every thread
In order to understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.
17:57
@Jordan Yes, CS degree. Sad indeed.
so...
user142019
Node.js would have been great if it didn't have callback hell.
@Rytmis Rofl :P
@LewsTherin Everything is dependent on what you are doing and using. I use KnockoutJS and NodeJS+Express+MongoDB for the back-end for projects, it is quite nice. :-)
Aren't there compiled-to-javascript languages that neaten that up a bit, much like async/await?
17:58
@Zoidberg Yeah!
I seem to recall seeing a presentation
when I use from counter, it not worked very well in threads
can any one help me?
await something 'la', defer err, result
@Rytmis Great, you gave me a stackoverflow
user142019
17:59
@LewsTherin IcedCoffeeScript has await and defer which kind of fixes it.
user142019
I haven't used it extensively, though.
my code is:
user142019
(CoffeeScript > JavaScript anyway.)
@LewsTherin
@RoelvanUden Where does the View come in NodeJS? Do you have it right in the .js file?
17:59
@LewsTherin A Stack Overflow on StackOverflow. Isn't that a bit... meta?-)
@LewsTherin Node is not a web app framework, so... it depends on what framework and view engine you use.
for (int intFilesCntr = 0; intFilesCntr <= strResourceFiles.GetLength(0) - 1; intFilesCntr++)
{
lstIntFilesIndex.Add(intFilesCntr);

Thread eachFiles = new Thread(() =>
{
if (strResourceFiles[intFilesCntr].IndexOf('.') == -1)
{
for (int intResourcesCntr = 0; intResourcesCntr <= lstStrAllResourcesVarNames.Count - 1; intResourcesCntr++)
{
if (strResourceFiles[intFilesCntr] == lstStrAllResourcesVarNames[intResourcesCntr][0])
{
foreach (DictionaryEntry dicEntry in resourceSet)
{
if (dicEntry.Key.ToString() == lstStrAllResourcesVarNames[intResourcesCntr][0])
(see full text)
@LewsTherin If you use KnockoutJS you don't need a View on the server-side, as that is on the client-side already. You just use NodeJS as a back-end for data persistence, database access, and so forth.
ExpressJS seems to be fairly popular. Comes with a number of built-in view engines.
user142019
With Express I always used Jade.
for (int intFilesCntr = 0; intFilesCntr <= strResourceFiles.GetLength(0) - 1; intFilesCntr++)
                {
                    lstIntFilesIndex.Add(intFilesCntr);

                    Thread eachFiles = new Thread(() =>
                    {
                        if (strResourceFiles[intFilesCntr].IndexOf('.') == -1)
                        {
                            for (int intResourcesCntr = 0; intResourcesCntr <= lstStrAllResourcesVarNames.Count - 1; intResourcesCntr++)
                            {
(see full text)
@RoelvanUden
18:00
Holy crap that looks scary.
user142019
Eww.
@RoelvanUden Ah, of course. That makes sense. I'm still getting used to that stuff. You simply pass the json back to the client.
plz see my code
and help me
user142019
Try writing different functions.
Otherwise, you can use Express and the template language of your preferences. Jade is popular, as is EJS. You might even like Gaikan (self promotion, since I wrote it!)
18:00
@MRS1367 check out Parallel.Foreach
zoidberg
I know
this example code
What the hell is that.
Or rathery, why the hell.
not my main code
user142019
for (int intResourcesCntr = 0; intResourcesCntr <= lstStrAllResourcesVarNames.Count - 1; intResourcesCntr++) just use i as the variable name for loop counters.
@MRS1367 If you write code like that, you should be shot.
user142019
18:01
Also, foreach.
okkkk
No dude
user142019
And maybe you can rewrite this even using LINQ.
its an example
If nobody wrote code like that, I'd be out of a job
18:02
Just re-writing the if statements to continue will clear up some mess.
okkkkkk
user142019
:)
Woob woob woob woob
/me scuttles sideways
for (int intFilesCntr = 0; intFilesCntr <= strResourceFiles.GetLength(0) - 1; intFilesCntr++)
                {
                    lstIntFilesIndex.Add(intFilesCntr);

                    Thread eachFiles = new Thread(() =>
                    {

                            if (strResourceFiles[intFilesCntr].IndexOf('.') == -1)
                            {

                            }
                            else
                            {

                            }

                    });
(see full text)
you can see my example in short
What in Bob's name are you trying to achieve?
18:03
I'm a fucking genius. I just re-wrote 4 major classes and nothing broke without even testing in-between.
@MRS1367 Ugh, don't have a lambda spanning over 5 lines. That should be refactored to its own method
@JohanLarsson -> tnx, I check it.
lambda reply!
I will use delegate for my code
and add several methods to do my jobs
And use obvious names.. I find names to be the hardest
18:05
So what's the assignment? Process each file in its own, separate thread in the most obscure way imaginable?
Naming variables and methods is a real chore, yeah.
but first, I want to know about this problem and a solution
hey someone give me standard tips on developing MVC web app and mobile apps!
@codebrain Read the ASP.NET MVC4 Apress book :-)
I have started to use really short (char) names for variables in methods. Find it cleaner for short methods
18:06
and after, I will write my code in better form...
its 400 pages long Roel
Methinks he's looking for distilled wisdom
@codebrain It is. So, read it, and you have all the standard tips you could need :D
1. Don't write code that sucks.
2. Try to avoid bugs
3. Unit testing is kind of important
huh :P :(
18:07
4. So is acceptance testing
^ Point #1-#4 are good.
OK, let's see if I can come up with MVC specifics.
1. Seperate models, controllers and views.
2. Don't do crazy logic in a view.
3. A controller should not access the database directly.
4. Think about sessions and security.
If you create view models, try to avoid re-using them. It tends to lead to classes where each call site uses about a third of the class but not the rest, which is stupid and confusing.
That is to say, make your view models specific to the place where you're using them. Put just enough stuff in them that you'll get by, and no more.
Governing rule in everything we do; BE LAZY.
18:09
IoC is good for testability. I've grown used to using Autofac.
@RoelvanUden Edit them to one and have stars?
I am yet to try any IoC
user142019
The inverse of IoC is control.
As per your request:
If you use an O/R mapper like EF or NHibernate for your model, don't try to mock it out in your unit tests. Instead, use SQLite or somesuch as an in-memory database.
18:10
1. Seperate models, controllers and views.
2. Don't do crazy logic in a view.
3. A controller should not access the database directly.
4. Think about sessions and security.
@JohanLarsson -> I can't use Parallel.ForEach in my problem
@MRS1367 foreach, Task.Run() and your logic. Done!
@MRS1367 ok did not read it carefully as it was unreadable :)
I read it
If you find yourself writing code that gets an entity by its id in most of your actions, you'll probably want to write a model binder.
18:11
but I need to use from 1 counter for extract some data from my lists and arrays
@Rytmis Isn't that still integration testing? Noticed "in memory" though
Start writing tests early, because getting all your code into a testable shape later on is a huge pain.
@RoelvanUden -> I check it.
@LewsTherin Strictly speaking yes, but experience leads me to say that being that strict about the definition is not very useful.
user142019
Writing tests is boring.
18:12
Agreed
i want to access some data in my arrays and lists for each files
runnin' out of stars
@LewsTherin It's not reasonably possible to unit test ASP.NET MVC in a way that doesn't involve constructing at least some parts of the MVC pipeline, so technically it's "not unit testable"
user142019
I use the type system and limit side-effects to prevent myself from writing too much broken code.
@Rytmis Yeah, unless you mock the shiz out of it
18:13
@LewsTherin I try to ensure that I only ever test a single of my own components -- the number of infrastructure components needed to get there is irrelevant, IMO.
Well yes, but then you'll end up writing logic in your mocks. Consider something like generating URLs, which won't work without an actual route table and an URL helper.
And writing code that heavily depends on a crapload of mocks leads to unmaintainable tests.
... at least when I do it.
user142019
Use strongly-typed routes instead of strings.
Hmm. Sounds like something I should know about but don't...
let's google that
Writings tests is ok, writing mocks is boring
I've seen examples with a lot of mocking.. that I wonder if people ever get to the actual code. It is distasteful.
@Zoidberg At a glance, I don't see how that solves the problem I'm thinking about -- albeit that may very well be a different problem from the one I managed to describe...
user142019
18:16
It doesn't solve the same problem.
user142019
But it does solve the problem of broken links and easy changing of routes. :)
user142019
Though a function url_for or something can also do it (Flask and Ruby on Rails have something similar).
user142019
public abstract class Route {
    public static Route FromString(string s) {
        // could be more efficient, you get the point
        Match match;
        if (matchUrl("/", s)) { return new HomeRoute(); }
        if (match = matchUrl("/users/:id", s)) { return new UserRoute(match.id); }
    }
}
public sealed class HomeRoute : Route { public string ToString() { return "/"; } }
public sealed class UserRoute : Route {
    public int UserId { get; set; }
    public UserRoute(int userId) { UserId = userId; }
(see full text)
Sheesh, that looks like effort
user142019
Generate it. :P
18:21
I've always preferred higher-level abstractions to generated code.
Dunno if that's good or bad.
user142019
Me too.
user142019
Or at least… metaprogramming.
Ask me again in ten years, and you'll get a different answer.
Possibly.
So you have a class Route that returns HomeRoute or UserRoute, which both extend Route.. mind fuck
user142019
But C#'s metaprogramming capabilities are quite limited to runtime reflection.
18:22
Strong opinions, weakly held and all that.
what is metaprogramming? lazy here
user142019
@JohanLarsson writing of programs that manipulate other programs as their data.
That's a rather lispy way of defining the term
user142019
18:23
With reflection in C#, for example, you can write a program that uses IL (very roughly, usually as higher-level data structures) as its data.
C++ metaprogramming is a mind fuck
That's hardly the common metaprogramming scenario in C#, though, is it?
user142019
@LewsTherin Template metaprogramming is awesome!
user142019
Pure functional, Turing-complete, compile-time programming ftw!
You could also say it's writing a program that instead of solving the problem directly, generates a solution to the problem.
18:24
@Zoidberg I am staying far away from it as much as possible, until I mature
is using attributes metaprogramming then?
I'd consider that a form of it, yes.
But (this may come as a shock to you) obviously I don't get to define the term. :)
I think so too
user142019
I think attributes are more of a way add metadata to code, but you could consider it metaprogramming.
Well yes, adding an attribute isn't metaprogramming as such
However, writing code that accesses them is.
So if you use framework-provided attributes, someone else has done the metaprogramming for you.
Or something to that general effect.
user142019
18:26
Lisp is master in metaprogramming.
More of a mind fuck?
user142019
Not to mention Template Haskell. :333
Ooooooooh.. you had to mention Haskell
user142019
Allows you to modify the AST at compile-time!
@LewsTherin lol, you know Haskell?
user142019
18:30
There are only ten people on the planet who know Haskell.
@JohanLarsson I've had the misfortune to use it. Misfortune because my lecturer sucked :( I learnt it briefly myself and it was fine ha
user1125394
@Zoidberg irc has 1000 users
IIRC*
user142019
@c'c those are all bots.
user1125394
template haskell, never tried but seems not that a good idea
user142019
18:40
It should be used sparingly.
user142019
But it's very powerful.
@Lews!!!
@Zoidberg What is Haskell actually used for?
@Lews Y YOU NO JAVA NO MORE?
@Code-Guru Hey hey! A while :)
user1125394
18:41
@CCInc mathematicians likes it
@Code-Guru I'm still doing Java.. but no one interesting in the room lol
very strong mathematical background
@LewsTherin yah...I got scared away, too
Y???
I IZ IN TAT ROOMZ
The room got overrun by noobs
case in point =p
18:42
Lol
user1125394
haskell_in_kindergarden
It's quiet in there as usual
ME IZNT TEH N00B!!!
IZ A OWNERZ
@Zoidberg hmm...an update to GHC today, huh?
probably wont' dl it...but nice to know
user142019
Apparently.
user142019
18:44
It's a single bug fix related to the type checker.
@Lews so read AMOL yet?
Nope, not yet. And not even after May. I have to reread the entire series :)
read it soon!
I'd love to but I have assignments and exams :( I miss reading.. a lot
I decided not to reread the whole series...I might go back and read from COS to the end again...but I also have a lot of other reading I want to do...
18:47
Yeah, I still have ASoIaF to read
I had to make time to read when I was in school. Most nights it was just a few pages or maybe a chapter just before (or while) falling asleep.
And E Feist, Sanderson.. oh my
When I was in school I read every fucking day.
@LewsTherin I haven't read the last one yet...DwD, right?
I even read in class
@Code-Guru I haven't even read CoK! :(
@LewsTherin I mean my pleasure reading...not just school assignments =p
18:49
i heard you love the cok
hiyoo
@Code-Guru Not school assignments.. novels in class ha ;)
I never paid attention, which I sorta regret now.
user142019
I read only blogs and bad (hey, that's redundant!) Stack Overflow posts.
@LewsTherin so Y U NO READ AMOL? =p
@drch Rofl, you dirty **** :P
well...I'd usually put the book down during the lecture...at least long enough to jot down a few notes.
18:50
@Code-Guru College is mildly important :P But I need a good result for the job I'm offered :D
yah, there's that...
you should still make some time for pleasure reading!
and not just the Playboy "articles", either...
Pleasure reading, makes me think of Sherrilyn Kenyon
never read her
I suggest you avoid reading that in the public. I learnt that the hard way
18:52
I think the book I was reading then was Acheron.. omfg..
@JohanLarsson :(
@LewsTherin I kind of wondered if it was that kind of reading...
@LewsTherin trust me and read it, it is beautiful, also short.
@Code-Guru Actually, I think I got the authors confused. Oh well fuck it. Its been a while
@JohanLarsson I'm not really into short books. Except for Goosebumps and Spook.. when I was yet a teenager
Nostalgic
lol
never read either of those
Are you serious?
I thought every kid read that.
user142019
18:57
user142019
This is the only good book.
Goosebumps, Spook, Animorphs
I did indeed read Goosebumps. God, in hindsight, those were bad
user142019
I never finished a book.
@LewsTherin I wasn't exactly a kid when Goosebumps was first published...
18:57
I think I knew they were really bad in some way when reading them, but the barrier entry was so low...
@TomW Of course :P
@Code-Guru Oops, sorry :P
user142019
I almost finished Learn You a Haskell for Great Good! but it's non-fiction.
@LewsTherin yup...I was in high school when the first one came out ;-)
18:58
@Code-Guru Did you see the last episode? Does Martin have a favorite character?
@LewsTherin I haven't even seen season 2 yet ;-(
@Zoidberg Your'e gonna like this
user142019
lolwot
user142019
brb
in fact, I didn't finish season 1. The disc I rented skipped towards the end of the last episode.
18:59
You've probably read it anyway.. Jaime gets held by Brienne?
@LewsTherin What do you mean "held"?

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