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19:00
It will even work on Mono!
@FredOverflow fap faster?
Anyone know how cgi works
@JohanLarsson Lol
@LewsTherin black magic
@JohanLarsson I don't fap on the toilet.
19:00
@LewsTherin CGI is the enemy of NOD.
I'm not using it.. but I need to grokk the theory
user142019
@LewsTherin webserver starts process with command-line arguments and environment variables that represent an HTTP request, IIRC.
user142019
You output a response to stdout.
@Zoidberg That's what I don't get.. like a system call?
@LewsTherin CGI? They use computers to make images and stuff, hence computer generated images. :P
19:02
@RoelvanUden Or Common Gateway Interface :D
user142019
@LewsTherin spawn process.
How is the process spawned? I know it is implementation defined but example in C?
user142019
By the web server.
user142019
IIS, Apache, Nginx.
Yes, but how
user142019
19:04
On Windows probably with CreateProcess and on POSIX with fork/execve.
how is process formed? how thread get cycles?
It doesn't use threads
A process without threads? :P
@Zoidberg I now have your email address.
user142019
Every process has at least one thread.
user142019
19:05
Okay.
@Zoidberg one
Well, te request isn't multithreaded
user142019
@KendallFrey Me too.
@Zoidberg What's this about stdout?
user142019
The server waits until the process returns.
19:05
@Zoidberg !Shit(sherlock)
user142019
@LewsTherin The file Console.WriteLine writes to.
user142019
At least, in POSIX.
user142019
I don't know what stdout is called on Windows.
@Zoidberg I know, rofl. But what does it have to do with CGI?
stdout
That's in the C stdlib
user142019
19:06
You write the HTTP response to stdout, the server reads it and sends it to the browser.
stdlib == standard library == standard
What if another process is using stdout?
user142019
Every process has its own stdout.
Each process has its own stdout
darn
stdout is just a file right?
user142019
19:07
stdout isn't necessarily the terminal.
no
a stream
user142019
It's the stream with file descriptor 1.
often the console, sometimes a file, sometimes a pipe
user142019
On POSIX, at least.
Right, yeah. stdout output stream.. cool.
user142019
19:08
Unless you're an idiot and you close it.
Where does the server store data from stdout?
user142019
CGI is basically:
Webserver reads HTTP request.
Webserver spawns process with custom environment variables, writes some data to stdin (request body, IIRC).
Process processes the request.
Process writes response to stdout.
Webserver reads stdout from process.
Webserver writes that to socket.
Say I have a JS file that will have a function appended to it at runtime. Can you come up with a way to remove that function without removing the code?
user142019
And as you might have guessed, CGI is slow as a dog.
@KendallFrey Store it in a variable and clear the variable when you want.
19:10
@Zoidberg Then it closes the process?
user142019
@KendallFrey inline it. :P
I can't.
user142019
@LewsTherin it waits until the process terminates.
I have no control over it.
@Zoidberg hm? Really? I thought cgi was for those times where nothing else was fast enough
user142019
19:11
You spawn a process on every request.
user142019
Of course it's slow.
Yep
Process = heavyweight
So make an OS where it isn't.
Ok, give me a few seconds
@Zoidberg What alternative do you suggest that would run circles around cgi?
19:12
tap tap tap
@KendallFrey: delete function
@Zoidberg ah, I was thinking specifically of compiled C++ cgi modules.
@drch I should try that, just to wreak havoc on our program.
user142019
@FredOverflow worker servers and load balancer.
19:13
@drch Ah, you can't.
how come?
You can reassign it, but not delete
in general or in this specific problem
@MikeF this looks kimbasinger ;)
19:15
@drch In general. I tested with node
Do you really need to delete a function in node?
user142019
delete f;
user142019
Just because you can.
No, you can't.
delete returns false
If the function is part of an object, such as the exports of a module, it will work.
19:18
in node or in js
@KendallFrey ^
node, which is js
well in js you can
im not sure if node behaves differently
What about JScript?
user142019
You can use Node with C++.
You can use Node without C++.
user142019
19:19
Indeed.
user142019
But Node isn't necessarily JavaScript.
I have used V8 with C# already. That was pretty good.
@Zoidberg What?
user142019
1 min ago, by Zoidberg
You can use Node with C++.
user142019
1 min ago, by Kendall Frey
node, which is js
Node in C++, or C++ in Node?
user142019
19:21
Node with C++.
WTF are you referring to?
user142019
You can write extensions for Node with C++, hence you can use Node with C++.
var obj = {foo : function() { }};
console.log(typeof(obj.foo));
delete obj.foo;
console.log(typeof(obj.foo));
Oh.
@drch Not function properties, function declarations.
function drch() { ... }
delete window.foo
19:22
delete drch;
false
user142019
JavaScript's a joke.
Also, no window object here
@Zoidberg JokeScript
@Zoidberg But a darn good one.
user142019
No.
user142019
19:23
Type system is too weak.
user142019
ØScript
A small snippet of some JS I have been obfuscating: d&(-~[]<<y)+~[]
var module = {exports: {}};
module.exports.a = function () {
  console.log('I am called');
};
module.exports.a(); // Works.
delete module.exports.a;
module.exports.a(); // Undefined
@KendallFrey
Again, that's a property and an anonymous function.
user142019
XY question.
19:25
There is no Y.
I'm just curious.
You cannot delete a global function, that is impossible. But note that a global function in node is not global at all. It's just available in that module. I don't get why you need to delete a global function..
user142019
Oh. :P
user142019
I thought you were doing evil things.
I am, but unrelated to this.
user142019
D:
19:26
The floppy drive.
Or was that A:
user142019
That's A: and B:.
in my day a: was the 5.25 and b: was 3.5
i don't remember what D: was. I know it wasn't the CD though
user142019
Drive letters are bad.
user142019
D: was optical drive on my old computer.
user142019
19:27
And my second partition on my current computer.
Whose dumb idea was it to make a hard drive C: every time?
user142019
It's just a generic drive letter.
does anyone know of any alternatives to a master/slave architecture
user142019
@KendallFrey A: and B: were floppy already.
@Zoidberg Backwards for me.
@Zoidberg So screw the floppy.
19:28
How do I write my own stdout?
user142019
@StuartBlackler context please.
@StuartBlackler Equal opportunity employer.
user142019
@LewsTherin you cannot.
@LewsTherin You can redirect your output, maybe.
user142019
Or well.
19:29
@Zoidberg in distributed computing. I am thinking something like master/master but I dont know if that is the correct terminology
@KendallFrey Thanks
user142019
You can open("/dev/stdout").
Isn't stdout or stdin just a process that directs streams
/dev ftw
@Zoidberg I used to have two floppy drives back in the days!
19:29
@LewsTherin It's a stream that has been redirected by the process.
user142019
@LewsTherin linux.die.net/man/3/stdout has a nice explanation of the standard streams.
mongo replication sets can promote themselves to master if the master goes down
@FredOverflow They've had floppies since Adam got kicked out of Eden. If you know what I mean.
but you need to have an arbiter in case two go for master at the same time
@KendallFrey no
19:31
@StuartBlackler: each node "votes" for the new master
thanks @drch
then theres also just standard peer to peer
I vote Jon Skeet.
@Zoidberg Fair enough
What happens if I call a virtual method from inside a constructor in C#?
19:32
DONT
d not
do not
user142019
Stop not answering his question.
2
If Kendall Frey does not know what it does, you probably shouldn't do it.
it will call the subclass method before initializing members
19:33
@FredOverflow interesting things. You can do it, but it's generally frowned upon.
@drch Why? Wasn't it obvious at the time that Java does it wrong?
user142019
@FredOverflow What happens if you call a non-static member function in Java? Because all non-static member functions are virtual, right?
@redtuna Like masturbating on an airplane?
@Zoidberg private methods and final methods are non-virtual.
@KendallFrey put that in your C# book. "Calling a virtual method in your constructor is like..."
19:34
And if a class has no subclasses loaded yet, then the virtualness is optimized away.
user142019
public class A { public virtual Foo(); }
public class B { public B() { (new A()).Foo(); } }
user142019
@KendallFrey ( Í¡° ͜ʖ Í¡°)
I just threw up a little in my pants.
So why is calling a virtual method in ctor bad again?
user142019
@LewsTherin lemme give an example.
19:37
The same way as wearing a condom inside out. It wasn't designed for that.
@LewsTherin Because unlike C++, the derived version will be called, but the derived object hasn't established its invariants yet.
string dealWithIt = "";
dealWithIt = "B      :)";
dealWithIt = " B     :)";
dealWithIt = "  B    :)";
dealWithIt = "   B   :)";
dealWithIt = "    B  :)";
dealWithIt = "     B :)";
dealWithIt = "      B:)";
dealWithIt = "       B)";
ha
@Pheonixblade9 Did you forget += deliberately?
@LewsTherin yes
user142019
19:38
public class Base {
    public Base() {
        Foo();
    }

    public virtual void Foo() { }
}

public Derived : Base {
    private int x;

    public Derived() : base() {
        x = 42;
    }

    public override void Foo() {
        if (x != 42) {
            LaunchMissiles(); // oopsie
        }
    }
}
@FredOverflow its invariants?
You know, I have a ncurses-like library that would animate that quite well
@LewsTherin The things you know about your object once the constructor has finished executing.
"oopsie" lmao
Kim Jong Un calls virtual methods in his constructor.
user142019
The point is that you're calling a method on an object that hasn't yet been constructed.
user142019
19:40
That's very, very bad.
@Zoidberg Alright, so x hasn't been initialized
user142019
@LewsTherin x is default-initialized to 0, then base() is called, base() calls Foo(), and Foo() launches missiles if x != 42, then Foo() returns and B() sets x to 42.
its initialized
That's a good point. Must remember that. You should come here often @FredOverflow
What happens if you assign at declaration?
19:41
@drch Initialized to 42
if it was private int x = 100
it would be 100, not 0
and not 42
@drch I don't think so..
?
That just gets moved to the ctor, no? So the same problem
@KendallFrey In Java, its still assigned after the base constructor has run. Dunno about C# rules.
Oh yeah.. maybe I am thinking Java, "oopsie"
user142019
Java is oopsie anyway because you're already screwed if you use it.
19:43
@FredOverflow So does C++ really call the base instead of the derived, just because it is used in the ctor?
@LewsTherin Yes, because the vptr points to the base vtable.
@FredOverflow At which point does it point to the derived?
Good question. I would guess as soon as the base version is finished.
user142019
In C++ it's UB isn't it?
I see. Cool... so many rules.. I need a bigger brain :D
19:45
just get resharper
it will warn you so you dont have to think as much
That won't help lol
user142019
Just use common sense and don't call virtual methods in a ctor.
user142019
I use Vim.
For C#?
user142019
Yes.
19:46
You masochist.
JOOR SO LEETZ
I already had that typed btw.. I knew you'd say yes
user142019
@LewsTherin why?
user142019
Vim is great.
But VS is greater.
19:47
intellisense
mouse
nuget
No annoying insert, or escape shiz
I'd even take gedit over vim
user142019
@drch Yes you really use a mouse when typing.
Oh haha
no, but jumping to implementations or viewing decompiled sources or meta
19:49
A programmer is a problem solver who knows a programming langauge.
cant do that in vim i dont think
programming != writing code
user142019
Install a plug-in that does it.
user142019
I can't live without Vim.
Prove it.
19:50
No pain and he'd die
ba dum tsss
@Zoidberg I don't think so, but I'm not sure.
hi, does anybody know how to control the tab key functionality on a windows form.
when I press the tab key, it moves from and to random components, not really in any logical order.
Yes, there's a button you can use to set tab order.
I haven't used it in a long time.
But it gets you to click on the controls in order and assigns the tab orders.
where is that button?
19:53
2
A: Setting the TabIndex property in WinForms

Hans PassantNo, the designer doesn't 'fix' the TabIndex you set. There's an interactive tool to set them. Use View + Tab Order and click the controls in the order you want to tab them.

Somewhere in the program.
shrug
user142019
I love C# so much.
I love Java more
Ok, I see it.
19:55
I use it everyday. Swing, Servlets, JSF. Java FTW
user142019
Die.
@Zoidberg Gladly
@Zoidberg He probably can't commit suicide without handling some checked exception.
19:56
:P
user142019
@FredOverflow Use JNI to write a Pointer class and dereference a null pointer.
If I don't use a checked exception.. I could kill others
@Zoidberg Is this the C# room or the JS room? :)
user142019
@FredOverflow With the current room description, they're practically the same room.
19:57
:)
user142019
@KendallFrey He means Java Sucks, not JavaScript.
We're hiring intermediate->Senior level .NET guys in Victoria BC if anyone is interested... Free starbucks, free lunches most days, great pay, and you get to live in Victoria BC.
JS === JavaScript. WTF
lol.. appreciates the use of the ===
user142019
I like Ruby's === "is in" operator.
19:58
@RyanTernier how much is great pay
user142019
(1..10) === 5
less then exuberant, more than average
Why stop at 3? Why not have a ===== operator?
is there a range?
user142019
19:59
@FredOverflow In Haskell you can!
user142019
@drch you don't say.
How long can operators get in Haskell? Arbitrarily long?
user142019
(1..10) === 5 checks whether 5 "is in" (1..10), which is true.
Can I have a =>=>=> operator?

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