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21:00
Last I checked anyway
@DigitalD: ditto, but i also dont like to have to check null in foreach
"I thought we had added feature X" You were involved in the conversation where we decided to remove it, bub.
user142019
See the sidebar.
Ah, 16 is a nice number.
21:01
16..
Yep
user142019
Contravariance and covariance are so awesome.
Why not use variadic lamdas?
@drch understandable. I like showing a "there aren't any students in this course" kinda messages. which mean I have to check for Students.Count > 0 anyway
I guess if you have 16 args you are doing something wrong.. lol
user142019
C#, why not have variadic generics?
user142019
21:02
And template metaprogramming! :D
Yeah, because those are totally needed for C# business apps :)
> Sorry, we went bankrupt because C# doesn't have variadic generics!
user142019
lol
@DigitalD: in pocos where I actually expect it to be assigned, I'll sometimes just init to Enumerable.Empty so i can still safely do .Count or .Any etc
21:04
> Also, we couldn't compute Fibonacci numbers at compile-time!
I still don't get how metaprogramming executes stuff at compile time
Is that built into the compiler itself?
user142019
I like how C# refers to tuple elements as Item1, Item2 etc because of the lack of non-type generic parameters.
user142019
@LewsTherin of course.
@LewsTherin It's an emergent artifact that was never intended.
user142019
How else would it be compile-time?
21:06
You can parameterize templates not only with types, but also with numbers. That and template specialization give you a purely functional Turing-complete language with the worst syntax ever.
So basically one can execute functions at compile time and feed it as a temporary into a piece of code?
Wait.. how does it decide whether to execute a function?
@drch Ahh. Everything I'm doing right now is EF in MVC, so I haven't had to think about that.
at least the way I've been building it.
This is so fkn nice, huge transcript full of programing stuff
@Zoidberg I will get around to it when I finish college.. but compile time must be slow ;)
@JohanLarsson Indeed
user142019
21:08
Compiling C++ programs with a lot of template instantiations usually takes a lot of time.
user142019
Especially when there's a lot of recursion.
@LewsTherin TMP functions look very funny:
template<int N> struct fac
{
    enum { value = N * fac<N-1>::value };
};

template<> struct fac<0>
{
    enum { value = 1 };
};

const int answer = fac<10>::value;   // compile-time constant
user142019
But yeah, C# has runtime reflection.
Oh fuck
I don't miss that
Mind == blown!
user142019
@FredOverflow int constexpr factorial(int n) { return n < 2 ? 1 : n * factorial(n - 1); } FTW.
21:09
@Zoidberg constexpr != TMP
user142019
I know!
user142019
It's even better than TMP!
@FredOverflow Why use int N? No use with the template stuff then
@LewsTherin Not sure what you mean. N is used in the body.
user142019
You can to template<typename T, T N> if you want any integral type and not just int.
21:11
Yeah
@Zoidberg Do you have sublime Text? Try and see what happens if you forget a semicolon at the end of a class or struct :)
user142019
@FredOverflow red line.
constexpr must be a C++11 thingy
user142019
But no, I don't use Sublime Text.
@Zoidberg Awesome, isn't it? :)
user142019
21:11
I have used it but I prefer Vim.
@LewsTherin yes
user142019
@FredOverflow SublimeClang is fucking awesome.
Is this the C# room? :D
What is that, a Vim plugin? :)
user142019
It's a Sublime Text plugin.
21:12
@LewsTherin I'm sorry, we have to discuss C++ somewhere, and C++ is not welcome in the C++ room.
user142019
With code completion and live diagnostics from clang. Just like Xcode.
@FredOverflow Hahaha
Did C++11 remove template specializations?
user142019
No.
That sucks
user142019
21:13
They should have removed the specialization for std::vector<bool> though. :'(
user142019
@LewsTherin Why?
What's wrong with template specializations?
user142019
Template specializations are awesome.
Isn't it slow?
user142019
I miss them in C#.
21:14
You couldn't have computed functions at compile-time in C++98 without them!
@LewsTherin What, the compiler?
Yeah.. I mean it has to generate shiz for each type at compile time.. although I guess it makes things faster at runtime
Oh, you're talking about that meaning of the word template specialization :)
Unless I got it wrong.. I haven't done C++ in years
Yeah, that's the C++ way of doing it. Each type gets its own "bytecode".
It also means there is no need for boxing and unboxing of primitives.
Wait, so there are two meanings to template specialization?
21:17
Yes. The first is the one you mean, which almost everybody else calls "template instantiation" (but the correct standard term is indeed "template specialization"). The second can be seen in my TMP example: template<> struct fac<0>. That is, when the argument is 0, do something special.
in Game Development on The Stack Exchange Network Chat, 8 mins ago, by ToddersLegrande
Alright, since you are obviously new to [technology] let me break it down for you. Let's take a look at this code block.

[Copy and paste all of the code]

To a seasoned programmer such as my self, it's obvious there is a problem starting at [first line] and goes on until [last line]. This just isn't implemented properly. I think if you replace [first line] through [last line] with code that works you'll find that your problem is solved.

Refer to [link to official documentation] if you run into troubles since you should be able to find everything you need to solve this problem there as well.
2
@FredOverflow I see. Thanks
TMP is such a mindfuck
C# generics is straightforward, mostly
C++ is just, to quote a wise man: "C**k in fkn a**"
void Blah<T,U> straightforward
user142019
But TMP is a lot more powerful.
21:21
I can't remember how it is done in C++
To imagine TMP templates
user142019
template<typename T, typename U> void Blah
@LewsTherin Are you referring to anal insertion of the genital?
So the generics come before the method signature
@FredOverflow Lol
user142019
It has a reason.
user142019
Because C++ is retarded beyond PHP and cannot find out names before they are declared.
21:22
I think I read once because of memory or CPU shiz
user142019
void foo() {
    bar(); // illegal T_T
}

void bar() { }
user142019
C89 could do it! :D
Yeah, so it needs a prototype
Or it declared before foo()
What was the reason again? I'm pretty sure the article said memory management or CPU..
user142019
void foo() {
    static_cast<void(*)()>(::dlsym("bar"))(); // lol
}

extern "C" void bar() { }
What does names have to do with template methods anyway?
21:25
@Zoidberg Don't be lazy.
user142019
template<typename T /* T is now available */>
T foo();
user142019
T /* oops! what is T? */ foo<typename T>() { } // this wouldn't work because C++ is retarded
Right I see
Is there a way to separate template<typename T> somewhere else?
user142019
I think not.
@Zoidberg Inside a class, it's legal :)
user142019
21:26
Right. :P
user142019
@FredOverflow But this is illegal:
user142019
class foo {
    decltype(x) foo();
    int x;
};
@LewsTherin There is if you use a certain compiler with a C++ feature that has been removed from the standard :)
Dang :(
user142019
Haha.
user142019
21:27
Comeau C++ Compiler.
Come aun!
user142019
export is still a reserved word. :)
@LewsTherin Dang? Is that the D version of Clang?
user142019
dang is clang with wrong keming.
@Zoidberg Yeah, in case C++ ever gets beer literals.
user142019
21:28
@FredOverflow Probably going to be used for modules.
@FredOverflow I forget you are lecturer? :D
@LewsTherin wat
user142019
Ø will use export for exporting names from modules
user142019
@FredOverflow wat
21:32
Great song
@Zoidberg What does "I forget you are lecturer? :D" mean? Is that a question? Am I supposed to answer it?
user142019
@FredOverflow oh :P
@FredOverflow Ooops.. my bad I left the "?" in there by accident
I guess I am used to asking questions?
It would appear so?
21:34
I'm Ron Burgundy?
@LewsTherin lol
I think I'm going to brush my teeth now?
I think I am going to fap now?
@JohanLarsson :D?
user142019
user142019
Greater song.
21:36
Seriously..
greaterest song
mashed potatoes on my on my table
LOL
Greatestest
no mashed potatoes, no care
oh my
@drch drch how did you even know of that song? I've never seen that "singer" before.
21:39
its actually the same guy behind both of those videos
user142019
@drch I smell something dodgy in the air..
oh god
I really loved that episode
user142019
user142019
21:44
I really loved this episode.
Looks like something a five year old watches :(
user142019
Actually, most watched by men between 13 and 38-years-old.
You can't be serious?
Fuck, that's horrible.
user142019
My Little Pony is awesome.
If you are a 5 year old girl.. yes.
21:49
MLP season 1 was the best, plus some of season 2
Ok, you guys can't be serious lol
Unicorn Master Race
My Little Pony is an entertainment franchise developed by Hasbro which is marketed primarily to girls. It started as a line of plastic pony toys developed by Bonnie Zacherle, Charles Muenchinger and Steve D'Aguanno which have been produced since 1983. The ponies feature colorful bodies, manes and a unique symbol on one or both sides of their flanks. These are referred to in the two most recent generations as "cutie marks." My Little Pony was revamped at least four times with new and more modern looks to appeal to a new market. Following the original My Pretty Pony toy, introduced in 198...
> My Little Pony is an entertainment franchise developed by Hasbro which is marketed primarily to girls.
user142019
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic is an animated television series produced by Hasbro Studios in the United States (for scripts) and at DHX Media's studio located in Vancouver (for animation; formerly known as Studio B Productions), which is based on Hasbro, Inc's My Little Pony line of toys and animated works. The series is considered to be the fourth generation (G4) of the My Little Pony franchise, following earlier lines and television show tie-ins in the 1980s and 1990s. The series premiered on October 10, 2010, on The Hub, an American pay television channel partly owned by Hasbro...
user142019
To be exact.
21:51
It's gotten more attention than is warranted, but it's still a fun cartoon.
user142019
> Despite the target demographic of young girls and their mothers, My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic has become an Internet phenomenon, with many male fans between 13 and 35.
Like Adventure Time or Regular Show.
user142019
Java is also a language for little badlets, yet used by most programmers.
Each to their own..
I like Animes, but not cartoons for girls :P
Animes are for japanese people. What are you doing watching something outside your demographic???
21:54
Where does it say "Animes are for Japanese people"?
Same place it says that cartoons are for children.
A cartoon is a form of two-dimensional illustrated visual art. While the specific definition has changed over time, modern usage refers to a typically non-realistic or semi-realistic drawing or painting intended for satire, caricature, or humor, or to the artistic style of such works. An artist who creates cartoons is called a cartoonist. The term originated in the Middle Ages and first described a preparatory drawing for a piece of art, such as a painting, fresco, tapestry, or stained glass window. In the 19th century, it came to refer to humorous illustrations in magazines and newspa...
Yes, it does.. somewhere in that article.
Now, show me one for animes.
this is the entirety of what i've seen of that cartoon
fuck shit stack
posted on April 24, 2013 by Scott Hanselman

Glenn Block is working on something interesting that combines C#, NuGet, Roslyn (the new "compiler as a service") and his love of text editors and scripts. Now, with help from Justin Rusbatch (@jrusbatch) and Filip Wojcieszyn (@filip_woj) they are having all kinds of fun...using C# as a scripting language. Every few years someone tries to turn C# into a competent scripting world, myself inc

22:10
HttpWEbRequest - how do I set the encoding of the message to be ASCII?
of your post data?
content-type text/html charset=us-ascii
Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii"
user142019
var bodyBytes = Encoding.ASCIIEncoding.GetBytes(bodyString);
var stream = request.GetRequestStream();
stream.Write(bodyBytes, 0, bodyBytes.Length);
user142019
Assuming you meant the request body. :v
not looking at the request. Trying to force a submission to be ASCII encoded
rather than UTF-8
to see if my server blows up
default is ISO-8859-1
22:17
I am adding a new feature for merging product groups. There is group A and group B, they are the same product, and I am going to have a feature which allows all of group B's quantity to be placed in group A.

I have it set up like this:
MergeProduct
int DestinationId
int SourceId
int Quantity

but what I am curious about is the navigation properties and if I should consider taking a different design approach because the nav properties will get really interesting

MergeProduct
virtual Product DestinationProduct
does that look like too much of an issue?
Lol
Circular references are the worst
I had to write a custom serializer for them ;)
class Product {
ICollection<Product> MergedProducts { }
}
do you need the MergeProduct class?
yes because it maps to a database table
and I need to record their occurances
well it could still be there in the db without showing up in your domain model
22:23
Products are not always entirely merged
There can be partial merges at different dates
How would you map your definition of MergedProducts?
In a getter with a db hit?
yeah it would be
youd setup the mapping in your OnModelCreating
I use a map of the database to model an object graph and then pull from it using linq. I don't really ever ask my model to do anything.
is there an important difference between Source and Destination?
Yes, it used to track the path of a product over time
ah ok
then what you have seems fine to me
22:27
okay I will see how it goes, thanks for your input :D
actually one thing - does MergeProduct have any properties?
besides the products?
Yes
MergeProduct
id
sid
did
quantity
date
ah ok so its a full blown entity
wasn't sure if it was just an association table
Ah, yeah, it has some data in there too
So I started documenting a lot more. It is interesting. Definitely helps, definitely adds more time up front.
Easier to track though
Yesterday I wrote an 8 page feature description for making a new dependency. lol I think it took longer to document than to implement
yeah watch out for analysis paralysis ;)
22:30
Seriously lol
is there a proper term for like cowboy testing (so like the opposite of tdd like newbies do)
huh
"testing it in production"?
@StuartBlackler maybe structured or planned? made that up npw
In computer science, a Monkey test is a unit test that runs with no specific test in mind. The monkey in this case is the producer of any input. For example, a monkey test can enter random strings into text boxes to ensure handling of all possible user input or provide garbage files to check for loading routines that have blind faith in their data. The test monkey is technically known to conduct stochastic testing, which is in the category of black-box testing. The name 'monkey' comes from the adage that ‘a thousand monkeys at a thousand typewriters will eventually type out the entire w...
22:39
i guess the consensus is no ;)
@TravisJ then you will have to keep the documentation synced with the code ;(
user image
3
^ thats the testing method approved by newbs
i would love to put that badge in my dissertation but I cannot :(
@drch :D
@Johan - The documentation is version sync'd
joke: killed
user142019
My software works nowhere, not even on my machine. :(

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