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22:09
my guess it is an exercise in making a plan and there is nothing wrong with that. My issue is when the result is not even close to what a plan is.
Do you still code Johan?
no very little lately, been drawing CAD at work and walking puppy at home
Injection risk: {q: 'SELECT uid, name FROM user WHERE not is_app_user and uid IN (SELECT uid2 FROM friend WHERE uid1 = me())'}
@JohanLarsson Bum :(
@LewsTherin why?
22:12
Nothing.. just wondering because I never see your crazy generics anymore :P
I had an AI class in college where we had a semester-long group programming project and we had to give a presentation during the final week.

One guy, opting to work as a group of one, somehow got the impression that the final presentation was the only required part. And so he just presented his plans for a hypothetical uninstantiated programming project.
@TravisJ From Javascript?
@MikeF Did you change your gravatar to make a point?
@Lews - on that site that was listed. Although it looks like that is a call to the facebook api. It would be funny to drop a facebook table
@TravisJ looks stringy, {DROP table...}?
22:14
thought it would be fun to get the ball rolling on a "cool kids" group :P
@TravisJ I would think they would strip it somehow
drop table user...fb crashes
would be kinda funny
Try it
This is how bad things happen
At least, I'd have deleted facebook.. finally
22:15
@LewsTherin lol
I don't wanna :P If it doesn't work then I will game it and then end up either breaking something or wasting a lot of time
Years ago, back in the day, I crashed facebook's photo album feature since I had a script that uploaded a new avatar every 5 minutes.
Anyone viewing my "Profile Pics" album would get a generic error after exactly 30 seconds.
@MikeF at least it was plans for a programming project
think Knuth wrote most of TeX on paper before implementing it, or maybe it was some other project of his
I've been seeing a lot of that TeX stuff.. what is it?
I usually find it when looking for MWord formatting
I think Knuth wrote it to get the typesetting like he wanted it for his books 'The Art of Programming 1-N
22:24
@Lews - "Typesetting requires the prior process of designing a font and storing it in some manner. " TeX is a form of that.
TeX ( as in Greek, but often pronounced in English) is a typesetting system designed and mostly written by Donald Knuth and released in 1978. Within the typesetting system, its name is formatted as . Together with the Metafont language for font description and the Computer Modern family of typefaces, TeX was designed with two main goals in mind: to allow anybody to produce high-quality books using a reasonably minimal amount of effort, and to provide a system that would give exactly the same results on all computers, now and in the future. TeX is a popular means by which to typeset co...
user142019
@LewsTherin it's the only decent way of writing documents.
Is everyone a pony on this site?
GAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Why doesnt my page number show on the first page.... stupid Word
wat
22:25
@StuartBlackler Yeah, very annoying.
I heard Knuth had a cash prize for anyone finding bugz in his TeX code
@TravisJ I see
Knuth is a gladiator
Knuth reward checks are cheques awarded by computer scientist Donald Knuth for finding mistakes in, or making suggestions for, his publications. In the preface of each of his books and on his website, Knuth offers a reward of $2.56 (USD) to the first person to find each error in his published books, whether it be technical, typographical, or historical. Knuth explains that $2.56, or 256 cents, corresponds to one hexadecimal dollar. Valuable suggestions are worth 32 cents. In his earlier books a smaller reward was offered. For example, the 2nd edition of The Art of Computer Programming, Vol...
ok nothing huge then, a beer
//wants a beer
user142019
22:33
blewrg beer
user142019
@StuartBlackler because you use Word instead of LaTeX.
probably @rightfold but ive got it sorted now :)
@LewsTherin you finished your project now?
@rightfold Zoidberg?
user142019
@JohanLarsson People finish projects?
user142019
22:34
@LewsTherin A pony named Zoidberg is silly.
@JohanLarsson Yep
But it sucked
@rightfold lol
@rightfold So it is you.. lol. I was sure when I checked your rep ;)
user142019
Don't laugh at my low amount of rep. :'(
@LewsTherin I'm pretty sure it did not
user142019
22:35
I get about 15/20 rep each day for doing nothing. :3
you have more than the rest of us combined except Travis and Fred
@rightfold So you do laugh at mine? You bastard :P
user142019
:D
@JohanLarsson Trust me :)
I am going to pass Kendall soon :P
22:36
I tried to answer a q today, did not go well, ended with the guy asking for code in comments :D
LOL
I hate that SHIT
@LewsTherin I trust you to write hq stuff and I trust you to still beat yourself up
(if that is parseable)
It was (is?) :P
@LewsTherin answering in comments is the most convenient in a way
That's what I do now.. safe
Unless the answer I can give is crystal clear
22:39
I often give crystal clear answers to questions that was not asked
user142019
Sorry was AFK getting a sausage roll.
[x] advanced, had me in a state of wtf :D
I love breakfast rols
user142019
> for a while
user142019
22:41
That pun.
did not intend a pun, still don't see it, editing any way
user142019
for a while do you see it now? :P
user142019
{
    pun indented
}
haha
22:43
time to sleep but not sleepy
user142019
Don't sleep.
teach us something pony?
I do need to sleep
user142019
return for IO a in Haskell is implemented as return x = IO x.
user142019
Okay, I taught you something.
22:44
ty sir
Why does it have to be Haskell?
user142019
I could teach you something about Ruby.
I don't use Ruby.. not interested ;)
user142019
To get all elements in an array that are within a range, use arr.grep(1..10). Take that, C#, with your pathetic arr.Where(x => x >= 1 && x <= 10)!
If that bothers you.. write an extension method?
22:45
I would like range comparison in C# 1 < x < =10
user142019
Does .NET offer ranges?
Of course
user142019
Oeh. :3
 Enumerable.Range
Or some shiz
.NET doesn't deal in puny arrays of integers. We have lists of complex object graphs that run the world.
user142019
22:46
And otherwise they're easy to implement. :P Three-liner.
@LewsTherin pretty crude
user142019
@JohanLarsson CoffeeScript and Python have that.
@rightfold I think F# has some support but you know better than I do
@rightfold I like the syntax
user142019
Me too.
I don't
user142019
22:48
In C# you can probably write a hack for it with operator overloading. :)
user142019
But please don't in real-world code. :|
Possibly
user142019
Optionally
Unintentionally
user142019
22:49
Moronically
Shortsidedly
user142019
Stop it
user142019
Seriously
yeah it was painful
22:50
Clearly
Unfortunately
painfully
pony
Tiredly
user142019
Time to lurk on /mlp/.
22:53
@TravisJ You win, fuck you. :O
yeah huge win, I was second cos I starred first :D
user142019
I'll have to write Java code in two weeks.
user142019
22:56
> back button accounts for 40% of all web clicks
Clicking the play button on a porn video?
parsing...
Can a proxy server be used on the original server? If so, what's the point?
logging?
context is king
stackoverflow.com proxystackoverflow.com on the same domain.. apparently it is possible
I always assumed that the proxy is nearer than the original server
23:01
Anyone know any Psueo ESB/Message Routing implementations for .NET that are not "Biztalk"?
Similar to Apache Camel, but for .net
user142019
I fucking love this weather.
user142019
Almost 30 degrees.
I miss winter a little
user142019
Hell no.
user142019
It's been winter for about six months.
23:08
it was a sick nice winter in Sweden this year
user142019
It was horrible here in the land of cheese.
but I can imagine winter in Holland is not much fun
@JohanLarsson sick nice.. interesting ;)
user142019
Should I implement destructors in C#?
user142019
Or is Dispose enough?
user142019
23:09
I only have managed resources (NetworkStream and Socket, to be exact).
@rightfold Check this out (I have no idea)
user142019
THANK YOU JOHAn
@LewsTherin very nice?
user142019
Ah, thanks.
user142019
23:13
So destructors are only really for unmanaged resources.
user142019
Like pointers or file descriptors.
Pointers or file descriptors aren't unmanaged resources.
I HAVE NO IDEA
user142019
No, but they can point to unmanaged resources. :P
In that case.. yes :)
user142019
23:14
I wouldn't call them resources at all.
@JohanLarsson :D
user142019
More like, values.
Well it is a pointer to a resource.. appropriate
Special values lol
finally sleepy, night sirs
user142019
File descriptors are also pointers. :>
user142019
23:15
GOODBYE JOHAN
@JohanLarsson Night dude
54
Q: Is there any benefit to implementing IDisposable on classes which do not have resources?

Travis JIn C#, if a class, such as a manager class, does not have resources, is there any benefit to having it : IDisposable? Simple example: public interface IBoxManager { int addBox(Box b); } public class BoxManager : IBoxManager { public int addBox(Box b) { using(dataContext db = new dataConte...

@rightfold I'm pretty sure they are just numbers?
But they are known as "handles"
user142019
@LewsTherin the concept of a "pointer" still applies.
Yes, indeed.
user142019
23:16
They're just not implemented as memory addresses.
user142019
But they do point to information.
user142019
Processes just have file descriptor tables in the kernel.
I can't remember what the function is to close a file
close(fd)?
user142019
Yes.
23:17
night @Johan
user142019
open, socket, dup, etcetera all create file descriptors and close closes them.
So close probably tells the OS to reduce the fd count
@rightfold I don't think it "closes" them per se.
user142019
No.
user142019
If all file descriptors to a resource are closed, the resource is freed.
"closed"
user142019
23:19
Reference counting-based resource management.
user142019
@LewsTherin You close the file descriptor. :P
user142019
That's the terminology that the man pages use.
user142019
It doesn't necessarily free the resource, though.
I think they should change it lol. It confused me when I was beginning.
How the fuck do you close a number?
user142019
23:20
@LewsTherin Well, when you "delete" a file the file may still be around if you have multiple hardlinks to it.
@rightfold Nope
@rightfold Are you talking about physically deleting a file?
user142019
No.
user142019
I'm talking about rm.
Oh, Unix..
user142019
I never used Windows beyond web browsing and some playing with C# lol.
23:22
Gaming?
user142019
Oh yeah, and AOE II. :P
user142019
2 mins ago, by rightfold
That's the terminology that the man pages use.
user142019
@LewsTherin I've never seen a man page for Windows. :L
I think drch pulled on up ages ago
"Servlets are written in Java.. safe"
FML
user142019
Haaaaaaa Java.
23:25
I'm going to bed. My brain can't cope with that.
java has its uses, but its really a pile of poo
nn mate
user142019
Night :)
user142019
@StuartBlackler Tell me about them.
user142019
@LewsTherin Good bye see you tomorrow.
user142019
23:26
Java is obsolete—there are superior alternatives.
user142019
For example.
user142019
And if you need to target the JVM, there's Scala and Clojure.
if you go from c# to java (in terms of learning), such a bad time for you
Can questions now be deleted by the OP even if they have answers?
user142019
23:27
Going from C# to Java must be a horrible nightmare.
ive gotta do work for an hour. ping me if anything interesting pops up
/worth reading
user142019
Especially because I use var whenever I can in C# and Java lacks it.
user142019
@StuartBlackler Good luck!
I see. Since my answer had not been upvoted yet, the question was eligible for deletion by the OP even though I solved his f'ing problem
user142019
Conclusion: OP is a faggot.
23:33
Now that is gratitude
@Zoidberg - look at this crap question too, he was lucky to even get a response: stackoverflow.com/questions/16226274/…
user142019
Give me a link to the question he just deleted.
user142019
Well, it is a terrible question.
user142019
Voted to undelete though.
user142019
Man.
user142019
I have to work with team mates for a school project.
user142019
And one guy wants to change everything all the time.
user142019
I'm getting sick of it.
give him his own branch
user142019
23:48
heh. :P
user142019
And then just never merge it. \o/
user142019
He's a bad programmer anyway.
exactly, never merge... then say "sorry your source is far to out of date with the rest of the project"
user142019
The project has to be completed today at 12:00.
user142019
:v
23:52
what time zone?
vb.net but can one of you try this stackoverflow.com/questions/16126282/… i dont have Visual studio anymore so cannot
user142019
@StuartBlackler Europe/Amsterdam.
VB.NET??? where's that rainbow and unicorn picture?
@tgkprog not very many .net people around here. GTFO
:D
maybe you could try it using c# should be the same concept -> container gets the mouse events of the child components if you over ride Protected Overridable Sub OnMouseMove ( e As MouseEventArgs )
23:55
it is the quiet time of night as you can see :)
user142019
@RyanTernier not a rainbow but comes close:
user142019
Visual Basic
user142019
Man.
C# - A friend, a guy you'd drink a beer with. Pushes you to be better than you are.
VB.NET - someone who holds your hand, wipes your ass then cries when you look at C#.
BizTalk - Someone who pushes you to the ground, kicks you in the nuts, pees on you, sets you on fire, laughs, then phones VB.NET to watch.
Java - Dooood, wait wha??? Unicorns have horns?
user142019
"You must use X in your application." is such a terrible requirement for a school project.
user142019
23:58
We have to use a HAVING clause. But we don't need it. :facepalm:

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