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user142019
23:00
Don't obfuscate JavaScript code.
user142019
It's completely pointless.
user142019
You can minimize it to save bandwidth.
@OlegOrlov JS minification is a great idea for production environments. Minification and obfuscation are COMPLETELY different things, though.
user142019
@OlegOrlov what's the point of it?
Minified JS code might be obfuscated, but obfuscated code is not necessarily minified.
@OlegOrlov yeah, why would you obfuscate JS code?
You should never put valuable business logic in client-side code, anyways
23:01
@OlegOrlov Why the fuck..? It is hard to read as it is :(
user142019
Obfuscating JavaScript is a bad idea and only noobs do it because they don't understand anything.
user142019
It's not impossible.
@rightfold I agree with you, but rather than insulting someone who's asking the question and not giving any reason for why it's a bad idea, you should explain yourself :)
user142019
If they really want to know, they will know.
23:02
@OlegOrlov I'm not saying it's not possible... but why would you? JS is a scripting language, you can never completely obfuscate it
(you didn't see that)
Javascript bytecode?
Why does that sound familiar..
Serverside Javascript? (Not Node)
user142019
Compile V8 to JavaScript using emscripten and then use that to run JavaScript.
That is confusing..
Is V8 not an engine? Like JVM
user142019
V8 is an implementation of JavaScript.
@rightfold V8 is an implementation of ECMAScript *
23:07
> Compile V8 to JavaScript
How does that make sense?
user142019
@LewsTherin why wouldn't it?
user142019
If you can compile V8 to machine code, why wouldn't you be able to compile it to JavaScript instead?
How do you compile an engine to JavaScript? Is V8 a source file given to you?
user142019
V8 is written in C++.
user142019
And there are tools that compile C++ code to JavaScript.
user142019
23:10
Your target is then JavaScript instead of machine code.
user142019
Here is CPython compiled to JavaScript: repl.it/languages/Python.
Ok, I gotcha
user142019
I didn't say obfuscation is for noobs.
@LewsTherin Returning a non-static local variable by reference is always UB. You cannot prolong the lifetime of local variables.
user142019
Read more closely.
user142019
23:13
Yes.
user142019
Obfuscating JavaScript.
@FredOverflow Mmn.. I think you can? Or maybe I am thinking of temporaries.
user142019
And FYI, JavaScript is not .NET.
user142019
If you feel the need to obfuscate JavaScript, you're doing it wrong. Move the algorithm to the server.
@LewsTherin Believe me, my head is full of worthless C++ knowledge. Returning a local by reference does not prolong its lifetime.
user142019
23:14
@FredOverflow It may do so.
How would that even be implemented? The stack frame is gone when the function returns.
user142019
But still, it's UB and thus a bad idea.
@rightfold In Hell++ it may :)
int a = 10;
int &b =a ;
user142019
@LewsTherin That's allowed.
23:15
You're not returning anything here.
user142019
But it doesn't change the lifetime of a.
return b;
user142019
If a goes out of scope, dereferencing b is UB.
If the return type is int, you get a copy. If it is int&, you get UB.
user142019
@FredOverflow No.
user142019
23:16
You get UB once you dereference it.
It is int& , no need to dereference it.. :S
user142019
int& foo() {
    int a{};
    return a;
}

int& a = foo(); // no UB
std::cout << a << '\n'; // UB!!1
@rightfold Why do you always have to have the last word and be right about it? :)
You can't dereference a reference.
@rightfold Ah, I see what you mean
user142019
@FredOverflow I never said you can.
user142019
23:17
Really.
Show me the part of the standard that says references are implicitly "dereferenced".
user142019
It doesn't. :L
29
A: Does a const reference prolong the life of a temporary?

PotatoswatterOnly local const references prolong the lifespan. The standard specifies such behavior in ยง8.3.5/5, [dcl.init.ref], the section on initializers of reference declarations. The reference in your example is bound to the constructor's argument n, and becomes invalid when the object n is bound to goe...

5
A: Returning temporary object and binding to const reference

Sergey K.This is a C++ feature. The code is valid and does exactly what it appears to do. Normally, a temporary object lasts only until the end of the full expression in which it appears. However, C++ deliberately specifies that binding a temporary object to a reference to const on the stack lengthens th...

I think the second one is better lol
@rightfold Giving up so easily? :)
@OlegOrlov then put that business logic in the application layer.
user142019
23:20
FTFY.
room topic changed to C#: Java really isn't a bad language. But it is a bad person. [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
FTFTFY
Fixed that fix for you?
yup
fixed that ftfy
actually it means fuck titties fuck titties fuck yeah
user142019
@Pheonixblade9 I prefer that
user142019
Apparently.
hello
Guns don't kill people. Erased generics do.
somebody repost @TravisJ's plugin with a description and I'll sticky it. Just a link isn't too useful.
howdy
user142019
@EdvRusj Good afternoon.
23:24
good morning
@Pheonixblade9 - Not sure who stickied it. You can unsticky
@TravisJ can you repost it with a title? It is a good sticky item.
user142019
Nooooooooooooooooooooooo my Java hatred message got unpinned.
Hi, i can't ask questions anymore because the downvoting in this question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16312110/make-a-program-to-solve-minesweeper?noredirect=1#comment23356470_16312110

Can anyone open this question to give an answer?
Thx in advance
user142019
23:26
@TravisJ Change that to "Stack Overflow Chat" with spaces and capitals. :(
user142019
@ChrisPappas It is a bad question, why would we reopen it?
I have implement an algorithm
and i want to improve it
@ChrisPappas you're asking multiple questions.

1) How do I use UI automation?
2) How do I input data from one program into another without an API?
3) How do I solve minesweeper?
user142019
You cannot get input without an API.
@rightfold - Fixed. I changed the text on the wiki too
23:29
"Please do all of my work and research for me" questions generally do not do well on SO. Try a few things, and ask specific questions, rather than throwing your hands up and hoping somebody feels mercy on you.
user142019
:)
@rightfold you can, its just a huge PITA
user142019
How?
user142019
System calls are APIs.
a program API, not a system call :)
23:30
hi all!
user142019
Eventually you need to perform a system call.
and stop it, @kendallFrey is the resident pedant asshole around here ;)
user142019
Unless you're implementing kernels for some reason.
Stream.Read blocks yea?
NO ONE TOLD ME HI.
I AM FAMOUS PEOPLE
user142019
23:32
@StuartBlackler Yes.
@rightfold as in blocks until data is received or a timeout occurs, which ever is sooner?
Former
user142019
It blocks until data is received.
user142019
I'm not aware of a timeout parameter.
23:34
hmm, a pending operation for 10 seconds shouldn't be a problem?
user142019
It should work.
user142019
But it will block for ten seconds.
@Pheonixblade9 question updated..check it plz
ssshhh. Everyone ignore @JABFreeware
If the server doesn't time out.. you should be fine.
23:35
pretty sure TCP doesn't timeout on 10 seconds, so it's got to be the way that im pausing the task
is it ok to use Threading.Thread.Sleep() inside a Task<T> or is there another method that I should use?
TCP doesn't give a shiz about timeout
@StuartBlackler Why do you need it?
does anyone know anything about assertions?
@LewsTherin I'm trying to simulate a long running task
@StuartBlackler it depends... why not use Thread.Yield?
@Pheonixblade9 Why does he need it? :S
23:37
oh, if it's test code simulating long running, Thread.Sleep should be fine
@EdvRusj yes... I know a decent amt, what's up?
just a sec
public Task<byte[]> Execute(byte[] data)
{
    return Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
        {
            System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(5000);
            return BitConverter.GetBytes(questionId / 2);
        });
}
that's a shortened version of what I am doing
must find my question
if I remove the sleep, everything works. If I keep it in, the code never returns :/
Could you comment whether a reply made by Stephen C makes sense ( please read my comment made to him ) - programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/196882/…
23:40
@StuartBlackler Oh wow.. :O
by comment i meant could you tell me
:)
@LewsTherin and my VS keeps crashing when I debug this app. So looks like im putting in Console.WriteLine in everywhere to trace the problem
@EdvRusj an Exception is when something bad or unexpected happens in your code. An assertion is something used in test code to assert something in a unit test should be a certain value or in a certain state.
I actually think that the guy is wrong, but Im just a little ant
I cant move a rubber tree plant
Yes
but the guy said that preconditions were used only for
@StuartBlackler Not sure :(
23:41
You can assert that an exception will occur. For example, in MSTest, you can have the annotation [ExpectedException("NullReferenceException")]
how shouldi put it, not normal exceptions
preconditions?
Why does MVC put in an extra empty input tag after checkboxes?
i think you're missing the point im trying to make - as far as Ive read, preconditions can also be used in public contracts of a method
@RyanJMcGowan:
32
Q: ASP.NET MVC:Why does the CheckBoxFor render an additional input tag and how can I get the value using the FormCollection

NikronIn my ASP.NET MVC app I am rendering out a checkbox using the following code: <%= Html.CheckBoxFor(i=>i.ReceiveRSVPNotifications) %> Now I see that this renders both the checkbox input tag and a hidden input tag. The problem that I am having is when I try retrieve the value from the checkbox u...

23:43
Like magic! I wish I thought of that
which means that checks have to made against arguments of a method, and if such a check fails, it isnt considered an illogical error
basically, when you use a <form>, a value is not sent unless the checkbox is checked. So it needs another input to simulate an unchecked checkbox
but the guy is claiming that preconditions shouldnt be used in public contracts
also:
34
Q: asp.net mvc: why is Html.CheckBox generating an additional hidden input

OmuI just noticed that Html.CheckBox("foo") generates 2 inputs instead of one, anybody knows why is this so ? <input id="foo" name="foo" type="checkbox" value="true" /> <input name="foo" type="hidden" value="false" />

is implying not claiming
23:45
Can't you just assign a control false as a default?
value="false" before databinding
I guess I can stop starring at the screen...the guy isnt coming back :)
@LewsTherin ahhh second stupid mistake i've made today. Thought I was sending the result back, but I never was :/ woops
it was just luck that when i queired the result it was there without the Sleep statement
If I create a custom checkbox helper, should I add the second input tag? Is there a real advantage?

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