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20:24
Hello guys i have a question. Is it possible to use generic types on interpreted languages? I think no because in generic programming the source code is not compiled as it is but it first writes “templates” of the source code that will be compiled lately in the process. I think interpreter cannot do that. I am wrong?
Good question
If all my understanding is correct, interpreted languages are often duck typed, which makes generics somewhat irrelevant
There's nothing at all that says an interpreted language has to be duck typed; or that a duck typed language has to be interpreted, of course
5 hours ago, by Tom W
The mind boggles at how remarkably poor many programmers are at explaining themselves
@TomW thank you... I will wait to hear other opinions too
not true for you @TomW
@JohanLarsson well, thanks
If you're serious
;)
20:29
I am very nice/well put
why do you doubt me? :D
user1125394
yo men
user1125394
int start=0;
int.TryParse(args[2], out start); //ideas for something less verbose?
@Loclip ask FredOverflow if he shows up, he is serious about languages, no shadow on Tom, he is also superstar.
The only talent I profess is bullshitting.
@JohanLarsson haha ok i will wait
user1125394
20:35
int start= int.ParseWithDefault(args[2], 0);  // :(
@Loclip or ask in the c++ room but they don't love new guys so tread carefully :D
@xcx if you sure that is a number you can write int start = int.Parse(args[2]);
@xcx the out is ugly, if you do it a lot I guess you could wrap it in your own method
user1125394
yes, I'm sure, except if a kid plays with the app, oh well you're right
user1125394
let it crash for the kid
20:38
Why you want less verbose?
user1125394
That's my phobia :)
because ugly?
user1125394
yes
haha i never cared about that
dunno if int start = int.TryParse(args[2], start) ? start : 0; works, probably not
20:39
You will not gain anything though. All you are doing is spending time on something which is rather trivial.
user1125394
@JohanLarsson hm, you could almost wrap that in a lambda
user1125394
@TravisJ yes but making code cleaner
I wrote it here in chat, compiler might not like it
@xcx i use comment to make code cleaner :)
user1125394
ah never! that's verbose :) hehe
20:41
I find comments a bit smelly
I find comments a sign that code could be better
@LarsTruijens true
user1125394
seriously I find comments a sign that programmer care about readers
20:42
why not write readable code if so?
user1125394
in addiion
Also comments need to be maintained, kept in sync
user1125394
so you pack everything in doc + readme?
methodnames etc
As Einstein said “as simple as possible, but no simpler”.
20:44
refactor out small methods with good names can be an alternative to comments at times
true that
> Simple ain't easy—T. Monk
user1125394
> "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." Vinci
> Simplicity – The Art of Maximising the Work Not Done—Unknown Agile, (unknown to me)
user1125394
that's minification
20:46
how?
user1125394
'over'-simplicity
I don't read it like that, I read it like it obviously has no bugs
The trouble with programmers is that you can never tell what a programmer is doing until it's too late. --- Seymoure Cray :D
user1125394
hehe
20:49
so true
user1125394
if he's alone in his trip yes
alt+0151 '—'
@JohanLarsson i was lazy to go to character map :D
thanks for shortcut
Is less code cleaner code?
20:56
I agree
often the oposite
but less boilerplate is probably cleaner, like linq or java and vb vs C#
user1125394
@TravisJ That's Java viewpoint indeed
So lets get to obfuscation then! A one liner with multiple lines to replace two lines of code right?
user1125394
that javascript's one
20:58
My point is that tryparse is not verbose, and if you work around it, it will become obfuscated
user1125394
or Lisp, (but didn't learned it yet so should shut up)
Look at johan's example, (which doesn't compile johan :P), it is still obfuscated
yeah my example if pretty ugly I give you that
user1125394
@TravisJ nah, it's a program argument, if the parse failn, the app fall, I don't see the problem
Or, look at something which goes even farther over the top in order to avoid tryparse. This is one line of code technically.
int start = args[2].Select( a =>
 {try{ return int.Parse(a.ToString()); }catch{ return 0; };}
).First();
20:59
but I find the out in tryparse ugly, that is maybe a slight language smell
ugly, but it does not use tryparse and it is one line
@TravisJ: agree
user1125394
I find try even uglier :)
uses the same try as tryparse
If you are worried about input, then scrub it.
if( args[2].GetType() != typeof(int) ) return;
@TravisJ good thinking.. good alternative solution
user1125394
21:05
@TravisJ not bad hmm
@TravisJ but it is always a string?
user1125394
ah yes in my case static void Main(string[] args)
@Johan - Hmm
you don't parse an int either
tryparse is the scrubbing I believe
but if you are going to return from main you might as well just crash?
Well what should happen if arg[2] is "5s"?
21:08
args[2].GetType() will always be typeof(string) I believe, no VS here.
user1125394
shouldn't if user reads readme
lol if only we could count on users either always being smart or never being malicious
or just make 'em suffer
write randomly to hdd for five minutes then BSOD
using regex at this example is worst than try?
tryparse > regex imo
21:12
For my program once the try catch was slower than regex
try catch is slow, exceptions are expensive
I would be surprised to see regex faster than tryparse
string[] args = new string[3];
	args[2] = "5s";
	Regex regex = new Regex("^[0-9]+$");
	int start = 0;
	if( regex.Match(args[2]).Success ){
		start = int.Parse(args[2]);
	}
	Console.Write(start);
but no practical difference in this case
Still looks pretty verbose
And then if your regex somehow fails, you still throw an exception
Like if an arabic number gets in there or something wierd
lets make an enterprise version!
21:13
Lol
lets start with planning meetings to guarantee that it will be expansive and nothing will happen
Okay, lets plan to plan a meeting tomorrow with the same plan as today.
or just random meetings on any topic really
recursion
@TravisJ pro!
21:15
:)
so, I don't get why developers don't like meetings.
I like meetings as long as I feel involved or that I am affected by the outcome.
@TomW Sounds like you are doing them right in your place.
I see many bad ones, just bsing around and politics and such
Decline many invitations nowdays
I always think that replacing email with forum discussions would remove the need for many meetings
takes so bloody long though
what does?
user1125394
21:21
like Johan, with a followed discussion you have transcript + eliminates some time loss
communicating textually
user1125394
but sometime you need to talk right
also, many people are very bad at it
user1125394
the fucking hierarchy can't read their mails
they might read them; they just never answer them
you'll never know either way
21:24
the problem with communicating textually is that it often lacks structure, there is no facilitator, no one to see that the discussion goes ok. It's just everyone 'talking' at the same time
and you can't read people faces/body language, which actually is important
@TomW not sure it would be inefficient, quite convinced of the contrary in fact
user1125394
@LarsTruijens distributed Vs centrallized
of course there are situations where it works very good
user1125394
when you have a meeting someone can lead it
I like ETW, but the tools are often very technical and the results can be overwhelming
21:29
Guys one question... shouldn't C# listed in Interactive mode languages? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
Interactive mode languages act as a kind of shell: expressions or statements can be entered one at a time, and the result of their evaluation is seen immediately.
Oh forget it i misunderstood it
IMHO not before Roslyn is in production
user1125394
@Loclip interactive are not compiled I thinkù
I suppose the meetings I'm thinking about are very me-centric; when I want to know something it's usually because it's a blocker
user1125394
others could get bored
@xcx you right you need interpreter
21:35
cool, Jon Skeet responded :D
@TravisJ: Whichever is simplest for the particular situation. I like query expressions for joins and groupings - anything which would introduce a transparent identifier - but for more straightforward queries I like straight method invocations. — Jon Skeet 3 mins ago
If there ever was a star
Another question is metaprogramming still not possible in C#?
I read that it not possible but this answer is from 2008
I write code in C# that writes javascript code. Does that count?
user1125394
21:42
I don't tjink metaprogramming is so good, template langauges and such :(
But C# support reflection which as i see in wikipedia is subset of Metaprogramming
Damn i hate my project
Should take something more practical
You can use T4 templates
Are you doing that for a class?
Its my final year project.. I making research
wow, just stumbled on this msdn article: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb308966.aspx
yeah there is no book that is better than msdn library imo
21:50
msdn is Eric Lippert's book :P
I don't know him.. First time hearing his name
My feeling is there is a bunch of really smart guys in the C#/.net team
C# was named Top Programming Language of 2012
People starts using it more and more
The c# chat room was just unofficially named chat room of the year for 2012 by me in this message
5
21:57
:D
user1125394
it's too general, to vote for one programming language
room topic changed to C#: Top Programming Language of 2012 [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
user1125394
in its category c# clearly beat java, but I really like also erlang, haskell
They dont say that c# is the best language its just they language of year
user1125394
@JohanLarsson +[wtf]
21:59
probably has a place
user1125394
o man PHP is also ranked, wouldn't trust that
why php shouldn't ranked? php is programming language and there a lot of people that use it
hahaha
Pure perl :)
C# is new language, it made great progress
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