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22:00
^
@JohanLarsson Sure. The problem becomes that I need a stream to read the entity body from at some point in the future, so if I read beyond the HTTP headers I have no way to manage read portions from a pre-allocated buffer and other portions that still reside in the network stream to be read.
but if you are reading a byte at a time you should be able to refactor that to a buffered approach
you want drch power, I'm out of guesses
drch is intoxicated and in bed but he will do what he can
@drch A buffered approach? Enlighten me, oh wielder of drch power.
22:04
ha
so youre doing like stream.Read() ?
@drch NetworkStream.ReadByte()
so you can do somethign like this:
class reader {
  int pos;
  byte buf[] = new but[65536];
  Stream stream;

  byte next() {
     if (pos == buff.Length - 1) {
	    pos = 0;
		stream.read(buf,0,buf.Length);

	 }
	 return buf[pos++];

  }
}
the idea being that reading a bunch of data at a time is faster than reading byte by byte
java has a buffered reader that works this way
Oh, so you're basically creating your own abstraction instead of working with the awkward Stream class and allow iteration over that...
not sure if theres a c# equivelant
yep, you could probably throw together a BufferedStream : Stream
22:11
been around since 1.1 so definitely stolen from java
This is absolutely brilliant. So to recap and verify my understanding, this will attempt to read a block of data as per configured SetLength and will perform quick reading on the local buffer. Then, once it exhausted the local buffer, it will read from the underlying stream (in this case, a NetworkStream) to retrieve more bytes.
back in the day, i did a few of the spoj.pl programming challenges and i recall that usinig a buffered reader in java was basically the only way to make your I/O work fast enough their constraints
to get shit working, you should be able to just use stream
but for performance, buffered stream should be considerably better
yep thats how it works
it fills the buffer as best it can whenever it runs out of data
Sweet. That's a really useful class to have around. Now I just need to see if I can couple this with high-performance socket techniques as these apparently don't even use a stream to read bytes. Otherwise, I'll just fall back to writing my own as per your suggestion.
Thanks for the input, @drch.
yw. double check the implementation remarks on msdn
since youre doing a webserver which is 100% read then 100% write it should be ok
Will do. No plans for WebSockets at this point
22:17
It is assumed that you will almost always be doing a series of reads or writes, but rarely alternate between the two of them.
Makes perfect sense. :-)
Gonna catch some sleep and tinker with this tomorrow. Thanks again, and take care guys.
nite bro
@drch - What type of project should a service layer be? Should it be a class library, a wcf service, something else?
class library presumably
22:27
no anti aliasing? :P
vintage stuff
That is what I thought too.
wcf project is just and endpoint
but it always depends. if its always going to be a WCF service layer, then you might as well put all your shit in that project
but in theory, you have a services class library and if you have a WCF project, its just implementing (or exposing) the services
I have an asp.net mvc3 project, and I wanted to start pulling code out and making it available through a service instead of in the controllers
yeah so you can just abstract that out to an interface and have it implemented by a wcf client
in that case you might have a web project, a wcf project, and a contracts class library that exposes the interfaces and data contracts
22:31
wow, had an edit review that looked just like the review audit, I can't believe people make edits like this
@Deanna depends on the time of day
between 9am and 6pm in Bangladesh time, I'm not surprised by anything
I am surprised that 1 rep users can propose edits
@drch - So what is different between a wcf project and a class library project?
WCF is a web project
if you hit f5, it fires up iis
I don't need it to be available to the web, I only need it to be available as a dependency
@Deanna ENGRISH
22:37
its totally valid to have a web project and a wcf project and have the web reference the wcf project
What does the wcf have that the class library does not?
class library is just code
wcf project assumes a webserver
Yeah, that is all I really need though
The asp.net project would be utilizing the webserver, why would I need the wcf project to as well?
I haven't worked with wcf before so I am still trying to grok the point of it
its just web services
so you have one web app talking to another web app
As in, it exposes a get or post?
22:40
its usually wrapped in soap
but you can do restful wcf if youre brave
I don't want to send a request to it though, I just want to use an instance of it in my code.
then dont bother with WCF ;)
if you have a web app and a wcf service thats implying a physical separation
Should I even both with a separate project? I suppose I could just make a namespace for it
either or
if you expect that you may actually push it to a webservice than sure
for me, i usually start with 2 projects. Projectname.Web and Projectname.Framework
i add more projects once i feel like framework is getting cluttered or if i need a physical separation (ie distributing a class library)
ive worked at so many places that go way overboard on new projects
download the MVC framework source code... 1 project.
Okay, not going to be a web service so I will just namespace it
22:45
good call. less is more
its usually a piece of cake to push that out if you find the need
Yeah I just don't want to add something for the sake of adding it, especially if I can get away with pigeonholing it cleanly
agree totally
drch power ftw :)
22:47
haha
thats the thing with 'N-tier' development
elsewhere in programming, when you see something like that, you assume N is arbitrarily large
they should have called it 3-4 tier
this place im working at now has a separate project even for viewmodels
UI
web
service
data
Seems kind of over the top
.Web, .ViewModels, .Service, .Contracts, .Core,
and they do that for every project
so every little component is N-Tier and theres so much duplication its insane
Are the projects huge?
22:49
they look it
I mean as far a what they accomplish
then theres these other oddball projects like 'WebUtility'
which has 5 classes
5 isn't that many
no kidding
I have 25 classes and all they do is model my db
22:50
it barely even warrants a namespace let alone a project
theres 4 solutions and each has like 28 projects
Dang! 28 projects in a solution?
theres lots of overlap threre so its not 28 * 4
Do they hate NuGet or what
but the project i work on most often has 28 projects
user1125394
men, I've got a Dictionary<int, List<MyObject>> , I want just to get all MyObject Values for whatever keys, mydict.Values returns a ICollection<List<MyObject>> and not a flat Collection<MyObject>
22:51
i dunno what it is but the programmers out here are terrible
its because the contract market is so good so all the good programmers are freelancing
@xcx There is no single list so no simple way to get them
dict.Values ?
user1125394
foreach (MObject o in mydict.Values) {// my wish
dunno what 'whatever keys' mean
22:52
@xcx - That is because each value is a List. So when you ask for all the values, you get a collection of lists.
user1125394
ah I se :(
you could try a simple enumerator that just does a foreach , foreach and yield return
you want a list of all the myobjects?
user1125394
yes
foreach (MObject o in mydict.Values.ToList()) {// my wish
user1125394
22:53
like flattening the double inset
dict.Values.SelectMany(x=>x.Value)
user1125394
ah right
except, it would have to be List<MObject> os
and then you would need to iterate through those. Are you trying to concatenate?
user1125394
yes
well technically dict.Values.SelectMany() would be IEnumerable
user1125394
22:55
it's just to do an operation (mysql update) on each
user1125394
@drch nah sry not a select but a foreach, for doing an operation
List<MyObject> objs = new List<MyObject>();
dict.Values.ForEach( v => objs.AddRange(v) );
maybe like that?
@xcx S
er
@xcx .SelectMany flattens a collection
foreach (var MyObject in mydict.Values.SelectMany(x=>x.Value)) { }
user1125394
foreach (Order o in opened.Values.SelectMany(x => x)) {
	UpdateOrder(o, conn);
}
user1125394
.Value is not possible at this place
22:58
er yeah sorry
user1125394
looks nice :)
i meant foreach (var object in myDict.SelectMany(x=>x.Value)) { }
Rubber duck debugging, rubber ducking, and the rubber duckie test , are informal terms used in software engineering to refer to a method of debugging code. The name is a reference to a story in the book The Pragmatic Programmer in which a programmer would carry around a rubber duck, and debug his code by forcing himself to explain it, line-by-line, to the duck. Many programmers have had the experience of explaining a programming problem to someone else, possibly even to someone who knows nothing about programming, and then hitting upon the solution in the process of explaining the problem...
user1125394
a indeed
@Pheonixblade9 that is a classic
er wait nvm thought it was something else
user1125394
22:59
@drch perfect thank
i thought it was the story about the duck they put into that game so that the producer would bitch about the duck and not the other less obvious bugs
hah
thats good, too
"this looks great... but what's the deal with the duck? we should remove that."
so they can feel like they're adding value
yeah that was exactly it
because they HAVE to find bugs
so give them something obvious
theres a lot of things like that in this world
user1125394
23:01
but the duck is more a female object tho
the CFO at one of the places i worked at had this policy where he said no to every request
because if the person didn't come back after hearing no, then it wasn't that important
@drch sounds like a jackass
well it was more about budgets and shit
hey can i have $250,000 for this project?
why is the CFO dealing with requisitions? lol
hmm I suppose
i may be oversimplifying here
23:03
var dict = new Dictionary<int,List<MyObject>>();
        for( int i = 0; i < 50; i++ )
        {
            var l = new List<MyObject>();
			var a = new MyObject();
			a.Number = i;
            l.Add(a);
			var b = new MyObject();
			b.Number = i*2;
            l.Add(b);
            dict[i] = l;
        }

		var objs = new List<MyObject>();
		dict.Values.ToList().ForEach( v => objs.AddRange(v) );

        Console.Write(objs);
I gotta go tho, nite guys
@Pheonixblade9 also he was like 5'7 so maybe he had some small man issues he was trying to sort out
but the co was 150 people and pulling in nearly 100 mill
hmm
revenue?
23:06
yeah gross
gotcha
ooo
happy hour
I should go grab a beer
do it
I'm relaxing with a tea, will that do? :p
not really
'tis all I have :|
23:10
spike it

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