@Sippy I dont know but I feel like that has terrible bad idea written all over it. Areas are supposed to be huge, thats why they are like an entirely new MVC project within your current MVC project.
I feel like I need a more simplistic way of organising my MVC projects cos they get a bit ridiculous when you have a shit load of partials all over the place.
A water tower is an elevated structure supporting a water tank constructed at a height sufficient to pressurize a water supply system for the distribution of potable water, and to provide emergency storage for fire protection. In some places, the term standpipe is used interchangeably to refer to a water tower, especially one with tall and narrow proportions. Water towers often operate in conjunction with underground or surface service reservoirs, which store treated water close to where it will be used. Other types of water towers may only store raw (non-potable) water for fire protection ...
@SpencerRuport I was studying Bachelor of IT (Programming) at RMIT, but the lecturer there was ... um... not understandable. So now I'm doing Diploma System Admin and also Diploma Website Development
@SpencerRuport for the sys admin one I'm taking sustainability, systems maintanence, systems security, disaster contingency, network solutions, and they even threw in some copyright and oh&s classes in there :/
i'm disappointed with the outline for the web dev course though. i don't see the point in web dev courses to be honest - not if this is a true indication of what they're like.
@Jase I get the feeling that given the spread of types of people going to school for IT related items, many schools try to accommodate everyone and sometimes it can feel like some of the courses are weak
I felt that way getting my Bachelor's, but now I'm working on my Master's and I feel that the courses are now geared to the level of people who want to learn more than the basics
I haven't started the sustainability one yet. but what i mean by not seeing a point in the web dev course is just what @NewProgrammerJames said; it feels weak. I've had 10+ years exp developing personal websites/databases and desktop apps because i had nothing better to do in my spare time. so with all this self-taught knowledge i've got from over the years this course feels extremely weak. i finished 4 units in less than one month (that's about 40 assignments)
@NewProgrammerJames ah, maybe i should do bachelors next. i'm already 30 though. I also feel like time's running out lol, so maybe i should just get work after these diploma's
@Jase - With all that experience I would suggest speaking with the professors. Sometimes (but not always) they're willing to sign off on you skipping the class.
Might give you some room to sign up for a more advanced class.
If it matter's I'm working full time too... my life sucks right now, but, it's worth it. I got a good promotion at work when I got my Bachelor's and I'll probably get another good one when I get my master's
one thing i'm afraid of though is being put in an advanced class that's too advanced for me and then struggling/failing. because i'm self-taught. i only taught myself what i needed to know/wanted to do - plus the basics. my 10+ years knowledge would prob be way less than someone who studied for a few years at bachelor level and did some work on the side as a job
I kind of lucked out with the job, I started as a Help Desk Technician for the company I am with and I saw an opening as a programmer at my company. They hired me because I was close to finishing my Bachelor's
so I haven't really had to do much of a job search
i made a portfolio of (personal) projects that i've done as a way to show what i am capable of... i've been looking for a web dev role for years and not a single bite
@NewProgrammerJames Of course. I don't do generic resumes. I find it a little weird. I hate generic scripts read to me over the phone when i call support, so why would i do that to somebody else?
@NewProgrammerJames i usually get automated responses saying something along the lines of "thank you for applying for... we have received your application..." and then nothing after that. and if I call after some time to see if they're interested, they tell me they've either hired someone or i wasn't successful
@Jase also consider looking for a job below your level... that's how I got started at my company... I took a very entry level help desk position, and then moved up quickly once they realized I was above that
@CharlieBrown yeah, maybe :) I have been seriously considering making my projects open source or even public domain and put them on github. i don't plan on using them, but personally i think there's some really good stuff
@NewProgrammerJames yeahthat sounds like a good idea. i did try that for a little while. but i felt too bad. i couldn't even get a job that i didn't want (although help desk would suit me just fine - for a while)
oh... it places accept volunteers? heh, i'd never heard of that! thanks, i'm going to make some calls in the morning.
I know that there are "FreeGeek" places that spend time getting old machines ready for Non-Profits, and they can often times use programmers/dev's for various projects
@CharlieBrown I did sign up for an azure account the other week. I did plan on releasing my custom controls for winforms but i just haven't been bothered to make the website yet (www.jase.website)
@NewProgrammerJames oh thanks, is this limited only to certain countries? where are you from?
i did a search for it in australia, and i think i see something in perth
there's bound to be something like that over here though
@ton.yeung functional.. like Haskell? I've done some stuff in haskell.
heh, i've always wanted to use f# for something, but when i see it in the list there in visual studio, my eyes scroll up about 2 cm's and see c# then i click c#as usual
i've read a lot of f# being very mathematical-like... i think maybe that's what's kept me away from it. or maybe i just don't want to get out of my comfort zone with c# unless i need to
also, i have no idea what these are lol: gang of 4, solid, ddd, soa <<< are they like... gangs or something?
Ohhh, lol. Ok. Yeah that makes good sense.
what kinda stuff should you be making in f# anyway? from what i've read it doesn't seem to be a general purpose language like c#. i don't remember, but i have this feeling its more specialized toward something
@ton.yeung oh, i see. ohhh, come to think of it. i did see an option to create a winforms f# project. i think.
now i'm curious. i have to have a look
yep, understood
i can't believe how minimalistic a basic console app is in f# compared to c#:
// Learn more about F# at http://fsharp.org // See the 'F# Tutorial' project for more help.
[<EntryPoint>] let main argv = printfn "%A" argv 0 // return an integer exit code
this reminds me of another language i played around with years ago.
thanks lol
that's what turns me off about python (indentation and lack of semicolons and braces)
also i don't like one thing about javascript and most other languages... they dont have proper casing like Microsoft's languages do... LikeThis() - some of them have thisInstead() it feels dirty
yeah, i know it's good to know, that's all i've ever heard and read but i still can't bring myself to do anything in it
@BradleyDotNET Yes!!!!! why do they do that?!?!
It's like.. they said C#...... but then it turns out to be more like javascript or something
hmmm
@ton.yeung int height = Screen.PrimaryScreen.WorkingArea.Height; < they need to be capitalized. but with unity and um, the other one i was talking about, they start their methods with lowercase letters with some languages. i find that a bit weird
@ton.yeung that is good advice
@ton.yeung doesn't need to be :) it's just my personal preference. and it's just like... i dunno... i think it's an ocd thing as well, maybe partially... But when i'm writing in c# every variable must beLikeThis; or string name = String.Empty; and not string name = string.Empty; i know they don't need to be that way but it feels weird when they're not
it is small stuff. and if i was at work i wouldn't complain about it, cause it is small stuff. but when i'm at home i like to be able to enjoy things more
I have this code in my WinJS default.html:
<x-ms-webview src="http://localhost/"></x-ms-webview>
<x-ms-webview src="http://display/"></x-ms-webview>
<x-ms-webview src="http://192.168.1.2/"></x-ms-webview>
display is defined in the hosts file:
127.0.0.1 display
and 192.168.1.2 -- the one tha...
if google knows when i take a dump? if it records movements... they can see that i went from this location (living room) to another location just a few meters away (the bathroom)
winjs i think is windows runtime think for ah html metro apps?
My company renewed our MSDN subscriptions but didn't let us use our own email accounts this time round...what they also did was register fake accounts that aren't the same as our company email addresses, and the authenticator that Visual Studio redirects to won't accept connections from outside the company
@Mooseman I think you may have bigger problems here. Do you plan on releasing this app to the Store? Because, unless this has changed, these Metro apps were not allowed to access localhost. And they wouldn't allow them past certification.