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11:01
Plop!
11:49
@Sam have few minutes?
Sam
Sam
@AshishAhujaツ I will in 10-15 mins.
Oh np. I have to go in 10 mins. I'll ask you tonight or tomorrow. Thanks.
Sam
Sam
Ok
Sam
Sam
Cya
 
1 hour later…
Sam
Sam
13:20
@Gunr Can I borrow your eyes for a couple of mins?
Sam
Sam
Great. So I'm messing around with npgsql on a simple table (just two columns).
 value |   idf
-------+---------
 and   | 2.53774
 to    |  1.0892
 the   |  2.3292
 want  |   9.327
 it    |       2
 good  |   0.302
^ An example
If I execute SELECT * FROM mytable; via psql I get the right results.
However, doing this from C# returns nothing:
var cmdStr = "SELECT * FROM myTable;";

using (var con = new NpgsqlConnection(connectionString))
using (var cmd = new NpgsqlCommand(cmdStr, con))
{
  con.Open();

  var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader();

  ...
}
quotes
your table name has a capital in it
wrap the object name (table name) in double quotes
or change the table to not have caps
Sam
Sam
Ah, right
so it depends on how you created the table
if you forced using caps or not
Sam
Sam
13:29
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS GlobalTerms
GlobalTerms is the actual name of the table.
So I guess it's actually all lowercase.
if you use the all-lower-case version in code, what happens?
an error about the name or 0 rows?
Sam
Sam
Still 0 rows
> I’ve discovered over the years that while PGAdmin might be a useful and friendly way to manage your databases, it also automatically uses double quotes when creating tables. This means that if you create a table with PGAdmin, you might find yourself struggling to find or query it afterwards.
Sam
Sam
^ Never seen this before.
hum...
Sam
Sam
13:33
Oh
And
dumb question, you do have rows in the table right?
Sam
Sam
If I use an NpgsqlDataAdapter instead, I can see the rows.
Sam
Sam
@gunr2171 Yep
well ok
you might also want to look at using a DataSet (dumping results into it), easier to view the data
Sam
Sam
13:34
Hmm
@Sam well that should be the correct way to go
Sam
Sam
@gunr2171 But I thought that would dump everything into memory.
Which I'm trying to avoid.
ok, so you're just going to read the stream one entry at a time
that should work
Sam
Sam
public IEnumerator<Dictionary<string, object>> GetEnumerator()
{
  // rd is the NpgsqlDataReader passed in from the constructor.
  while (rd.Read())
  {
    yield return GetRow();
  }
}

private Dictionary<string, object> GetRow()
{
  var row = new Dictionary<string, object>();

  for (var i = 0; i < rd.FieldCount; i++)
  {
    row[rd.GetName(i)] = rd.GetValue(i);
  }

  return row;
}
^ That's how I'm iterating over the rows.
(In a separate class)
GetEnumerator? Are you making a class that inherits from IEnumerable?
Sam
Sam
13:39
@gunr2171 With the data adapter?
@gunr2171 Yes
I cut out the boilerplate code in the snippet.
why inherit? Why not make a method that returns an IEnumerable and use yield return within?
Sam
Sam
I... never thought of that.
let me write up an example....
Sam
Sam
Ok
class DatabaseAccessor
{
	private string ConnectionString {get;set;}

	public DatabaseAccessor(string connectionString)
	{

	}

	public IEnumerable<YourObject> EnumEntries()
	{
		var sqlQuery = "select * from globalterms;";

		using (var connection = new NpgsqlConnection(ConnectionString))
		using (var command = new NpgsqlCommand(sqlQuery, connection))
		{
			connection.Open();

			var reader = ....

			foreach(var entry in <your reader>)
			{
				//parse the row into some object
				YourObject parsedObject = new YourObject();
(forgot to set the variable in the constructor)
Sam
Sam
13:48
And var reader = .... == var reader = command.ExecuteReader();?
I think so
Sam
Sam
Ok, thanks! :)
then use something to iterate though the reader
that's what you use in the foreach
Sam
Sam
Yeah
but that should be much cleaner than implementing your own IEnumerable
Sam
Sam
13:50
Right
I'll have to remember that for future use.
It works :D
Awesome
Thanks again @gunr.
woot!
no problem
14:20
Hiya!
Sam
Sam
Hey
@Sam Have a few minutes now?
Sam
Sam
Yep
Um well... I had this dumb question when I was implementing the privilege system for the bot
I know that you have to manually add the user id's to some file and always check them etc etc but
Whenever a user posts a message, I didn't get how you can find the user id of the person posting the message. Do you know how?
Sam
Sam
It's easy if you're listening to the websocket.
But I don't know how you're watching chat.
Or anything about your chat library.
14:25
Okay. I'll tell you how the bot does that. Just lemme open the files. 2 mins
Sam
Sam
Ok, no rush.
PLOT TWIST, I AM THE TROLL!!
3
Sam
Sam
TIL gunr is 6 yo.
@Sam Yeah. Here is how we're getting the messages:
I'm 6 years old in chat bot years
Sam
Sam
14:30
ofc
With 1 chatbot year ~= 4 earth years?
The main has a never ending for loop which only ends when we command it to
That'd mean that I'm 5,25 years old ô.ô
@Sam don't know. not awake enough to do mental math
The loop calls a function which basically gets the message using a function.
Sam
Sam
@AshishAhujaツ Sounds like you're polling.
Can you link to the source?
14:33
Yup. Do you want the repo, or the functions I'm talking about?
Sam
Sam
Just the functions please.
Sure.
The function runChatBot which is being called by main.
Sam
Sam
Reading...
The function processChatRoomEvents which gets the messages using CURL
^^ and is also called by runChatBot
Oh sorry. That link is wrong.
Sam
Sam
Yeah, I was going to ask where processChatRoomEvents was defined.
Sam
Sam
Thanks
And when runChatBot get's the message, it calls processMessage github.com/NobodyNada/chatbot/blob/master/chatbot/…
I don't think it is related to this, but just in case
Sam
Sam
And where is poll defined? xD
poll? In which function is it??
14:39
Nobody worked on this part, so I'm not very good with it. I mainly implemented the commands.
thanks
Sam
Sam
Oh, ok.
Hmm
Oh poll! That's a standard library function
include in poll.h
Sam
Sam
Ah
Sorry, my C/C++ isn't great. lol
np. Even I'm not really good in websockets.
Sam
Sam
Ok, well I'm struggling to read this.
I'll just tell ya what I know.
14:43
No problem. I think an explanation will be enough
Sam
Sam
Every message posted in a chat room will have a user_id field in the JSON (when you're listening via the websocket). This is the ID of the message's author.
Sam
Sam
All you need to do is parse this field.
Then I think I can get it using the the cJSON file's functions.
Lemme check it out.
Thanks
Sam
Sam
Np
Sorry I couldn't actually do anything xD
14:48
Na na. You've helped me. I didn't know this, and Nobody isn't coming anytime soon, so then I would've just been stuck doing nothing
Sam
Sam
Ok
I think I've got it. All I need to do is get the json, and do cJSON_GetObjectItem(event, "user_id")->valueint;
Thanks. Now I can make the privilege system
Sam
Sam
\o/
Can't understand why I didn't get this earlier. Just one single line :P
Thanks for your time!
15:17
Night o/!
Sam
Sam
Cya
 
5 hours later…
20:13
Hello everyone! (nagato v2 docker)
@Sam so you know, closey takes a long time to start up on the Joining room step.
Sam
Sam
Yep
it seems to scale on the number of people in the room
Sam
Sam
Ye​p
: (
@Closey status
20:14
SOCVR Chatbot, running at nagato v2 docker, version 951ae800 on master, running for 1 minute and 8 seconds (tracking latency 1000ms).
Sam
Sam
May 26 at 20:52, by Sam
@gunr2171 Use .JoinRoom("url", true); for a quicker room joining time.
but
Sam
Sam
Ping stripping will fail for the first few mins (or however long it takes to init the users list).
hum. ok
@Closey stop bot
@gunr2171 I'm shutting down...
Goodbye! (nagato v2 docker)
20:18
well, time to start in the main room and try again
oh, side note: it was Undo who caused the PK_ProfileId error from yesterday
so maybe it's moderator related
Sam
Sam
Hmm
20:34
\o/
21:21
perfect

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