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12:02 AM
RELOAD!
[rubberduck-vba/Rubberduck] 1 opened issue. 1 closed issue. 3 issue comments.
[Minesweeper] Games Played: 102, Bombs Used: 66, Moves Performed: 13309, New Users: 12
 
 
2 hours later…
2:09 AM
 
 
4 hours later…
6:22 AM
0
Q: How to easily call functions in order with Kotlin?

user242161If the conditions are right, I'll call the next function. I want to make it. The source doesn't look good, so I want to change it efficiently. Do you have a good idea? example) fun A() { if (network not available) { dialog...show() retry -> A() cancel -> ... } els...

 
 
5 hours later…
11:15 AM
@Vogel612 Is that like on the latest video from you?
 
long weekend-hey!
 
11:48 AM
@skiwi likewise-hey!
 
12:07 PM
@SimonForsberg yup
wasn't able to formulate a coherent comment that would add anything so I just didn't :)
 
@Vogel612 Haha. Okay. Then I won't enjoy the fun of deciphering a comment either :P
I was hoping I would get a bit more comments on episode 120, but I'm happy at least to see that all problems related to Tar were solved by the end of 121.
 
 
6 hours later…
6:40 PM
[Zomis/Games/PR-203] build 26 Build failed.
 
6:59 PM
Hey everyone! Have a nice day!
 
 
2 hours later…
9:16 PM
TFW you miss the obvious error for far too long, and then you see it... :derp:
 
9:27 PM
@IvenBach Are you also playing Factorio? :P
 
[Zomis/Duga/ktor] build 26 Build success.
 
Ktor bot started
 
[Zomis/Duga] build for commit 1166bcc9 on ktor: This commit looks good
 
@SimonForsberg Nope. Simple Python tutorials.
I'm slowed down by no type system and having to infer what is returned for a given member.
 
@Duga @Greger Week 1807: Weekly updates missed, one. Factorio played, still too much. Train Log releases made, five. Train Log downloads, 521. Grilling with friends, once. Nice mail received, once. Computers getting read only file systems, one (the usual one). Running, twice. Long weekends begun, one.
@IvenBach I know that pain.
Python 3.7 does have some typing support though
 
9:35 PM
Do you work with python?
 
Nope. The lack of typing is one of the reasons.
 
I feel like I did when I initially learned VBA and did everything late-bound without intellisense.
 
Also, I prefer list.map { ... }.filter { ... }.length instead of len(filter(map(list, ...), ...))
 
Is the first kotlin syntax?
 
9:37 PM
Reading "naturally" from Left-to-Right feels better, IMO.
 
And to some extent Java, but in Java it would be list.stream().map(e => ...).filter(e => ...).count()
Yup. I prefer Kotlin's syntax a lot more
 
That's what I've understood to be a "fluent syntax" or however its termed.
 
When coding Lua for Factorio Mods, that also uses the Python-like one, and urgh I find it annoying
It might be called "Fluent API" (at least some other things are called that, I'm guessing it's applicable here as well but not entirely sure)
 
I don't see myself doing much, if anything in python. Looking into it for a bit of exposure on what's out there and to get outside my comfort zone.
 
Yeah, pushing yourself is good ^^
 
9:41 PM
It's also proving to myself that I can understand new docs in another language and learn it, if/when needed.
I think my next short to mid term goal is working on sorting algorithms. The docs mentioning of merge/quick/heap-sort shows me more of what I-don't-already-but-probably-should.
 
10:17 PM
@SimonForsberg Splunk Alert: MFE Long SQL Query - [max(runtime):204674, avg(runtime):204674, min(runtime):204674]
 
10:31 PM
@IvenBach The important part is to understand how they work. Maybe you want to implement them in order to do that. I honestly can't remember if I have ever implemented them.
 
10:48 PM
Yep. Past-Iven went through the process of implementing them. At that time I got to where I saw what was going and kinda-sorta understood it but couldn't internalize it. Now I'm at a point I can.
Frustrating knowing you're not ready to fully understand something when trying and implementing it.
 
I honestly believe that implementing sorting algorithms is overrated.
sure, it's nice if you understand them, but usually you wouldn't want to implement a sorting algo yourself if you can at all help it
because there's a surprising number of edge-cases and a lot of potential to mess things up
 
11:05 PM
Found that out with the shunting-yard algorithm...
 
11:24 PM
@Vogel612 I'm inclined to agree
The same applies for those bloody LinkedLists and other data structures. Over-rated to implement, but nice if you understand them. Also filled with a surprising number of edge-cases and a lot of potential to mess things up.
 
11:36 PM
@Vogel612 I would like to know what you think of the title of Friday's episode when that comes out :) I bet you will get the reference.
 

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