active questions tagged opinion - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-18T12:09:47Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/opinion http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1916817/worst-scene-from-a-movie 0 worst scene from a movie [closed] Remus Rigo 2009-12-16T18:50:37Z 2009-12-16T18:55:20Z <p>What is worst scene from a movie, from a programmer's point of view?</p> <p>PS I "like" the "software" used in movies to zoom a small portion of a picture (like 80x80 pixels) and in the zoomed window you can see every detail and verry clearely... that I find verry amusing.... no comment on that...</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/220296/best-cubicle-toys-for-programming 6 Best cubicle toys for programming dlamblin 2008-10-20T23:28:16Z 2009-12-16T16:52:06Z <p>I need some employee/co-worker Christmas gift ideas. Do you have any good cubicle toys that help you to do any of:</p> <ol> <li>think about programming problems</li> <li>solve programming problems by representing common abstractions</li> <li>can be directly programmed</li> <li>can interface with a PC based IDE to be programmed.</li> <li>it may present problems that can be solved, to kick start problem solving.</li> </ol> <p>Disallowed items are:</p> <ol> <li>reference material in book, pamphlet, poster or cheat-sheet form, even if it has kick ass pop-cultural references.</li> <li>edibles. [discuss separately]</li> <li>things that need their own lab-space and/or extensive tools to be worked with.</li> </ol> <p>So yes, Lego Mindstorms come to mind, but they aren't cubicle toys because they cost more than cubicle toys would, and they have too many losable parts.</p> <p>comments on the answers so far: The 20 Questions game sounds quite neat as it could get you thinking; The bean balls could be used as tokens in a problem, so I can see that working. The magnetic toys like ball of whacks or the ball-and-stick ones present hands on fun of a structural nature... now can there be a similar hands on fun toy that aids in representing a solution to a problem? The Gui Mags clearly could, but they're quite utility oriented. The AVR Butterfly is less of a toy but definitely priced attractively, cheaper and more responsive than a basic stamp.</p> <p>I'm not going to pick an answer; there's several great suggestions here. Thank you.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1607553/getting-your-programming-developer-team-up-to-speed 3 Getting your programming/developer team up to speed ajdams 2009-10-22T14:18:27Z 2009-12-09T17:56:39Z <p>I recently left a large university hospital for a much smaller one because of the pay increase and because it was a career booster. Of course these two things would generally be something to be excited about and a great accomplishment (esp.for someone my age) but I have found myself pouting on the inside as I drive to work every morning, and here is why. The new t=eam I joined is dreadfully behind in the times with coding practices, latest technology (yes they still use classic .ASP), and software - leaving me in a backwards time warp from using VS2008, .NET 3.5, and SQL Server/BIDS 2008 to using ancient SQL 2000/ VS 6.0 relics. </p> <p>At first, not so bad, I figured not all companies are on the cutting edge right away and are just waiting for that right spark to send them in the direction of change and improvement - nope - I started suggesting (in a professional and non-condescending manner) some new tools and what benefits they'd have for our company on both our side and client side but they (as in the team I am a part of) looked at me like I was an alien and gave me the simple, why would we need that stuff, even after I had made my case.</p> <p>This has led me to believe that I may not be going about this in the right manner and was hoping some more senior developers/engineers would share their experiences when they were younger and just starting out. I know times have changed but I feel it'd be useful nonetheless and any advice would be much appreciated!</p> <p>Thanks everyone!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1860970/what-should-a-tester-report 0 What should a tester report? Bobby Ortiz - DotNetBob 2009-12-07T16:09:33Z 2009-12-07T18:50:17Z <p>I have a web site I am building for a client. I now have a tester on the project with me.</p> <p>I feel testers are needed. REALLY! I cannot test my own code. I also appreciate the value of a new set of eyes. But what desires reporting?</p> <p>It is easy to say everything should be reported, but I don't have someone between me and the tester to filter out the unimportant requests. The tester does not know the system nor the target user well. She is assigning me tasks and not the project manager. I think this will change soon, but until it does, what do you recommend? There seems to be a believe that our users have NEVER used the interent before at all, and they are as dumb as rocks. </p> <p>The problem I am having is that EVERYTHING the tester suggests is being accepted automattically and assigned to me. </p> <p>I have many cases that make me drop my jaw and say "Really? Are you serious? This deserves to be a issue?"</p> <p>Ex: Need to add text at top of page that says "* = Required" for required fields.</p> <p>Have you ever felt this way? How did you deal with it?</p> <p>For now, I am just doing as I am told, but I am making it clear I do not agree.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1852570/how-long-does-it-take-an-experienced-programmer-to-become-proficient-with-a-new-t 3 How long does it take an experienced programmer to become proficient with a new technology / language? Jean Barmash 2009-12-05T16:07:24Z 2009-12-05T18:51:36Z <p>I realize that the question is likely o get a lot of "it depends", but I am curious anyway. When you hire somebody new (but experienced) to the team, and they don't have expertise in technology you are using, but know something similar, how much time do you budget for them to "get online."</p> <p>I am talking about something fairly substantial, like a language, or a framework / product that has a lot of ways of doing things. Obviously, many libraries takes very little time to start using. </p> <p>In my own experience (10 years of experience, including a fair amount of consulting, so learning new technologies is par for the course), it takes me about three to six months of experience to become proficient at a new technology, and about a year to feel like I am approaching expert level where I know all the basics and medium-difficulty issues, along with a few areas very well. </p> <p>What do you do in your projects? How do you budget the time to account for learning. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1812225/what-makes-ruby-an-elegant-language 9 What makes Ruby an Elegant Language? Luke101 2009-11-28T10:50:53Z 2009-12-04T08:59:50Z <p>I have been reading a lot about Ruby the past few days. Every SO post I come across I hear that ruby is an elegant language. Can you guys give an example of why ruby is elegant compared another language? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1842613/why-c-language-and-its-tools-is-so-aesthetically-ugly -3 Why C++ language and its tools is so aesthetically ugly? [closed] Steel Plume 2009-12-03T20:17:33Z 2009-12-03T20:18:24Z <p>After 20 years it appears to be a living fossil. </p> <p>For example Ant and Maven for Java rule as development tools, where for C++ there are only tons of raw text files managed (very well, of course) by some GUI.</p> <p>The first time I read a C++ source file, I thinked it was only a "toxic" piece of code between many diamonds, but continuing my exploration I understood that all files appear so ugly...</p> <p>So why time is passing but C++ developpers don't ask a make up for obtaining a more comfortable language? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1001494/being-a-lone-developer 80 Being A Lone Developer Ronnie Overby 2009-06-16T13:31:29Z 2009-12-03T19:57:00Z <p>What are some of the pros &amp; cons to being a lone developer?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/432167/common-truisms-that-need-correcting-the-most 21 Common "Truisms" that need correcting the most. Charles Bretana 2009-01-11T02:00:21Z 2009-12-03T19:27:35Z <p>In addition to his "I never met a man I didn't like.", Will Rogers had another great little ditty I've always remembered. It went </p> <p>"It's not what you don't know that'll hurt you, it's what you do know that ain't so."</p> <p>We all know or subscribe to, many IT "truisms" that mostly, have a strong basis in fact, in something in our professional careers, or something we learned from others, lessons learned the hard way by ourselves, or by others who came before us. </p> <p>Unfortuntely, as these truisms spread throughout the community, the details of why they came about, and/or the caveats that affect when they are actually true and when they don't matter, tend to not spread along with them... </p> <p>We all have a tendency to look for, and latch on to, small "rules" or principles that we can use to avoid doing a complete exhaustive analysis for every decision we make. But even though they are correct 90% of the time, when we misapply them in the other 10%, we pay a penalty we might avoid if we also understood the details behind them.</p> <p>For example, when User defined functions were first introduced in SQL Server, within a year or so it became "common knowledge" that this feature had extremely bad performance (because it required a re-compilation for each time it ran), and be avoided. This "trusim" still increases many database developers' aversion to using UDFs, even though Microsoft's introduction of InLine UDFs, which do not suffer from this issue at all, mitigates this issue substantially. In recent years I have run into numerous DBAs who still believe you should "never" use UDFs, because of this.</p> <p>What other common not-so-"trusims" do you know of, that many developers believe in, that are not quite as universally true as is commonly understood, and which the developer community would benefit from being better educated about? </p> <ul> <li>Please include why it was "true" to start off with, and why/when it's not true... </li> </ul> <p>EDIT: Please try to limit responses to issues that are technical, where the "common" application of a "rule or principle" is in fact correct most of the time, or was correct back when it was first elucidated, but when, in the edge cases, or because of not understanding the principle thoroughly, or because technology has changed since it first spread, applying the rule today, without understanding the details behind the rule, can easily backfire or cause the opposite effect from what is intended. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1825198/2009-in-retrospect 3 2009 in retrospect [closed] Vijay Mathew 2009-12-01T10:02:14Z 2009-12-01T10:11:26Z <p>What were the major innovations, contributions of 2009 with respect to Programming languages? How the programming landscape has changed/evolved during this year? What can we look forward for in 2010?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1098666/what-are-the-best-programming-related-screencasts 5 What are the best programming-related screencasts? cwash 2009-07-08T15:07:48Z 2009-12-01T04:37:18Z <p>Screencasts can be extremely educational and informative. If well produced, IMHO they can be very effective learning tools for developers, just short of pairing with an experienced developer. They can also be a waste of time.</p> <p>In the same light as this <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/923486/what-are-the-best-google-tech-talks/923656#923656">question</a>, what have been the best programming-related screencasts you've seen?</p> <p>What did you like or dislike about them?</p> <ul> <li>Aspects of the production <ul> <li>Script/Dialogue</li> <li>Audio</li> <li>Video</li> </ul></li> <li>Freely available?</li> <li>Misc (things like using KeyCastr or similar to show keyboard shortcuts)</li> </ul> <p>I hope the responses will help us come to something of a consensus about what works and what doesn't.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1822429/a-recurring-const-connundrum 7 A recurring const-connundrum Mordachai 2009-11-30T21:13:12Z 2009-12-01T00:12:37Z <p>I often find myself having to define two versions of a function in order to have one that is const and one which is non-const (often a getter, but not always). The two vary only by the fact that the input and output of one is const, while the input and output of the other is non-const. The guts of the function - the real work, is IDENTICAL.</p> <p>Yet, for const-correctness, I need them both. As a simple practical example, take the following:</p> <pre><code>inline const ITEMIDLIST * GetNextItem(const ITEMIDLIST * pidl) { return pidl ? reinterpret_cast&lt;const ITEMIDLIST *&gt;(reinterpret_cast&lt;const BYTE *&gt;(pidl) + pidl-&gt;mkid.cb) : NULL; } inline ITEMIDLIST * GetNextItem(ITEMIDLIST * pidl) { return pidl ? reinterpret_cast&lt;ITEMIDLIST *&gt;(reinterpret_cast&lt;BYTE *&gt;(pidl) + pidl-&gt;mkid.cb) : NULL; } </code></pre> <p>As you can see, they do the same thing. I can choose to define one in terms of the other using yet more casts, which is more appropriate if the guts - the actual work, is less trivial:</p> <pre><code>inline const ITEMIDLIST * GetNextItem(const ITEMIDLIST * pidl) { return pidl ? reinterpret_cast&lt;const ITEMIDLIST *&gt;(reinterpret_cast&lt;const BYTE *&gt;(pidl) + pidl-&gt;mkid.cb) : NULL; } inline ITEMIDLIST * GetNextItem(ITEMIDLIST * pidl) { return const_cast&lt;ITEMIDLIST *&gt;(GetNextItem(const_cast&lt;const ITEMIDLIST *&gt;(pidl)); } </code></pre> <p>So, I find this terribly tedious and redundant. But if I wish to write const-correct code, then I either have to supply both of the above, or I have to litter my "consumer-code" with const-casts to get around the problems of having only defined one or the other.</p> <p>Is there a better pattern for this? What is the "best" approach to this issue in your opinion: </p> <ul> <li>providing two copies of a given function - the const and non-const versions</li> <li>or just one version, and then requiring consumers of that code to do their casts as they will?</li> </ul> <p>Or is there a better approach to the issue entirely? Is there work being done on the language itself to mitigate or obviate this issue entirely?</p> <p>And for bonus points:</p> <ul> <li>do you find this to be an unfortunate by-product of the C++ const-system</li> <li>or do you find this to be tantamount to touching the very heights of mount Olympus?</li> </ul> <p>EDIT:</p> <p>If I supply only the first - takes const returns const, then any consumer that needs to modify the returned item, or hand the returned item to another function that will modify it, must cast off the constness.</p> <p>Similarly, if I supply only the second definition - takes non-const and returns non-const, then a consumer that has a const pidl must cast off the constness in order to use the above function, which honestly, doesn't modify the constness of the item itself.</p> <p>Maybe more abstraction is desirable:</p> <pre><code>THING &amp; Foo(THING &amp; it); const THING &amp; Foo(const THING &amp; it); </code></pre> <p>I would love to have a construct:</p> <pre><code>const_neutral THING &amp; Foo(const_neutral THING &amp; it); </code></pre> <p>I certainly could do something like:</p> <pre><code>THING &amp; Foo(const THING &amp; it); </code></pre> <p>But that's always rubbed me the wrong way. I am saying "I don't modify the contents of your THING, but I'm going to get rid of the constness that you entrusted me with silently for you in your code."</p> <p>Now, a client, which has:</p> <pre><code>const THING &amp; it = GetAConstThing(); ... ModifyAThing(Foo(it)); </code></pre> <p>That's just wrong. GetAConstThing's contract with the caller is to give it a const reference. The caller is expected NOT TO MODIFY the thing - only use const-operations on it. Yes, the caller can be evil and wrong and cast away that constness of it, but that's just Evil(tm).</p> <p>The crux of the matter, to me, is that Foo is const-neutral. It doesn't actually modify the thing its given, but its output needs to propagate the constness of its argument.</p> <p>NOTE: edited a 2nd time for formatting.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1811918/what-are-the-major-benefits-of-an-in-person-interview 0 What are the major benefits of an in-person interview? [closed] Christopher W. Allen-Poole 2009-11-28T07:52:29Z 2009-11-30T22:01:48Z <h1>The question:</h1> <p>How important is it to have an in-person interview?</p> <h2>Related thoughts</h2> <p>Obviously no one can say that an in-person interview is paramount in our industry -- people are hired from across the country on a regular basis, but I am wondering what people's thoughts are regarding the benefits of an in-person interview. I've been wondering if a phone interview, with either a shared, server-side "white erase board" or some form of remoting (either (or both) would be used for making the interviewee prove he can write code) wouldn't actually be more efficient. </p> <p>A more remote interview system would have the decided benefit of allowing the candidate to feel more comfortable. This would mean that you would be less likely to accidentally overlook someone who is talented, but gets nervous under pressure. It would also mean that the candidate would not have to spend the time and money to get to your workplace (they should be willing to invest, but this is a nicety for them). It could also mean that you'd be able to have your own staff work from their desks, or, if they are available and out of the office (which is very often the case with the head of our department), they can at least listen/join in on their phones.</p> <p>On the other hand it would be more difficult to actually see how the person is acting -- something invaluable in determining his (his being used in the gender neutral sense) personality type (whether he would fit in a company) and whether he is lying. If remoting is not an option, then it would also run the risk of causing you to "interview Google", but it sounds like a lot of those people sound like they are Googling the answers anyway.</p> <p>It seems that, as I read more and more about how interviews are conducted, most of the in-person stuff is more and more about "Can you prove that you can write code?" and that strikes me as something which could be pushed off on to the phone pre-screening interviews. Heck, even the questions featured in <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/GuerrillaInterviewing3.html" rel="nofollow">The Guerrilla Guide to Interviewing (version 3.0)</a> by the mythic Joel Spolsky are questions which only require the person's voice on the other end of a phone.</p> <p>And I'll admit, I'm also in no position to hire anyone soon (I'm the person with the least seniority in my department), so this question is purely academic. I may have incorrectly weighted something, but that is why I am asking this question.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1821254/is-apples-app-store-going-to-implode 0 Is Apple's App Store going to implode? [closed] Mr.Gando 2009-11-30T17:40:49Z 2009-11-30T18:02:42Z <p>Hello,</p> <p>I have been developing for the iPhone for a while, on the last months I have seen many friends of mine quit developing for the App Store (other not so friends too), due to low visibility reasons. For example a guy I know has 12 small games in the app store, each one is at least 1 USD, and he's getting about 20 USD a month. Cases like this keep appearing, and from my point of view, I think for the most part of the cases, that's the reality in the App Store.</p> <p>Those are mostly "One Guy" indie teams, so what happens to bigger teams? , I'm talking about 3-5 person teams... I can't really understand how this teams are making any profits of the store.</p> <p>Now if we move up to the big boys, like EA, etc, in an environment like the App Store, where it's really really hard to get an estimate of profits that you can make with a product, are these guys going to stay there?, I mean, DSi from what I've heard has a better structure, and offers more visibility to the developers, same is the case for the PSP miniS ( in the case you are an indie ).</p> <p>Since I noticed this trend, I have started porting my purely Objective-C Game engine to C++ to minimize the difficulty of moving on to DSi or the PSP miniS... with no major problems in the iPhone right now.</p> <p>My questions are:</p> <p>1) What do you think about this situation, do you think the App Store "bubble" is going to explode anytime soon ??</p> <p>2) If you think so, and you are in there, what measures are/would you take, to minimize the impact of this ?</p> <p>I purpose we build up a community wiki out of this.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/562630/what-is-your-opinion-of-groovy 3 What is your opinion of Groovy? Berlin Brown 2009-02-18T20:13:01Z 2009-11-28T11:07:17Z <p>For your projects, did you have a favorable experience with Groovy? How big was the project? Were there issues with the language? Did you consider Jython, JRuby or Clojure?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1476420/piwik-web-analytics-anyone-with-experience-of-it 0 Piwik Web Analytics - Anyone with experience of it? Phil.Wheeler 2009-09-25T09:47:19Z 2009-11-28T08:28:41Z <p>I'm considering trying to get more granular analytics for my sites than the free plan on my current provider, <a href="http://getclicky.com" rel="nofollow">Clicky</a>, provides.</p> <p><a href="http://piwik.org/" rel="nofollow">Piwik</a> looks like a strong contender in the analytics space (and I'm surprised I haven't heard about it before) but I want to be sure I'm not throwing the baby out with the bathwater by swapping to it.</p> <p>Does anyone have any experience with this software and - in particular - are there any people out there who've tried customising the code or developing their own plugin?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1463916/how-do-you-find-balance-as-a-technical-team-lead 7 How do you find balance as a Technical Team Lead? Phil.Wheeler 2009-09-23T04:15:23Z 2009-11-28T08:28:26Z <p>As a Technical Team Lead, I've been finding it very difficult to stay involved in development while delivering on my responsibilities of documentation, design decisions (architecture), meetings and the like. As a consequence, I've really started to notice a decline in my programming skills and a marked inability to learn and develop new skills.</p> <p>While I'm able to spend some time foraging the net for new stuff and spend a lot of time on development at home (yes, I need a hobby - that's a whole different question), I do worry that at some point I will become less marketable as a developer, but not marketable enough as a "sub"-manager.</p> <p>How do you reconcile your responsibilities as a Technical Lead with your ongoing upskilling / learning?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1811224/why-do-people-rage-against-homework-questions-so-much 0 Why do people rage against homework questions so much [closed] Daniel 2009-11-28T01:18:16Z 2009-11-28T01:26:53Z <p>Why do people rage against homework questions so much? Everywhere had to start from somewhere and most people needed help at some point so why do people act superior to people who want to learn?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1808029/perl-to-python-ruby-code-translator 0 Perl to Python/Ruby code translator Thrawn 2009-11-27T10:45:38Z 2009-11-27T15:41:50Z <p>I was asked to write a Perl-to-Python and Perl-to-Ruby (and vice versa) code translator by an evil boss, and therefore I'm curious to know if some automatic code translators between them exist already. Just by googling it, I found <a href="http://perthon.sourceforge.net/" rel="nofollow">Perthon</a>, plus endless discussions and dead projects trying to do this.</p> <p>In your opinion, is there a standard way for this translation? Apart from having a programmer expert in all languages manually doing the job :-)</p> <p>Thanks!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/764416/why-would-one-use-groovy-over-java 4 Why would one use Groovy over Java? lfaraone 2009-04-18T22:58:04Z 2009-11-23T20:33:04Z <p>What benefits does Groovy offer over the use of Java other than more complicated syntax?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1779596/opinion-mining-what-database-type 1 Opinion Mining - What Database Type? MRFerocius 2009-11-22T18:52:28Z 2009-11-22T19:08:46Z <p>Hi guys,</p> <p>I am entering a project to make a Opinion Mining (Data Mining -> Web Mining -> Opinion Mining) to get semantic orientation of the words contained. We will use a crawler to get the pages opinion. Now the question is, what type of DataBase should I use (OO, Relational, hierachycal, etc), is best to use in this type of project. I know this is a specific question, Im not expecting everybodies response but at least someone that already did it, that would help.</p> <p>Regards!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1777497/what-javascript-frameworks-should-i-become-familiar-with 2 What javascript frameworks should I become familiar with? Ben Shelock 2009-11-22T01:43:30Z 2009-11-22T17:18:30Z <p>jQuery has served me well, it has given me an excellent introduction to Javascript but now I want to move onto something else. A good developer has a good knowlege of lots of different technologies.</p> <p>So what frameworks should I move onto? I just want something good to put on my CV. There are so many out there and they all more or less achive the same thing. But because people have their own preferences I want to be as versitile as possible for other peoples sake.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/147070/are-we-as-programmers-becoming-too-dependent-on-our-ides 25 Are we as programmers becoming too dependent on our IDEs? Mike Spross 2008-09-29T00:25:27Z 2009-11-22T15:00:37Z <p>For a long time, the only IDE I knew was the VB6 IDE, which is fairly outdated (ca. 1998) and not very feature-rich (unless you purchase third-party add-ons). You can set breakpoints and watches and there are other (now common-place) amenities, such as Intellisense. </p> <p>So, when I saw Eclipse for the first time, I was amazed at how much the IDE could do for you (<code>Generate Getters and Setters</code>, the quick-fix feature, the <code>Refactoring</code> menu, etc.). Same thing when we moved to Visual Studio and I saw all the auto-generated Form Designer code for the first time. </p> <p>These extras are great for productivity and just plain Getting Things Done, but I have to wonder, are we becoming too reliant on IDE's? How many programmers actually understand the rationale for the refactoring suggestions their IDE's give them? Do they need to understand why the IDE is suggesting they make a particular change to the code they just wrote?</p> <p>I just wonder, especially as more and more productivity features get crammed into IDE's, how much thinking future programmers will actually be doing if the IDE starts shielding them from having to actually think things through before they code, instead of using the IDE as a crutch (i.e. "I can write crap code, because the IDE will refactor it for me").</p> <p>Sometimes I find it very liberating to just fire up a text editor and code in that for awhile, to prove to myself that I still actually know the language I'm coding in.</p> <p>What are your thoughts on this? Are super-friendly IDE's jammed-packed with productivity features ultimately harming programmers by hiding too many details of the language and shielding them from making real design decisions?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1762899/can-should-a-domain-object-be-responsible-for-converting-itself-to-another-type 0 Can/Should a domain object be responsible for converting itself to another type? Peter 2009-11-19T12:17:04Z 2009-11-19T21:26:40Z <p>We have a class Event (it's actually named differently, but I'm just making abstraction):</p> <pre><code>public class Event { public string Name { get; set; } public string Description { get; set; } public EventType EventType { get; set; } } </code></pre> <p>We need to build an instance of a Message class with this object, but depending on the EventType, we use a different builder:</p> <pre><code>switch (event.EventType) { case EventType.First: message = FirstMessageBuilder.Build(event); break; case EventType.Second: message = SecondMessageBuilder.Build(event); break; } </code></pre> <p>Do you think this is acceptable, or should we take the following approach:</p> <p>Make an abstract class:</p> <pre><code>public class Event { public string Name { get; set; } public string Description { get; set; } public abstract Message BuildMessage(); } </code></pre> <p>Then derive two classes: <code>class FirstMessage</code> and <code>class SecondMessage</code> and make the domain objects responsible for building the message.</p> <p>I hope it isn't too abstract. The bottom line is we need to transform one class to another. A simple mapper won't do, because there are properties with XML content and such (due to a legacy application making the events). Just accept what we're trying to do here.</p> <p>The real question is: can a domain object be responsible for such a transformation, or would you not recommend it? I would avoid the ugly switch statement, but add complexity somewhere else.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1759051/logging-authentication-attempts-including-passwords 4 Logging authentication attempts including passwords evolve 2009-11-18T21:00:34Z 2009-11-18T22:01:16Z <p>I'm writing a comprehensive authentication system for an application and I was planning on logging failed authentication attempts in order to implement better security. I would like to check failed passwords for both brute force and dictionary attacks, however the only method I could think of doing this is by storing the raw password.</p> <p>I have mixed feelings about doing this. Although I know that the failed login attempts will be cleared every so often I don't like the idea of raw passwords being stored in a database. I know I mistype passwords very often which are very similar to my real password, or worse yet I'll type a wrong password for a particular login that is actually an active password for another website I belong to.</p> <p>It would however be impossible to implement advanced security without storing some raw passwords, so I'm trying to think about the best way to do it.</p> <p>Here are some possible solutions I have thought of:</p> <ul> <li>Don't store more then 24 hours of login attempts. <em>This isn't really a solution, more of simply limiting the damage if the passwords are compromised.</em></li> <li>Clear a users failed attempts if they are successfully authenticated.</li> </ul> <p>Anyone have any input on this? Is this a good/bad idea? Should I use two-way encryption?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1746424/linode-or-slicehost 0 Linode or Slicehost meme 2009-11-17T03:36:16Z 2009-11-17T03:46:16Z <p>I'm looking into VPS for LAMP and wanted to see if any of you have an opinion to help me decide between Linode and Slicehost? Pro, Cons and overall opinion will be much appreciated.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1720307/high-traffic-highly-secure-web-api-what-language 0 High-traffic, Highly-secure web API, what language? emi1faber 2009-11-12T06:31:20Z 2009-11-12T11:00:24Z <p>If you were planning on building a high-traffic, very secure site what language would you use? </p> <p>For example, if you were planning on say building an authorize.net-scale site, that had to handle tons of credit card transactions via an API, what would you use building it from scratch? I would imagine that most sites handling similar traffic with similar security would use non open-source software (correct me if I'm wrong). What open source software would you use and why? Python, Ruby, Erlang, PHP, custom C/C++, or what? Also, would you use a traditional database, or does the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoSQL" rel="nofollow">NoSQL</a> route make more sense?</p> <p>Not trying to start a flame-war here, just wondering what the good people of Stack Overflow think on the subject...</p> <p>Update: As a bit of a clarification, this is entirely hypothetical. I fully understand the importance of knowing your language/platform, just looking for some opinions of strengths/weaknesses of a given language/framework and where (and why) one might be more suitable over another. As far as data goes, I'm thinking customer A bought items X, Y, and Z, from vendor B. So, pretty straightforward, until someone wants to know whether customer C also bought items X and Y or X and Z or Y and Z together in one purchase. So, from a data standpoint, I guess I'm looking at it from a business intelligence standpoint and wondering whether NoSQL has any advantages/disadvantages over a traditional SQL database.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1717510/preferred-os-for-hosting-tomcat-servlet-container 0 Preferred OS for hosting Tomcat servlet container. dacracot 2009-11-11T19:32:41Z 2009-11-11T22:38:36Z <p>I know that I'm taking a risk, pitting the differing OS religions against each other, but I would like professional opinions about hosting a servlet container. In my case the container is set, we will be using Tomcat. But what is in question is the hosting operating system. We have administrators experienced in Windows Server 2003. We have developers experienced in Solaris, OSX, and Linux. There is no warring between these groups, just a question of who will ramp up through the learning curve necessary to use the OS that they are unfamiliar with. So given all the cooperative spirit, we are struggling with how to find the most efficient path.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/252208/is-there-a-good-argument-for-software-patents 7 Is there a good argument for software patents? David Nehme 2008-10-31T00:08:35Z 2009-11-09T18:58:14Z <p>Now that it looks like software patents are going to be <a href="http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20081030150903555" rel="nofollow">severely limited</a>, does anyone have a good argument for keeping them. It seems like copyright law serves software fine and patents just add overhead to what should be an almost frictionless process. Are there any examples of software that wouldn't have been written if not for patents?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1690974/c-string-isnullorempty-good-or-bad 5 C# String.IsNullOrEmpty: good or bad? osij2is 2009-11-06T22:36:22Z 2009-11-06T22:47:05Z <p>After an incident at work where I misused String.IsNullOrEmpty with a Session variable, a fellow coworker of mine now refuses to accept my usage of String.IsNullOrEmpty. After some research, apparently there's a bug listed for IsNullOrEmpty on MSDN (<a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.string.isnullorempty%28VS.80%29.aspx" rel="nofollow">link</a>) (read note at the bottom): </p> <blockquote> <p>As of April 4, 2006, there is a bug (possible in the JIT) that makes this method fail when optimizations are turned on. It is known to affect both C# and VB.</p> </blockquote> <p>More information can be found here (<a href="http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/ViewFeedback.aspx?FeedbackID=113102" rel="nofollow">link</a>). Microsoft the bug is 'supposedly' fixed post-Orcas, but unfortunately my employer still uses VS2005. But if the problem is fixed in 2008+ so be it. That's just fine with me.</p> <p>While my colleague's refusal of my code with IsNullOrEmpty to me is blind ignorance (IMO) he certainly can't tell me why <em>not</em> to use it other than the misuse with the session variable. I've used IsNullOrEmpty all over our code with no issues whatsoever. Personally, I find it much more readable in addition of doing two things in one statement. </p> <p>After googling for opinions on the subject, I've found sites that take the pros/con stance. Here are some of the sites I've read about this:</p> <p><a href="http://cs.rthand.com/blogs/blog%5Fwith%5Frighthand/archive/2006/06/22/1063.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://cs.rthand.com/blogs/blog_with_righthand/archive/2006/06/22/1063.aspx</a> </p> <p><a href="http://www.omegacoder.com/?p=105" rel="nofollow">http://www.omegacoder.com/?p=105</a></p> <p>One site (<a href="http://dotnetperls.com/isnullorempty" rel="nofollow">http://dotnetperls.com/isnullorempty</a>) sums up the method (IMHO) pretty well: </p> <blockquote> <p>Here we looked that IsNullOrEmpty method on the string type, which provides us with a good and relatively efficient method of checking whether a string is OK to save or use. However, for performance, it may be better to use manual null checks. Empty strings can also be tested in other ways, and my research here shows that checking length is fastest.</p> </blockquote> <p>Assuming the bug fix is in place (and working correctly) in VS2008/2010/etc., is there any reason <em>not</em> to use String.IsNullOrEmpty with VS2005 and beyond? I realize this may seem a little overkill over such a silly little method, but I'd like to know if there's more behind the scenes going on and if anyone has alternative explanations.</p>