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I mistakenly thought that older versions of VS Community were unavailable for download when installing it on my new laptop, so I ended up going from VS2017 to VS2022. It wasn't quite painless, but nearly so.
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Good job!
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Your post almost made me want to upgrade to Windows 11 now. Almost.
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Own one? What is your favorite?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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all manners of stew?
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Overnight porridge with old-fashioned steel-cut oats. 3 parts liquid to 1 part oats and a shake or two of salt. I use equal measures of milk and water, but just water works well too. Add a dash of Maple Syrup for sweetness.
I'm just cooking a Rice Pudding in the oven, staring from uncooked rice. I bet a slow-cooker version of Rice Pud would be great, too. It never occurred to me. Maybe next time.
Keep Calm and Carry On
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SWMBO makes great roasts and chilis. They're not done in a slow cooker, but they're done much the same way.
There are a lot of chili recipes out there, so you have to find one that you like. Your .sig mentions bacon, so you can't go wrong there. Pinto beans, kidney beans, and mushrooms are also good. And chili peppers, of whatever variety imparts the level of heat that you want.
When I was living in Dallas, some colleagues went to a county fair in more of a rural area. They said that the secret ingredient in that fair's prize-winning chili was squirrel meat.
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Greg Utas wrote: They said that the secret ingredient in that fair's prize-winning chili was squirrel meat. There is hardly any meat on a squirrel
..but yes, sounds like a good plan for today
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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This meal is a family favorite, never gets old, and is easy and quick.
Italian Veggie & Pasta Soup
1 lb ground beef
3 carrots - chopped very small
4 stalks Celery - chopped
2 cans diced tomatoes - do not drain (for zest one could be tomatoes with green chilies)
2 cans red kidney beans - could drain them but I don't
3 cans beef broth
1 24 oz can traditional spaghetti sauce
1 8 oz pack of macaroni - elbow or, better yet, shells
Brown and drain ground beef then add to pot.
Add carrots and Celery to pot
Empty all cans into pot
Stir, cover and cook on low for 6-8 hrs or high for 4 hrs.
Before serving cook up macaroni in separate pot.
To serve put large spoon full of macaroni in bowl with a ladle full of soup.
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David MacDermot wrote: 3 carrots - chopped very small
4 stalks Celery - chopped ..and my mind went "unions! unions!!" Those three are called "mirepoix" and is an often used flavor base.
Guess I'll be trying this one twice; once with and once without unions.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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You'd have to talk to my wife. She's an extremely slow cooker.
Of course, she is extremely slow at every thing she does. She has two speeds, slow and full stop.
Her dishes are wonderful.
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Slow Eddie wrote: Her dishes are wonderful. Picture?
of the dish, not the wife.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Microsoft <whistling innocently> __not doing anything here__
<pulls rug out from underneath you>
Microsoft: Walk much, fella!?! Ho ho, ha ha. < walks away >
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Given the rich/complete metadata and run-time analysis (JIT) of managed code, I'm surprised .NET and/or Java do not have a way to create true transactions in the engine.
It should be relatively easy to considering how much information is available in terms of how the data is laid out in memory - unless I'm missing something. By *relatively* I mean compared to say, trying to implement such a thing in unmanaged code.
It strikes me as a missed opportunity, as I know several areas where it could potentially come in handy, maybe more so with parallel operations as well.
But again, maybe I'm missing something. Maybe it's more difficult than I imagine.
I'd try to do it myself but,
A) It's a lot of man-years of effort
B) It requires changes to the CLI or JVM - and my code will never "go viral" enough to be adopted into major engines.
C) I've never done it before. It's a bit ambitious for a first attempt at implementing ACID transactions.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Moving back-end wheels to the front.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Not everything is about databases. Not every piece of software is a triple tier application designed for some corporate entity that wants to do b2b or ecommerce transactions.
There are plenty of good reasons to want to be able to do this in memory.
Transactional memory - Wikipedia[^]
Most of them having to do with concurrent software.
It's arguable that maybe full ACID isn't needed in such cases, but once you've gone that far, full ACID is a stone's throw from it.
Real programmers use butterflies
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He's not at Microsoft Research anymore but way back around 2010 Dana Groff led a team that designed the experimental STM.NET[^]. I know nothing about it at all. For some reason the whole project was completely dropped.
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Dropped?! Where I worked, projects (if initiated at a sufficiently senior level) were never dropped. They were only repositioned.
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Greg,
Greg Utas wrote: They were only repositioned. Yeeaah, we're going to need to go ahead and move you down to storage room B[^].
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Interesting.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I found the team blog in the archive[^] if you are interested in reading the old material. I did some digging around and it was the Program Manager of the CLR team at the time (Joe Duffy) that pushed to get it dropped.
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Does anyone know of a Visual Studio debugging visualizer (C#) that lets you view byte arrays in a large hex-editor fashion, rather than just the simple intellisense dropdown? (Read-only is OK)
I'm trying to compare byte arrays to see the differences and it's maddening switching between each intellisense dropdown and trying to remember the first one to compare it with the second one. It would be great if I could see them side by side.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Hmmm,
What's wrong with the built-in memory view?
Ctrl Alt M,1
Ctrl Alt M,2
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