The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘Conferences’ Category

Some notes on codepoints.net and beta.codepoints.net

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/08/07

At the time of writing a lot of this might be more recent, but for quite some time codepoints.net had not been updated with code point information newer Unicode releases.

Basically it was stuck at Unicode version 8.0 with some 120k glyphs. At the time of writing Unicode version 15.0 is in beta and the difference between 15.0 and 8.0 is some 24k glyphs.

So I had a quick twitter chat with the author and jotted down the links in this blog post so I won’t forget them.

There I learned it was open source (I think it is the only Unicode codepoint site that is).

Here it goes:

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Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Apache2, codepoints.net, Conference Topics, Conferences, Database Development, Debian, Development, DVCS - Distributed Version Control, Encoding, Event, GitHub, Linux, MySQL, PHP, Power User, Scripting, Software Development, Source Code Management, Unicode, Web Development | Leave a Comment »

Leah Neukirchen: “Lesser known pop music facts: The song “Nothing compares 2 U” is actually about the floating point value NaN. …” – BLÅHAJ Social

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/08/06

From about a year ago, but too funny not to repeat:

[Wayback/Archive] Leah Neukirchen: “Lesser known pop music facts: The song “Nothing compares 2 U” is actually about the floating point value NaN. …” – BLÅHAJ Social

Via [Wayback/Archive] Jeroen Wiert Pluimers @wiert@mastodon.social on X: “Lesser known pop music facts: The song “Nothing compares 2 U” is actually about the floating point value NaN. blahaj.social/@leah/110781718156325459

--jeroen

Posted in Algorithms, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, Floating point handling, Fun, Meme, Quotes, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Kris on Twitter: “Company chat: »Right, we need more languages with Emoji as variable type indicators and pointer symbols.«…

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/08/06

Please do not overdo Unicode outside the ASCII realm for identifiers and stay away from Emoji: [Wayback/Archive] Kris on Twitter: “Company chat: »Right, we need more languages with Emoji as variable type indicators and pointer symbols.«…”

Company chat: »Right, we need more languages with Emoji as variable type indicators and pointer symbols.«
»
🎼initializer🎱«
»
💦 mutable, 🧱 not.«
»
🎁 on the heap, 🥞 on the stack«
»
🍼 ctor, 🪦 dtor«
»� non-utf string result«
»any of
👩‍❤️‍💋‍👨 as a concat operator«
»
📁📂 block delims«

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Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Encoding, Event, Fun, Quotes, Software Development, Unicode | Leave a Comment »

Ian Coldwater 📦💥 on Twitter: “Who called it a Kubernetes penetration test and not a clusterfuck”

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/08/05

For my slide archive:

[Archive.is] Ian Coldwater 📦💥 on Twitter: “Who called it a Kubernetes penetration test and not a clusterfuck

–jeroen

Posted in About, Conference Topics, Conferences, Event, Personal | Leave a Comment »

Every conversation about dependencies since 2020 uses the same XKCD 2347 based image, which is a problem on multiple levels

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/08/01

The below picture is a modification of [Wayback/Archive] 2347: Dependency – explain xkcd

Title text: Someday ImageMagick will finally break for good and we’ll have a long period of scrambling as we try to reassemble civilization from the rubble.

It actually emphasises the problem both that [Wayback/Archive] xkcd 2347: Dependency is way too optimistic, and that everyone uses that to point out dependency issues or worse as a thought-terminating cliché .

The second problem amplifies itself by increasing the popularity of the comic, and the attracts people to use it even if they hardly know about dependencies.

In turn it diminishes the meaning of it, kind of making it more optimistic by basically amplifying the message “there is just one really fragile project our design/infrastructure depends on” (the infamous “A project some random person in Nebraska has been thanklessly maintaining since 2003”).

The sad reality is that this single fragile project is just not true. Modern development and infrastructure systems usually are underpinned by package managers installing the complex graphs of dependencies of which dozens, heck thousands are maintained for “free” by, more often than not, a single worn out maintainer per dependency.

It’s just that over the last few decades usually only one such package at a time posed a serious problem. But with dependencies on very small building blocks, the amount of blocks is rising as is their usage. Just two examples out of the Node JS world (mind you, each development and infrastructure stack lives in comparable worlds):

Mind you, these links are 2021 and 2022, so the numbers have increased.

Many think such problems are limited to programming errors, but over the last decade these have become the tip of the iceberg. The real problems now are that maintainers are fading away as they have for instance been worn out for too long, or simply are aging. So what we have seen over the last decade is the rise of supply chain attacks.

One such example was the XZ utils backdoor which was, by sheer luck because one guy tried to investigate why connecting over ssh had become much slower than before, barely detected in time. It had a CVSS score of 10.0, the highest possible score.

So be prepared that the below picture will have “your business structure” on the top, and towards the bottom a bunch of small fragile pillars with the text “many projects, each maintained by a worn out person on the verge of collapse”.

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Posted in Awareness, Conference Topics, Conferences, Design Patterns, Development, Event, Fun, Software Development, Systems Architecture, Technical Debt, xkcd | Leave a Comment »

Programming Quotes: “No code is faster than no code…” – Mastodon

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/07/31

Important code optimisation thought: [Wayback/Archive] Programming Quotes: “No code is faster than no code. — merb motto” – Mastodon

--jeroen

Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, Fun, Quotes, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

CrazyMyra: “After AI took his job as an online assistant, Mr Clippy was obliged to seek work in other sectors…” – beige.party

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/07/30

I love the new title-text for the 2018 “Clippy” picture at [Wayback/Archive] CrazyMyra: “After AI took his job as an online assistant, Mr Clippy was obliged to seek work in other sectors…” – beige.party

A metal toilet paper holder in a corner od a bathro,with an empty roll, that looks similar to a large paperclip

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Posted in AI and ML; Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, Fun, History, JavaScript/ECMAScript, LifeHacker, LLM, Meme, Office, Power User, Scripting, Software Development, Web Development, Windows | Leave a Comment »

Reminder to self: write a Bookmarklet that shortens YouTube URLs to the youtu.be ones

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/07/02

When sharing YouTube videos via the mobile apps, they are shortened using the youtu.be domain.

So this is a reminder to write a Bookmarklet based URL-shortener myself for this and extend it so it also understands the various YouTube URL parameters (like start time).

The transformation is documented:

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Posted in Bookmarklet, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, JavaScript/ECMAScript, Power User, Scripting, Software Development, Web Browsers, Web Development | Leave a Comment »

GitHub – KirillOsenkov/LargeAddressAware: A build tools package that adds support for making 32-bit exes LARGEADDRESSAWARE (and some words on a 64-bit Delphi product)

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/06/26

[Wayback/Archive] GitHub – KirillOsenkov/LargeAddressAware: A build tools package that adds support for making 32-bit exes LARGEADDRESSAWARE

Hopefully this can be applied to Delphi projects as well. If not then in Delphi you can manually call this in an post-build task.

Addition late 20240626

[Wayback/Archive] Kirill Osenkov: “@wiert I also found that you can…” – Mastodon

@wiert I also found that you can target AnyCPU 32-bit preferred and it will give you the same address space. So that tool is only for x86.

Via [Wayback/Archive] Meik Tranel on X: “Please for the love of all that is holy. Do not build #dotnet tools to serve a non interactive task that is supposed to be run during a build – use an #MSBuild task package. Also #JS/#NPM devs should not be allowed to write tooling. Thanks for coming to my ted talk…”.

The Delphi bit inspired a few months ago by: [Wayback/Archive] Andreas on X: “Will there ever be a 64bit Delphi IDE or at least a LargeAddressAware version. Our Projekt crashes the IDE between 14-18 compilations because it runs out of memory. Maybe I have to patch the IDE myself by moving all .NET and Compiler memory allocations above the 2 GB address.”

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Posted in .NET, Conference Topics, Conferences, Continuous Integration, Delphi, Development, Event, msbuild, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Delphi has had a more type safe FreeAndNil or a while now, but in order to do so it lies to you

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/06/26

During my year+ of cancer treatments, Embarcadero did a tiny thing that makes [Wayback/Archive]FreeAndNil safer to use. In order to do so, the method now lies to you by taking a const [ref] parameter which technically it is not allowed to change, but the internal hackery allows it to. Dalija Prasnikar explained it in 2020: [Wayback/Archive] Magic behind FreeAndNil.

The new signature is this:

procedure FreeAndNil(const [ref] Obj: TObject); inline;

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Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Delphi, Delphi 10.4 Sydney (Denali), Delphi 11.0 Alexandria (Olympus), Development, EKON, Event, Software Development | 2 Comments »