• @Wild_Mastic
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      81 year ago

      Jokes on you, I am already one! (yes my company chosen dev language is really vbnet)

      • @Heavybell
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        1 year ago

        My old boss loved VB.Net. I still remember a time when I helped him out by solving mysterious bug for him.

        He used to have this class he copied about to do database stuff. Not the worst thing of itself, but it was oddly specific in some ways for reused code. E.g. It had a function that took an enum value and returned connection string. And of course what options were in the enum varied.

        So I come in one day and two other devs are already peering over his shoulder trying to help. The program is crashing when it tries to connect to the database and they can see for some reason the connection string is a single letter. I ask to see the function that is getting the connection string and see he’s removed the parameter, but the compiler didn’t pick up on it because:

        • VB.net lets you call functions that have no parameters without parentheses
        • VB.net is type lax, so an enum can be treated as an integer without casting
        • VB.net uses parentheses for array indexation as well as method invokation
        • .Net strings can be indexed like an array of characters
        • VB has no character type so VB.net treat characters as 1-length strings

        So instead of passing an enum to a function, it was calling the function with no parameter, then using the enum value to index the returned string into a single character, which was then treated as a string and passed to the SqlClient constructor.

        • @Wild_Mastic
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          21 year ago

          I saw something similar in ancient code I found while refactoring some stuff. It’s between genius and maniac.

      • lanbanger
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        1 year ago

        I remember when I turned up to a new C# role, when all the interviews had been about C#, but the system was all VB.Net. Fckmylife.

    • Rentlar
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      The next Slay the Spire to be developed on Microsoft Access