On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 8:02 PM, Martin O'Neal
<martin.oneal (at) corsaire (dot) com [email concealed]> wrote:
>
> > this is fairly stupid.
>
> LOL; more stupid than vacuous name calling, or less?
I'd say it's on par with it :)
> > what financial institutions are
> > using floating point and not decimal
> > variables to represent their money?
> > very few i'd guess. it hardly needs
> > to be said that anyone using FP
> > variables to do financial maths
> > should be shot.
>
> LOL2; unfortunately you have guessed wrong. Do not pass go. Do not
> collect ukp200. We see this kind of thing all the time in financial
> applications.
Well then you see some terribly-written financial apps. The ones I
worked are not like this.
> > your last recommendation for c# is
> > wrong. == is fine for numbers. your
> > test above even proves it!
>
> Er, obviously you have become confused due of the ambiguity of the bit
> where it says "This type of caching does not exist in C# as can be seen
> from the equivalent code example".
Yes I did; but it doesn't change the fact that your comments under
"Testing" in that section (page 16) are still not applicable to c#.
Nor is the "Recommendation" about ==. As I said.
> Thanks for the constructive criticism though.
You're welcome. I hope your future releases are improved because of it :)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
Sponsored by: Watchfire
Methodologies & Tools for Web Application Security Assessment
With the rapid rise in the number and types of security threats, web application security assessments should be considered a crucial phase in the development of any web application. What methodology should be followed? What tools can accelerate the assessment process? Download this Whitepaper today!
<martin.oneal (at) corsaire (dot) com [email concealed]> wrote:
>
> > this is fairly stupid.
>
> LOL; more stupid than vacuous name calling, or less?
I'd say it's on par with it :)
> > what financial institutions are
> > using floating point and not decimal
> > variables to represent their money?
> > very few i'd guess. it hardly needs
> > to be said that anyone using FP
> > variables to do financial maths
> > should be shot.
>
> LOL2; unfortunately you have guessed wrong. Do not pass go. Do not
> collect ukp200. We see this kind of thing all the time in financial
> applications.
Well then you see some terribly-written financial apps. The ones I
worked are not like this.
> > your last recommendation for c# is
> > wrong. == is fine for numbers. your
> > test above even proves it!
>
> Er, obviously you have become confused due of the ambiguity of the bit
> where it says "This type of caching does not exist in C# as can be seen
> from the equivalent code example".
Yes I did; but it doesn't change the fact that your comments under
"Testing" in that section (page 16) are still not applicable to c#.
Nor is the "Recommendation" about ==. As I said.
> Thanks for the constructive criticism though.
You're welcome. I hope your future releases are improved because of it :)
> Martin...
--
silky
http://www.themonkeynet.com/
http://lets.coozi.com.au/
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
Sponsored by: Watchfire
Methodologies & Tools for Web Application Security Assessment
With the rapid rise in the number and types of security threats, web application security assessments should be considered a crucial phase in the development of any web application. What methodology should be followed? What tools can accelerate the assessment process? Download this Whitepaper today!
https://www.watchfire.com/securearea/whitepapers.aspx?id=70170000000940F
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
[ reply ]