@BenjaminGruenbaum Yes, you're changing the location, for one it might not be the same origin and then there's how the frame's probably not listening to the messages I sent it.
@Zirak oh that's right : it works... when zoom = normal.... If I click, a new textbox appears.... But if ZOOMED (with mousewheel) , when I click the textbox is badly positionned, do you have the same problem ?
I'm having some trouble understanding the basic concepts of locking in a multi-user / web application.
When a user gets authorized by our federation, he'll return with a username claim, which we'll then use to retrieve some extra info about him like so:
var claimsIdentity = (ClaimsIdentity)HttpC...
Well, currently I'm not. The problem is, the call to `retrieveUserId` could take some time. So if a concurrent request by the same user were to occur during that call, `claimsIdentity.HasClaim(CustomClaims.UserId)` would still be false, meaning it'll retrieve and add twice
@QuanticProgramming Yes it is. It's also horrible but it's definitely wonderful :D
@Kippie whenever you have a doubt whether or not you should take a lock - take the lock and worry about performance later. Concurrency is hard to reason about, I've been writing multithreaded code for years and I'd definitely take the lock.
I don't disagree with you there, but it doesn't really matter in this case, I believe? I could always use the CurrentPrincipal on the thread, but that would get me the same problems, I believe
@BenjaminGruenbaum In a normal sollution, I would agree, but the back-end developed by an external party is based on AX, and it's slow as all hell. Retrieving a user by an id could take up to 2 seconds (I wish I was kidding.)
@Kippie then instead of locking it lock a boolean (or use an atomic) and if you're already trying to claim a userid return an appropriate response (likely a 503)
Current code is modified to do an extra check to hasclaim *after* retrieving the userid, and then either add or update it. Still has a small chance of causing some issues, but should mostly be safe as everything happens in-memory, and as such is fast
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah, the problem is there's not a specific call for just that. What it does is find a CUSTOMER based on a username, then aggregates all of his info in different tables, and returns a huge-ass object from which we only need one ID
I could ask for an RFC for this specific thing, though they'd probably charge € 40k for that, and we'd have to wait for the next release, being in march
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah, I've pretty much stopped caring. I'm only here as a consultant and I've made my opinion about the back-end clear enough times already. Now I just do as told, and tell the business off when they complain about performance
@Kippie ok then, but it sounds like whatever you're doing is fundamentally broken. Just so I don't sound ambiguous. This is not how you'd go about doing what you're doing in ASP.NET in general.
It is a bit like allocating a strip of memory c++. It is perfectly possible that you can't obtain anymore memory, though not likely, unless memory is almost entirely consumed or you're asking for an extraordinarily lot amount of memory
I would like to show a different div depending on what class my 3 span elems contain.
If all span hasClass up or up1 the code would show a div with class allUp . If it hasClass up up1 and down then it would show a div with class twoUp.
I wrote the following, but of course it doesn't work.
var $...
I don't know if this question should be answered or closed but if it should be answered then @Pointy's comment is probably at least half the answer. Maybe the other half would be that you can't write a script just by writing a bunch of random lines of code you don't understand and hope it will somehow work. — dystroy2 mins ago
var s = false || throw new Error('test');
SyntaxError: Unexpected token throw
var s = false || (throw new Error('test'));
SyntaxError: Unexpected token throw
var s = false || (throw new Error('test'), false);
SyntaxError: Unexpected token throw
I was hoping that someone could explain if it in general is a security problem not to update your browser. Firefox constantly prompts me to update my browser, but how dangerous is it to not update?
As part of this question, I would like to know what that problem exactly is. What are the risks of...
As a programmer I have always been trained and told that we should always design proper database structure and make sure that indexes, foreign key constraints etc are followed. I have used OpenCart, Magento, Prestashop, Wordpress and the surprising feature is - None of them have Foreign Key used ...