right, so i'm trying to make a distinction between what my application should be using and what my application should be implementing is a way I guess you could put it
well, not physically/technically. For instance, file parsing... I could write a file parsing application that's command line only.
but the files only give me a subset of the information i need in order to make that information in the file useful
so say you have file named `variables.txt` that looks like:
3, 5, 10
5, 6, 12
13, 20, 54
1, 100, 34
okay so then I parse that into the object
public class EquationVariable
{
public int X { get; private set; }
public int Y { get; private set; }
public int Z { get; private set; }
}
where then I would have List<EquationVariable> Variables inside my VariableFile object
but still there is basically nothing useful at this point.
after I have my VariableFile, I would then pass that to something else, which uses all that information
say that something else is a PolynomialWorksheet
then I have a WorksheetViewModel which I display in my application and it allows users to edit the worksheet
where I'm not seeing where to make a clear separation is between PolynomialWorksheet and EquationVariable I guess.
so if i had a parser library would that parse everything and provide PolynomialWorkseet, or would my application ask the parser library for all of its EquationVariable, and then create a PolynomialWorksheet
@BradleyDotNET okay, so now lets say I have a EquationVariableParser in a class library, and now PolynomialWorksheet is in my application. After a worksheet is created, a user can edit it, and then save it.
could step up this complexity now by saying, lets say the EquationVariableParser is an .exe, I ask it for all the variables, it gives them to me, i create polynomialworksheet, and allow students to edit. then then edits are sent back to the .exe, telling it to save the changes to that file, then the .exe responds back to me and may have possibly changed some of the values I thought I saved (basically it did a range check and prevented a range from being exceeded)
because if you think about it, you have the EquationVariableParser (exe) and that can be modeled, and it does communicate... but its a slave... so do you model the communication link in the EquationVariableParser model?
@BradleyDotNET for instance my phone app gets HTTP pages parses data every 15 minutes, then does a calculation based on the geographic location of the user. What I want to do with mobile services...uh oh hold on phone call
@BradleyDotNET so PolynomialWorksheet doesn't talk to EquationVariableParser... it would be more like, ComLink.SendEquationVariables(polyWorksheet, equVariableParser); ?
well mainly my issue is defining my domain i guess
my application: saves, edits, prints. it also communicates real-time. it also has concepts of multiple kinds of projects, and one main project which is composed of smaller projects.
it's supposed to be like an all in one deal, but i know that there can be separations which will help with readability and maintainability of the code, its just a matter of where do i make those separations
@BradleyDotNET ok back, so moving most of my logic to Azure mobile services should be doable, I need a dtabase and some stored procedure to calculate something based on geolocation of user and send push notification when they get close to certain something or other ....
and all these projects need to be saved, but in a different structure than their model, because i only need file paths/names, which will open the files when the project is loaded. and these project structures are represented visually as a treeview but you wouldn't be able to tell the project model has anything to do with the structure you see in the tree view.
for instance, i could open one file, and it would create 10 children below the root node in the treeview, and every child node would have a child node. but the "model" of the project would just be:
<Project>
<SpecialFile Location="C:\Users\me\Desktop\file.extension" />
</Project>
so when I open the project--create a Project model, I might have a file name, but now it needs to get parsed into a bunch of other things, and I don't think that makes sense.
Your ProjectParser would use a SpecialFile parser when it encountered one of those tags. That parser would return data the project model understood, or at least could contain so a data template later down the line can display it.
@BradleyDotNET the first thing I need to do is grab data from 2 HTTP sources, parse some values and store these in the sql database. But the free tier price for Scheduler only allows jobs to run every hour. This might be ok for one of the pages whose data updates every hour, but the other page updates its data every 15 minutes. Then what makes matters worse is I have no clue how the pricing works for the scheduler, it look s expensive but its based on units and I have no idea what they mean
@BradleyDotNET hmm ok I think I cam across a question on here about something similar. there was some concern about keeping the task alive but I'll do some more research into it.
@BradleyDotNET i think I found it, he says "Yet another alternative would be to write your own scheduler and hosting that solution in Azure Websites. I would recommend using Quartz.net scheduling library. It's free, open source and used by many folks"
I am developing a web site which I plan to host on Windows Azure. The site will need to run some daily/weekly scheduled jobs, synchronizing to various 3rd party data sources, sending user notifications, etc. It should also be able to run on-demand async tasks such as sending emails to users etc. ...