fyi, we've got our own version of extension as well (it's got c# / f# support while rlemons plugin focuses on langauges mostly used in his chat groups i think)
PR is still pending with him so maybe he'll eventually have it all as well
i've mentioned though that i've done it in my own fork in one of the PRs so its on his radar
reason my language support is non-trivial is because it not only updates the CodeMirror js package - it actually draws on its code and dynamically fills the combobox based off CodeMirror's declaration of language support. RLemon on the other hand is using hardcoded strings that don't work when you invoke full support of codemirror
because code mirror uses the same underlying markup language for multiple syntaxes, i had to also switch it from using a name of language to it's mime-type based off codemirror's js declaration
roughy speaking - this expands his extension from about 10-15 langauges to 130ish i think
but ServiceStack was great community project until 3.x - at 4.x the developer switched it into a commercial product with "free quota" included
i felt betrayed in that granted it was open source and developer had the right to earn but switching a product from a community project to full on commercial product .. that's wrong imho
also, its not nearly as fast as its alternatives - it's fastest component was ServiceStack.Text (its serialization library) but it's no longer the king especially if you're willing to use newer binary formats
its ORM layer was hideously slow and much lower in functionality than EF4 even
in case you're thinking you can try out 3.x of ServiceStack - it's .Net 3.5 based and isn't maintained (hasn't been for years)
My plan was to use EF as ORM since I have a bit of experience with it through school. So I'm just looking for something that makes it easier for me to send data back and forth between server and client. It could honestly run on TCP for all I care. :P
However, I feel HTTP is a better choice since it's more flexible in the future.
Is there a lot of plumbing involved with WebAPI? One of the things I enjoyed with WCF was that I just wrote a bit of code and everything else was taken care of for me.
for the longest time I've considered it to be a problem but then realised that a table is really just a virtual partition - you could just as easily do that yourself - for example in redis
np, but let me know what you choose because it's gonna be a bit of effort to get it up and running properly (and i'm assuming you have git setup already going)
Yeah. The Roslyn/C# approach is definitely the easiest for me, but you don't really see C# as a scripting language in the wild. Lua seems to be leading in that department.
as somebody who does scripting in c# - and not just because i already knew c# - it's more a case of people not realising they have this option than it being difficult to work with
my director has no clue about c# as a language but he has no problem modifying my linqpad scripts to make minor tweaks as he needs it just by following the logic already in there
while lua certainly has a lot of end user impression of the scripting language, it's not necessarily the easiest to work with imho (limited lua scripting experience) and as such you could just as well give them python scripting which also has a huge library support
at the end of the day, they'll learn whatever you'll give them (for example the autohotkey scripting? or actionscript?). We may be developers right now, but we're also end users of other people's works
and that last point is pretty important that a lot of us developers tend to forget - we're not gods in all realms.. we are also the PEBCAKs of other systems
as a very recent example - while I can certainly hold my own in c# / wpf / linq stuff - i'm the PEBCAK for Gjallarhorn
Yeah, that makes sense. I'll just go with C# scripting then. At least they don't have to worry about classes and such right away. :) And they'll learn The Right Languageā¢.
well dunno about the right language but giving them c# scripting can let them use linqpad as a mini ide for scripting for free
and its a huge benefit when you're exploring new stuff - that'll be very handy for a script developer of your game
its sad that people think of linqpad as a query tool - its a full blown mini-ide with integrated debugger that supports everything you'd expect from a "professional" debugger
agreed but i'm assuming since he's going to intentionally give the ability to plugin to the game the api will cater more to end user than to a well designed api meant for developers
my main argument for the ide type environment is: from my limited experience with third party scripting - its really really hard to script things in notepad or an "editor" that is basically a textbox in their program
with linqpads intellisense + ability to run random code as they're fleshing the script out could give them much nicer experience (especially if combined with debugger)
using System.IO;
public static class Foo
{
private static readonly Stream Stream = File.OpenRead("""");
public static long Bar()
{
var stream = GetStream();
return stream.Length;
}
public static Stream GetStream()
{
return Stream;
}
}
granted this debugger isn't something thats free (or intellisense even) - but there's no reason why he couldn't talk to linqpad author and offer a discounted linqpad in partnership with author so people who get his game and want to get into scripting could get linqpad intellisense at a discount