indeed but this will grant you learning AST stuff - how beneficial is that for you right now or in near future vs the energy you'll spend on the chance you get to learn something useful
(this isn't something about this project only - its kinda how I approach all problem solving)
I can learn something awesome but if it's not going to serve me in near future.. chances are by the time i can actually use it.. i would have forgotten it or at least no as razor sharp as i should be
and as such that'd be energy & time wasted
its partly why i've not pursued f# aggressively - its a challenge - i'll learn something cool.. but can i put it into practice immediately? until recently the answers been no
with Reed's Gjallarhorn release - stars have sort of aligned - i'm intrigued by his work and things have adjusted around me in a way that lets me make some aggressive changes to codebase
perhaps.. but it'll still need me to expend effort & time to learn it properly in first place - that isn't a few days task.. it'll take me at least a few months to really get a solid grip on f#
and if i can't practice it early on, i'll lose the knowledge and my motivation will take a swift dive not just in f# but c# projects as well
i already have picked it up at a basic level over this weekend
but it's like mvvm - i know the keywords.. i can write the functions
i've already got enough practice from hardcore linq statements to even pulls some of functional stuff off -- but am i reallyyy thinking functional yet? no
thats going to take time and experience.. no shortcut there
i'll make mistakes - write code that'll make folks cringe who know f#
i'm pretty sure your hired devs aren't spitting out the most beautiful elegant code
and i'm ocd about that - i can't let it be just functional - it does what you asked.. no it has to have artistic value as well
people should be able to twist it in ways I didn't anticipate and it should still hold it's own or at least gracefully degrade
i can't do that in f# just by reading tutorials
I'm considering the pluralsight f# courses - there seems to be 11 of them with some redundancy so probably more like 6-7 that may be helpful
that being said, if you've got a nice little UI project, Gjallarhorn is worth making the jump for IMO - it's completely making me rethink how UI should be approached for desktop
@ReedCopsey the level you're at - it might make sense - it is also why i've decided to pick f# just to be able to give gjallarhorn a fair shot but mvvm will still stay the defacto starting point for all beginner i think :)
honestly, had I written gjallarhorn in C#, I think it'd probably get a lot more traction - but some of the things I want to do with it just won't work in C# 😋
I was more a Bionic Six kid - i saw its reruns six times in a row and didn't get bored :)
it was really a coincidence kinda thing - i moved around a lot as a kid while my dad moved cities from project to project and coincidently bionic six was just starting to air on the local tv - I never understood how was it possible to have that coincidence six times in a row
Any idea why, if I am creating a DoubleAnimation to move a FrameworkElement, it would be moving the element relative to its current position in the parent panel instead of from 0,0?
I really feel like C# should add a better way to handle backing fields for properties. Some way so I don't have to make a ton of backing fields which only job is to hold a value for the property.
I guess it's possible they add something to address it. The recent changes to out are great.
I'm not sure non-auto-properties generate any backing fields. But that's what I'd do aswell. Just give access to a backing field inside properties, and only add it to the output if it's used. No cost and you get nicer usage.
There is a tutorial at Pluralsight that says an Element searches upward the visual tree until it finds a DataContext. Is this how it works? I always thought that DataContext is inherited.
0) That is hwo Reed writes C#. 1) Easy way to have a common standard in the project, just install the nuget. 2) Configurable 3) When used to it it reads pretty well imo. The bracing rules kind of enables reading the shape of the code
Added tile selection and a reflection based property explorer that looks for attribute decorated properties and then presents them in a modifiable form. It works nicely.
I need to improve my ObjectViewModel though, since it uses a chain of ifs to expose the different property view models. Not very flexible.
I'm playing around with the concept of dragging a window around by clicking and dragging a control within the window. The catch is, it has to be done during a DragDrop. Currently I am using OnPreviewDragOver, which works, unless you move the mouse too fast. Then it stops dragging the window. Any suggestions on how to address that?
Or would I just be better off capturing an image of the window, making that the cursor, and hiding the window till the drop is done?