Well, I was more curious about the comment you made where you said "this doesn't make sense". @NETscape explained that .Contains returns a bool which more than likely wasn't what I wanted to select data.
internal class LogItem
{
public DateTime Date { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public string Priority { get; set; }
public string Message { get; set; }
}
public class LogToTextfile : ILogger
{
private BlockingCollection<LogItem> queue = new BlockingCollection<LogItem>();
private bool running = false;
private void Start()
{
var th = new Thread(() =>
{
var filename = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings[@"TextLog"];
foreach(var log in queue.GetConsumingEnumerable())
@ReedCopsey i mean if the current thread is running while the logs are being written, and new things are added to the collection, the foreach wont pick them up
so its possible that log messages will remain in the 'buffer' between calls
perhaps race condition isnt the right term. but an unexpected state
> . The enumerator will continue to provide items (if any exist) until IsCompleted returns true, and if IsCompleted is false the loop blocks until an item becomes available or until the CancellationToken is cancelled.
You're going to have to verify that the string Contains() Title, figure out what element of the array has that tag, then show the string following the : on that element.
> Raw data Raw data (also known as primary data) is a term for data collected from a source. Raw data has not been subjected to processing or any other manipulation, and are also referred to as primary data.
@ReedCopsey Well, if I log to the Windows Event System I don't need a priority or date, it will be handled by that. If it logs to a database I'd use all of the data, same applies for a text file. Rather then building separate models.
In most cases I'll want all four, but in a couple I won't.
Well, the reason I chose a param string[] as the data could be varied then in each Dependency Injection implementation I could handle the data how it should be passed on that implementation.
I would say, "what strings am I really supposed to send this thing". And when it didn't work I would be submitting an issue to your github, posting on SO, just implement my own, or find another one
The goal was to become better with async, anonymous types, linq, and lambda.
That is why I was writing it that way.
@ReedCopsey My goal was to build a massive list of log data, but handle them with async so it separates away from the rest of the API and can finish when it finishes. Since IO can be so slow.
I have a 10 GB folder(myfolder) that has lot of files used in an web application. Every week, this gets recreated in a different folder(mynewfolder). I want to move old files to a diff directory and move newly created ones to the right folder without user noticing (or very less down time). I can ...
public class LogItem
{
public DateTime Date { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public string Priority { get; set; }
public string Message { get; set; }
}
public class LogToTextfile : ILogger
{
private BlockingCollection<LogItem> queue = new BlockingCollection<LogItem>();
public LogToTextfile()
{
var th = new Thread(() =>
{
var filename = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings[@"TextLog"];
foreach(var log in queue.GetConsumingEnumerable())
Meaning, if you need lazy instantiation, then it's the right way. But it's not always the best depending on the situation. We run into issues all the time where we use lazy singletons, but then they hang around when we needed them to be destroyed.
so in the most recent implementation, he's spinning the thread when the logger is created. In the implementation from yesterday, it was going to be lazy instantiated because he was calling Start() only when the LogMessage was getting called
@NETscape what in your opinion is better? In this case I would think you wouldn't really want the thread around unless you actually wanted it to start. Otherwise it just sits there listening to nothing until someone maybe calls it.
@NETscape @EvanL Ugh, code I've got to maintain where someone just left, left me a jewel. A return that is over three hundred lines long. I've got garbage like this all over: ?
@Greg That's what I fear from our SDK team... pretty much everything they write is a "Hack" and then it just gets pushed up to our app layer and we're supposed to use it...
I am working on a Windows Phone 8.1 app in XAML and C#.
I have a listview, whose item source is set to a CollectionViewSource called MusicSource. On the backend in C#, I have an ObservableCollection called source and the following code populates it by getting getting all the music files on the p...
@Pheonixblade9 Yeah, but it's primarily C#. I posted XAML in the question so someone doesn't come downvoting it and complaining that I didn't put the XAML part of the problem there.
@KendallFrey Not to be rude or anything, but the question has nothing to do with WP apart from the fact that they both share XAML.