I want to capture the screen in my code to get an image - like using the 'print screen' button on the keyboard .
Does anyone have an idea how to do this? I have no starting point.
@Slashy Yeah but you can use it from C#. On Windows 7 CopyFromScreen could push ~15FPS, BitBlt could push ~1500FPS (but you would be better off using the refresh rate). Since the required sync in window composition BitBlt was reduced to ~20FPS. Desktop Duplication should still reach a much higher speed.
Yes BitBlt WITHOUT sync could acquire that speed. It just copied the output buffer so it was fast. Now with sync it has to wait for the next refresh composition lock and thus spends most of its time blocking..
it's not about skill or what so ever, it's they can lie to you without a eyeblink
@ton.yeung nah, it's not the first time, and i talked with him once very seriously about honesty already, i guess i have to be the bastard and pull the trigger this time
@RyanTernier sure, they can be a domain expert after a year or so of training, but don't go thinking they know how to architect solutions or anything :)
sigh... it's not about being slow or low skill or not smart, in fact this guy is way too smart... it's about you always have to concern each every single word in his report, and always have to be afraid of the fire in the backyard
And yet, it happens all the time... "Not enough people" is the excuse, or "Bob, the architect is busy" so they just assign a greenfield project to a college kid b/c, well, he has nothing else to do... Years later people wonder why its so shitty
i've put juniors on architecture so they can learn, but they're on a team, learning. Ie, the architect will design, the junior will diagram the design, or log things
My boss once put a Junior Java Developer in charge of writing a BizTalk ESB, without any support from seniors. I cried, tantrumed and said "this will fail". I was reassured it would be ok
@ton.yeung Here is what I'm working with, I'm heading out to a Dr appt soon, will be back in a while. If you have a chance to look over this randomly and provide feedback that would be amazing. github.com/carbonrobot/template-hapijs-angular
Hi guys, just a quicky that I think would get closed on SO - can anyone advise a good workflow for modern web design with c# MVC? I have a designer who does his job, then it takes me a while to modify it to work how I need it to as a template... then, when there is a minor change to be done, it can take ages to find the place and do it all again... There must be a better way!? Just wondering what others do?
@ton.yeung basically a directory with html/javascript/pictures etc. I put them in to the relevant MVC places... he is a very good designer, but, I doubt he would be willing to code/learn
on top of that, sometimes I like to make little tweaks - programs like brackets is cool, but, just doesn't work with c#/MVC ... Do you (or anyone here) know of better tools, or ways to make it work?
@ton.yeung heh, before you say me (or even him!) it isn't a problem, it just gets annoying and I feel there is a quicker way... The templates are good, but, it is time consuming to take a file (e.g. index.html) and then work out where the changes are and split it to the main template, and many partials...
it isn't a problem - just very time consuming splicing up a main file to several templates/partials and more...
again, just want to know proper workflows that other people do in production as I feel so slow when doing this...
Ive been down this road many times, and it comes down to the designer and what they are willing to do. Best case is they create it in VS themselves, next best is they create it in partials and merge they html to test, then hand off partials to you, or go with what you have.
After a couple dozen large MVC projects, I don't think even the 3rd option is that difficult. If it is, one might consider restructuring the MVC project and removing the unneccessary complexity of too many partials.
@ton.yeung I'm having trouble articulating it. Basically it seems to me to railroad the design of views firmly into the domain of the application developer, whereas actually content designers need to be close to that stuff more than the developer does
I mean, there are CMSes built around MVC. But it's almost as though the framework itself makes it difficult to actually go about content creation if you don't have one
It's not a problem unique to MVC. Angular has the same concerns, Backbone, Ember, PHP, Rails, etc. In all forms of web application development its difficult to separate completely the designer from the developer
There is no silver 9mm on this one. typically we build apps then hand off what we built to a design agency who then tweaks and reworks it. We then integrate it back into our code. But myself and my team are full-stack, we do html, css, js, and backend code in c# or nodejs
@CharlieBrown I've said to various colleagues at various junctures in the past that anything called "build" should mean build, not build-and-do-some-other-nefarious-shit
It’s been 7 years and 10,000,000+ Questions since Stack Overflow was launched. The amount of good that has been done for the field - all the developers helped, all the person-hours saved, all the beginners who grew into professionals - is hard to overstate. I cannot express how proud I am of wh...
I think that this quote said it best: "I expect to find canon, word-of-God from the developers, and not a blooming garden of possibly conflicting advice"
a good example is the gulpfile thing @ton.yeung showed me this morning. SO was promoting one thing, then finally a Gulp dev came along and said, heck no
hi all again. just a confirm about something. in c# is there something like somevar is Baz<Foo, ?> where the second type argument is unknown? guess it would be Baz<Foo, MinimumRequiredType> and in order to be truthy, must be variant or exactly match. correct?
I'm new to C# inheritance. My parent class has a protected parameterless constructor. Do I need to write a protected constructor in the child class too if I don't want it to be callable?
@JacqueGoupil Classes always have a parameterless public constructor by default unless you specify any other constructor in it. Inheritance doesn't affect that.
I totally agree with making a place for canonical posts. I just don't think making it into some sort of "documentation" system is the right nomenclature to use nor approach to make a connection to.
@BradleyDotNET - Sure they are though. They didn't really vet that the problem needed solving, or even narrowing down what the core problem was. They just handed out a random solution and said "here!"
That's pretty much how documentation examples go though
granted, its not what SO is right now (which that post admits)
Assuming the proposal goes through, I would even specifically say that if the requested topic wouldn't be too broad for "standard" SO it doesn't belong in the Documentation section
at the same time, if we are good at making snippets of information findable, say, better than a lot of other existing systems, it makes sense to apply the same concept to documentation/examples
@BradleyDotNET - I just don't find the core problem an actual problem. Why should SO suddenly become the outsourced place for project documentation? I think we need a system that can prepare, arrange, and reward canonical posts. However, I just don't think that the proposal addresses that even if it someone provides a way for canonical examples.
And in the best case, this system eliminates that and gives us a place to say "go look at this thing you can actually understand" when people ask too broad/common duplicate questions
Yeah, it would be immense. Here is the other amusing part. You saw their example of Dictionary<> right? Where would that fit. Most questions of that nature are tagged c#dictionary
I think that is sort of whats being suggested. We don't start taking questions like that, but the answers to such questions have a home
I don't think the code-project article would make it on SO
its almost code-only
which makes me sad :(
Right or wrong, there are a lot of complaints currently about us turning away (potentially) useful content like "Explain TcpClient" because it doesn't match our rules
gah, mono's SQLite code is still doing O(n^2) shit elsewhere, it seems. My profiling pointed me at the source code that shows that when it's mapping the parameters to the paramNames from the command string, it's doing a scan over its private paramNames collection.
To me, the recent movements made just kind of demonstrate how instrumental Atwood was to the process and how hard it has been to reproduce his level of success since he left both in the inventive process and in the execution of features.