In .NET, List<T> doesn't have anything comparable to ObservableCollection<T>.Move does it? You have to manually Remove/Insert to move stuff the way you want, correct?Ob
Oh, hm, it seems Insert does exactly what I need it to (insert an item in the middle of a list and have subsequent items increment by 1 to compensate), maybe I overthunk it
but I did this last project, where the UI people made 3 parts of a header rows and the last one was special CSS bs, when I tried to Add a menu item POW fucked
Hello all, I am trying to do the windows authentication for my web application. I tried as mentioned in these steps, but the pop-up dialog box to enter the details did not poped-up.
The last time I remember coming in on time being an issue for someone was at a company I worked for, about 8 years ago, where one guy consistently got in at around 10:30-11:00 when the standard was 9:00-9:30.
So the CEO got mad and yelled at him, even though he also consistently stayed in until about 21:00-21:30, meaning he put in all the required hours, and more, and moreover he did very good work
@Kieran Oh, you don't know the half of it. Or quarter of it. Or one percent of it. He was a lying sociopath incompetent train-wreck of a CEO. When he was finally exposed, he was fired on the spot by the chairman of the board and the office's locks and security codes changed while he was out to dinner.
@Kieran We have flexible hours. Meaning, be in the office when you accepted meeting. Otherwise it doesn't matter if you come in at 07.00, 09.00, 14.00, or even if you don't (If you don't come, you have to put it into the calendar tho so colleagues know you're not laying in a ditch somewhere)
@Kieran Uh, you're expected to be there if someone invited you for a meeting and you accepted it. You should've declined if you weren't going to be there.
@RoelvanUden Same here. Looking at my monthly timesheet, I can see that 90% of the time I get in between 8:30-9:30, but I have days I get in later, if I need to take the car to the shop or just sit and have a relaxed coffee with a book for half an hour.
Hello, guys does AutoMapper has something like StructureMap Registries? so i can have several MapperConfigurations and than create 1 Mapper using those configs?
TFS-folks - have you ever tried working with two local workspaces mapped to teh same project?
For various reasons(tm), I can't do a feature branch, so I want to have two active copies of my main branch, one for adding a new, big feature, and one for quick bugfixes. Any reason why I won't want to kill myself within the week?
I think you are talking about the "portagens" sorry I cant remember the name in english. Those arent speed cameras. You pass there and pay to be able to drive on the highway
They are used to track your average speed as well. They take a pic of you in a point of the highway and then in another point lets say 100 miles after and mark the time on both. After they compare the two times and see your average speed
@Ggalla1779 we tried to play it in coop, with above avarage alien bases, rich, but scarce resources (there are a lot of iron in 1 spot, just the spots are very few).
we scouted the map in a very big radius, but no oil or extra iron found
I'm trying to use serilog with the SQL Server sink with no luck. It's not blowing up but isn't writing anything to the db. Here's what I'm using in a C# console app:
var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["MyEFEntities"].ConnectionString;
const string tableName = "Logs";
Log.Logger = new LoggerConfiguration()
.WriteTo.LiterateConsole()
.WriteTo.MSSqlServer(connectionString,tableName)
Log.Information("Testing");
Log.CloseAndFlush();
Then I do a SELECT * FROM Logs on Management Studio and it returns nothing
:34440692 public class BaseClass<T> where T: BaseClass
{
public virtual List<T> Children {get;set;}
}
public class DerivedClass : BaseClass<DerivedClass>
{
}
Wait, so DerivedClass1 has a list of DerivedClass2?
And they're all derived from the same baseclass?
public class BaseClass<TChildType> where TChildType: BaseClass
{
public virtual List<TChildType> Children {get;set;}
}
public class DerivedClass1 : BaseClass<DerivedClass2>
{}
public class DerivedClass2 : BaseClass<DerivedClass3>
{}
public class DerivedClass3 : BaseClass<DerivedClass4>
{}
It's the same code I posted earlier, but I gave the generic parameter a clearer name (TChildType), and now each level in the tree explicitly states the type it holds.
But would that make DerivedClass1 instances a DerivedClass2 type? Cause I just need them to hold a list of the other type while it remains the same type.
Podcaster David Rael was kind enough to invite me to his geek interview podcast show “Developer On Fire” recently; we talk about developer tools and impact and blogging and all kinds of fun stuff. Check it out!
Hi guys, how are you? I'm working on a Controller -> Services -> Repositories pattern but i've some problem about objects in different contexts.... can you help me?
Example: in my Controller I search a user using my UserService, then in the same controller method I search a Company using my CompanyService, then I add my Company to my User.Companies and when I update my User and do the SaveChanges I get an Exception because the two objects are in different contexts :-(
So I don't care about the first line, but when I split on , the last column always appears before the date. So I'm trying to basically either account or adjust accordingly.
My error exception message is: "The relationship between the two objects cannot be defined because they are attached to different ObjectContext objects"
i find myself time and again migrating back towards a webform methodology. Its easier for me to see a solution and make something work. I hate having to fight with the viewstate though
its an internal struggle everytime I start a new project
Hello everybody. Could someone please tell, is it possible, to use custom user control (in UWP windows 10) to template with it the flipview item, that is generated by flipview itself?