public BaseController(IContext context) { this.context = context; }
then set up your DI container, and hook it to ... your controller factory in your global asax.... charlie says your DI container will dispose of it, in which case it'd be prettier
(i think controller factory, there are two ways of doing it)
but in unit testing, you can create (moq) a fake class that implements that interface, so you can test stuff without actually hitting your db, and having KNOWN values during unit testing
@Sippy Essentially you ask for a IContext when you need one, and the DI knows you registered Context as IContext somewhere and gives you that. If you ever need to swap the Context implementation, you just change how you wired it up and you don't touch other files, ever.
@Sippy Dependency Injection is a scary term for something simple
i wonder if in 1000 years somebody will find a hard drive encrusted in rock, with our chat messages on it.... man would they think humans from this era are weird
using ProjectB; newds = ProjectB.DataLayer.Users... After Users intellisense should pickup an existing method.. but is not finding it.. public DataSet AuthenticateUser(string username, string password, out bool ValidUser) {
@SpencerRuport I have one that swirls around and can put the screen down. I use it mostly in reversed screen position with touch screen to play visual novels. It works nicely for that purpose.
Isn't the point of a release candidate to allow you to test existing code and/or get a jump on development? But deploying said code into a production environment with the RC of an external library is bad practice right?
var response = String.Empty;
var request = WebRequest.Create(google) as HttpWebRequest;
request.Method = "PUT";
if (request != null)
using (var stream = request.GetResponse() as HttpWebResponse)
response = stream.StatusCode.ToString();
@CharlieBrown here's the scenario: the MVC project i am working on right now has two final "Customers" each one has it's own static pages (Home, contact us, about ) and each one has its own SQL DB . but they share the main functionality. rigth now it's very hard for me to deploy the app and switch between the 2
should i keep everything under one solution or have two different solutions?
@CharlieBrown when i was reorganizing my solution and dividing it to projects (Common, Data, Business, websites...) it was hard for me to extract the views from the websites project (For instance : dropbox controller is a common feature, the related views are now under the websites project and not the Common project)