ComboBox combo = control as ComboBox; string text = ""; if (combo.InvokeRequired) combo.Invoke(new MethodInvoker(delegate() { text = combo.SelectedText; })); else return combo.SelectedText;
return text;
Someone knows why it keep "crashing" the comboBox even using the Invoke() ? It still saying "InvalidOperationException"
Well, Im trying to get its SelectedText, but it was returning "" all the time, then if I set a breakpoint in that line and check the "combo" object, the others properties like, SelectedIndex, SelectedItem etc, they have this "combo.SelectedX threw an exception...."
It's related to the cross-thread operation, but the invoke should fix that, but it still with the same exceptions in the object even using the Invoke
Let me see, because Im not really getting an error message since Im trying to get the SelectedText and it is always "", I just saw that the other properties have this exception on them
there isn't any way for us to tell what type it is from the screen shot, you're going to have to 1) figure it out 2) find another copy of the db file, which shouldn't be hard if it's part of an app, or email them and ask them
118 Pro ver 2.0, why cant i find anything like this on google, thats what confuses me
depends on how large the solution is, but yeah that sounds like a good set up, and one for unit testing the domain, and maybe one for unit testing the controllers or whatever in your mvc proj
or if it's small, you can have one unit test project
he uses EF directly as the repo, so then what would go in your data project? edm? What if thats in a different solutions entirely, then is there any need for a data project?
Neither am I, but was hoping you came in contact with it.
Basically, I want to know when I pass a Model or data down to the domain, then into the data, then returned to data to domain, to UI it is actually referenced right.
i dont know the answer, you want to limit references, so a common way for mvc is to have the data not reference anything, have your ui reference the domains and the data, and tie the two together
but if you follow DDD, i'm not sure if that fits or not, still new at it
Basically, the MVC UI calls your domain and gets data out of the domain, then the domain is actually what is talking to your data and returning it back to the domain for the UI.
your controller takes a reference to your data class, via di, and then populate models from the data
so your models don't know about how they're getting populated, and your data proj/classes doesn't care what it's populating, your controller ties the two together
where 'domains' come into this, i think MVC is a UI pattern, domains have nothing to do with a UI
hey guys, i'm just wondering here, if you were going to use a budgeting app to manage your bills, transactions, expenses, debts... what kind of things would you want to see in the "Summary View" when you first open the app everyday?
@Steve Yeah, I think I'm almost more confused now. If you skip the fact that MVC has a Model / Data / Controller and simply think of it in the realm of a console app rather then an MVC wouldn't it be:
@Greg Hmm, awesome thank you. I'm making this as a personal project but some friends said they wanted to try it too so just need to make sure what I was thinking wasn't completely insane or anything :)
I essentially have a bigger project, so I can't use one project. So I need to separate my concerns, core MVC Project, Business Logic / Domain, Data Layer in essence.
Was trying to learn, build my own data mapper from my mvc project to this domain layer, which interacts and pulls repository data out of the data layer.
Why do 'About' dialogs have OK buttons? Since there's nothing to really say "OK" to, other than a bunch of random information, why don't they just remove the OK button and let us click the one that makes more sense in this case, which would be the 'Close' button at the top right of the window?
Yeah, I'm going on a pretense of typical DDD design but MVC has its own implementation. Especially since it tends to favor an ORM doing all of it. Which could easily create anemic DDD.
where it has access to data, and the domains, it populates the domains, you put business logic in your domains, but do the different calls / tie your different domains together in your mvc proj/ controller
you don't want to tie your data directly to your domains, because what happens when you want to re-use those domain objects in another project?
you want your business logic, encaspulated in those domain objects so you can reuse them if need be, you dont want to tie it to any specific implementation of a data layer
yeah thats what gets me too, is in DDD books, sometimes they have the domain objects directly calling the data, sometimes they use event handlers to call back automatically when their data changes, or when you call save, or sometimes they call a service layer
DDD is not something i have a lot of experience in
MVC i do, which is why i say usually it's data ----> controller <---- models
what you're asking is a little over my experience level
I feel like documentation tends to take the shortcut route, which is violate principles you really shouldn't do. Which help them build courses quickly, but quickly teach incorrect concepts.
Because a View can call a Model, a Controller can call a View, Controller can call a Model but a Model doesn't interact directly with either your Controller or View.
So, with that principal in place. Your MVC Project Controller, will send a Model data to your Domain, your Domain does what it needs, and returns back to your MVC Project, or it will pass to your Data Layer. Which will then return back to the Domain, which goes back to the Controller. But the data layer is only aware of the Domain Layer, nothing else.
it depends, you can have many layers here, as i said the DDD book talked about different types of service layers, so i'm guessing if you do this, everything i read makes sense, but that doesn't mean i'm right
data repos ------> data service layer ----> models -----> service layer so your controllers don't grow huge -----> controller <---- views