I'm writing a library of collections. This library includes set collections with operations like Intersect, etc. I support both intersection with arbitrary sequences and with sets of the same type (The latter is a lot more efficient and has a specialized algorithm). The method that takes a sequence type tests to see if the collection happens to be a set.
I'm wondering whether it's necessary to have an overload that takes a set of the same type, given that it's all just pretense and the right method will be invoked anyway.
Yeah, this is my connection string entry ` <add name="VivendaContext" connectionString="data source=(LocalDB)\mssqllocaldb;attachdbfilename=|DataDirectory|\App_Data\Vivenda.mdf;Integrated Security=True" providerName="System.Data.SqlClient"/>`
@juanvan Everywhere I read about |DataDirectory| (even for WPF), it says that setting it via AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetData() should work, but it doesn't seem to make a difference to me
@juanvan If I remove |DataDirectory| from my connection string, this is the error i'm getting: {"A file activation error occurred. The physical file name '\\Vivenda.mdf' may be incorrect. Diagnose and correct additional errors, and retry the operation.\r\nCREATE DATABASE failed. Some file names listed could not be created. Check related errors."}
hmm, the strange part is that I get my .mdf file when I run / debug the application via visual studio. But it crashes on expanding the DataDirectory via clickonce
@BenjaminDiele AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetData("DataDirectory", System.IO.Path.GetDirectoryName((Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().Location))); got it into the debug folder
Wow I feel terrible. I couldn't sleep. I took sleeping pills and still couldn't sleep. Then I waited for a while and took sleeping pills again ,thining it migh work this time. It didn't.
So now I'm on sleeping pills, but sleeping isn't going to work. And walking is sort of difficult.
Usually the only time I'd do that would be going on holiday. Waiting for a plane entails going to the airport bar, obviously. Whatever time of the day that might be
i need to understand a concept of how to organize my code i see that there is something called data access layer and business layer i need to learn about that , what is the topic name or keywords that can help me in search ??
Nothing immediately springs to mind. Take a look at Martin Fowler's site though, he covers a lot of patterns there. Then from that you can usually find a big group of bloggers who disagree with him
is there a built-in way to validate file paths in XAML? I want to allow the user to select a save location and it would be handy if XAML helped validating (at least partly)
The F# file type provider does that. I have literally no idea how you'd integrate that with XAML, but maybe it's possible. The logic is there for exploring the filesystem at design time, anyway
But it's a CLR object so it should be possible to reference it
@ReedCopsey - ever use F# type providers from C#? Is it possible/straightforward and can the design-time validation be made to work outside an F# environment?
Suppose I have an xml file (which I receive from a 3rd party) I need to import. Each entry starts with a <Group> tag, and beneath it are multiple customer tags: <Customer1>, <Customer2>, <Customer3>, ... How do I catch that kinda stuff? It has no max, so eh .. =/
Anybody worked with IE Accelerators? I'm wondering if it's possible to click my custom IE Accelerator which will then launch my own app and pass arguments to the app.
I have a database initializer for EF called SapphireDatabaseInitializer which extends CreateDatabaseIfNotExists, if I want to extend SapphireDatabaseInitializer and override the seed method is that possible?
I've been using a trial account set up by my college, but got an email saying its cancelled. Is there any way to renew it without losing the current services?
hmm, can i somehow do a health check for which packages i have installed in my wpf project? I'm getting some exceptions when trying to enable migrations which should stem from wrong versions
the strange thing is, I have EF 6.1.1 in my packages.config, and the exception I'm getting is System.TypeLoadException: Could not load type 'System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure.TableExistenceChecker' from assembly 'EntityFramework, Version=6.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089'.
Any one would help me ?I'm having a problem with SSMS 2008
When i try to connect .\SQLExpress from SSMS ,i get the following today(don't know why it happened):
Cannot connect to .\SQLExpress.
A network-related or instance-specific error occurred while establishing a connection to SQL Server. The server was not found or was not accessible. Verify that the instance name is correct and that SQL Server is configured to allow remote connections. (provider: SQL Network Interfaces, error: 26 - Error Locating Server/Instance Specified) (.Net SqlClient Data Provider)
i found this -->http://www.sqlmusings.com/2009/03/11/resolving-a-network-related-or-instance-specific-error-occurred-while-establishing-a-connection-to-sql-server/
the problems I have are as simple as having 2 assemblies, one is a library and one is a website that uses the library, each has a database context, but only the the context from the library is actually created
the other thing is if I want to query across both contexts, I can't, yet from what I gather I should have a context for the library and one for the website
I shared one of the problems, which is actually many problems, I've been working out what was causing them all day, but this context issue is now driving me nuts, I just don't get it
I get that you should have a context per schema for performance reasons, but why only 1 context is built is beyond me, I presume EF is not installed correctly in the website, yet it can use the context from the library fine