but I think I am missing files, I wanted to run it on free tier app services in Azure. If I install it from the marketplace, working from VS is harder. If I create it in VS getting everything to deploy to Azure is also hard.
but I think I'm just going to do more work from backoffice because it works better when it knows what I'm doing rather than files changing behind its back.
using(DbContext ctx)
{
var e = ctx.First(o => o.ID == myID);
//change values in e
ctx.SubmitChanges();
}
I think that should work
if your changes are setting new values for another class, you should use the navigation property (assuming a recent version of EF) to set the values and it should get hooked up automatically, though I'd have to test it to be sure
do you know what a navigation property is?
(though DeviceType looks like it might be an enum?)
RE: my discoveries of mono Sqlite taking O(n^2) to set up parameters, I think I'll just do string injection for this large WHERE IN clause.
But ONLY because they're just ints anyway.
Another prescribed approach is to dynamically populate a temp table one row at a time and join against it. But dayum that's architecturally painful at this point.
I'd have to make sure the table gets cleaned up after use and shit
@KalaJ just don't like WordPress. Using it for a quick turn around on a website project that they want to be able to change the page content without seeing code.
@ton.yeung how would that work under the hood? would it ultimately make a query to SQLite that emits a huge result set, and then filters it in C#-land?
@Greg yeah, but the underlying textarea is still there and I think there is a method you can call that syncs between what is rendered and what is in the textarea.
about 50% of ddos or funky sql injection cookie or cross domain post attack nowadays we are receiving are from either google or amazon, fact is, they just take the money and don't care what shit ppl do on their cloud
@MikeAsdf if bitcoin mining on EC2 was profitable, Amazon would be doing it. It's perfectly profitable if someone else is paying for the computer time, though...
sad thing is I remember trying to get a CPU miner working in like... 2008 and I got sick of it and thought "this will never take off" :P
and you know what, for this poor guy wrote the article, even everybody in this world knew that he's hacked, he still have to pay that 6.5k bill on amazon
@TravisJ since it's an extension by github, according to the use term msft should be 100% free of responsibility. and for the github side, it's all depending on their use term, but most of the case they will also clear any of their legal responsibility as well
Damages are the trump card. If it had been less than $5k I would agree that it wouldn't go anywhere. But after $5k damages then both civil and criminal charges can be brought.
The law treats anything over $5000 as a big deal. Keep in mind, $5000 of theft will get you a $250,000 fine and up to 10 years in prison.
Sorry, but I am not sure where this disconnect is coming from. If you write something, or do something, anything, and you damage something, you are on the hook.
Regardless of how you tried to publish your terms.
@Shoe - It is civil between the two. But if there was a large amount of others who experienced similar actions it could become criminal. In this instance it is more than likely not at all and was just a simple failure.
For example, for years many companies used asbestos for manufacturing different things. Turns out that's bad for you. Those companies were not "criminally negligent" because nobody knew asbestos was bad for you