On another note - I'm profiling for performance hotspots in my app and found that a very commonly used method is Map - a method on a data object that take the ~40 fields it has and create a key-value dictionary from it. By reflection.
The class changes every once in a while and there are several variants for different clients/deployments. I'm thinking of the best way to improve performance without having to add a field to a straightforward set of myDict.Add("myField", this.MyField) calls.
I'm thinking of using reflection to create individual Expression<Func<MyObject, object>> expressions for every property once, at program startup, and then calling these to retrieve the values at runtime.
@misha130 I think as long as you're only building this stuff from type metadata, which can't change during the lifecycle of the process (I'm pretty sure it can't...) then I think you're good
@Sippy We have a relatively intensive data processing module that handles incoming data, the volume of which can be relatively easily expressed as "Events per second". So the first step was writing some tooling to calculate our EPS, then I profile the processor, find hot spots, fix/optimize them, and measure again.
For instance, finding out that a minor lookup that checks if an incoming field is part of a BlacklistedValues field turned out to be a hotspot, because a dev accidentally made the DB callto retrieve the blacklist on every call. Which bumped up my EPS from 800 to 5000 when I moved the call to the init phase.
wich damn connection string should I use for this: User ID=xxx; password=xxx; Data Source=ORCADB1_QLD; Connection Lifetime=10; Max Pool Size=50; Min Pool Size=1; Pooling=true; Persist Security Info=true;
had it for 3 years and what you do in 1h with c/ c++ you do in 15 min with c#
OLE DB Provider was not specified in the ConnectionString. An example would be, 'Provider=SQLOLEDB;'. i got this erro wile openning my connection, do any of you know what the heck the provide is on where can I get it from? or can I just use Persist security info?
"You know that listbox that updates in real time and is auto-sorted according to date? We now want the currently selected item to stay in place even if the rest of the list gets sorted".
So I'm thinking that on every change, I check the index of the current item, add and resort, then move the selected item manually back to the original index.
I still haven't convinced the product team that have a sorted list behave in an unsorted manner might be more confusing than having an item shift position in the list.
what happens, if the selected row would naturally fall off? For example static size is 10. User selected it when it was #8. 3 more items added. The selected row would fall off, and the realtime query wouldn't even select it
@Avner can you not do it like this: determine the current position of the element in the listbox, sort the listbox, reposition so that the selected item doesn't appear to move, but is still sorted?
Not only "easier". It's actively confusing. It's exposing a contract that it will never fulfill.
If I was calling @misha130's function, I would now feel the need to check if there are more than one entries in the dictionary, since a dictionary is, by definition, a collection type.
@Mr.Toxy Sure, but why would you want to? You can also use it to access web services and HTTP servers, but that's why we have HttpClient and other higher level abstractions.
My favorite bit about them is this line from their Wikipedia page:
> at the end of the tour, and without a place to live, the band collectively decided to move to Winterville (a small town outside Athens, Georgia), where they admittedly made a hobby of stalking members of R.E.M..