@Nathvi Look, I honestly don't care what you do to your own code. Just know that if I'd have to work with you, and I would see you make repositories on top of a UoW, I'd immediately think you didn't really get the point of abstraction layers, and I would know that interaction with the most basic of basics (data) is going to be a huge PITA.
@Serban - Was looking at favourited chat lines on this channel and noticed yours about "my javascript skills are as good as they need to be etc." nothing could be more truer.
and when you come back in 2 years time it'll be easier to learn
I used to work with a guy who thought it was a good idea to create double the number of threads as you have cores from go weather you needed them or not
his argument was ... 1. Not all theads will always be busy. 2. you want enough to keep every core busy 3. it saves you time / overhead, creating threads when you need them
I was like ... WTF!
that's the most crazy broken logic i've heard in a long time
When I get faced with that I tend to do what's asked then in addition look at how it's being used then one day I go in to meeting with 10 lines of code and rip the whole lot apart
how do web developers get around browser cache? I am using chrome incognito for .js changes and refreshing with chrome tools open, but still .js changes do not come in. Is it better to close the incognito browser and open a new one?
Then the client can ask "Hey server, I got etag xyz, is this still latest?" and server can go "Yep!" or "Nope, here's the new file"
@War I disagree. One web application should use one thread for processing user code, and n threads for handling asynchronous completions. Then if you want to scale out, you just tell IIS to make multiple appdomains/processes so you still can't get into trouble, ever.
Traditionally, this was not possible, lack of async/await and all.
So I get it's not like that.
Whereas nodejs is exactly like that. And it's so simple because of it.
hi guys, i have a situation, with a menu link on the left of a page using RadTreeView. When we click a tab we fetch a usercontrol for center content, top right nav content, and bottom right content.
we do this with Ajax, so all of the .js for the controls comes in
and .js is conflicting for each control has we click the left tree view
i am thinking of resorting to Post Backs.. but not sure what to do
in .net, i have a RadColorPicker that has OnClientColorChange, when I first load the page this even fires when I choose a different color swatch. But when I change out the colorpicker for the other colorpicker for bg colors - this event stops working
what should I do to reinstantiate the RadColorPicker so that the OnClientColorChange works?
Hi @juanvan that is new to me? now sure how I would do that. Going through and making bgcolors and fontcolors do not have shared methods.. this is a nightmare using Telerik
if i load the whole page and click background colors tab
and then click a color on the palette.. it will fire.. but then clicking fontcolors next will fail
but if I refresh the page and click font colors tab first and click a color on that palette it will fire the .js function, but then clicking to the background tab, and now clicking a color swatch will fail to fire the function
because it is all jQuery ajax calls to webmethod content which then loads the new controls
I guess something is getting screwed up. OR .js is overlapping somewhere
What are your thoughts on the usage of expression bodies in c# 6.0? Have you started to use them? Does less not necessarily mean more? (I nor the team of developers I work with have used them yet)
My gut feeling is that if developer A uses them in the codebase, developer B will come across and quickly assume it's a linq function or something and get slammed by the readability.
@RoelvanUden - Not very readable especially because we're use to seeing get{} set{} bodies for accesible properties
@Euphoria I don't really like it either. It was a good idea in theory, but I think one long function signature with the expression all on one line is less readable than the 3-4 line full bodied version.
@Pedram How related are they? Could you make a parent class that you inherit both of the types you want to output from, then output the parent class instead? if not you could always return a generic or object and do some fancy boxing
I mean i have like public (int || string) myfunc() {} :D as far as i know the output was only 1 data :D and always only 1 type ... if u wanted to pass more than 1 data you had to make a class output or reference stuff, but i was wondering if there was a way.
hmm this can actually work i guess
@BrennenSprimont I think the inherit thingy will work for me i just have to make an extra class
hmmm i think it through again while checking it and i think it's best i don't do this way, while inheriting is also an easy approach but I use this function with only 1 intended output for all my pages but only for 1 page i need both output together, so i guess I make a new function that convert the first output to the 2nd type and use it here :D
Ok, so I'm querying a webservice. This webservice is slow with multiple o's. I want to cache the results of the query, because I only want to query on a given set of parameters once during my transaction (In addition to the query being slow, it's also rate limited, so I don't want to perform unne...
@Nathvi yeah, but it depends on what category you're looking into Potential mates - Look is high on priorities C# Devs - Honestly, you take what you can get
Where would I need the TryGetValue? Either result of the TryAdd function means that the value is in the dictionary. Once added, values never get removed.
At least, until the entire program is unloaded.
If the program never unloads, well, that's someone elses problem. :P
Let me explain the situation... I have a bunch of linux clients (raspberry pi's). There is a web application (IIS/C#) based management interface. I want to offer the ability to restart the linux client's from the web application.
My idea was to install openSSH on the server and use bash scripts on the clients to facilitate this. That would require command prompt access from the web application.
@Vap0r "require command prompt access from the web application" has me a bit confused
@Vap0r If you own the machine everything is running on and can set the proper security then you should be able to get at the command prompt from virtually anything.
That being said it would be cleaner to use a proper api interface which is what I am assuming sshnet is.
You can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool th...