I need some help. I like to start coding in c# on my mac. I installed the Mono Framework and using Xamarin studio. When i want to run a basic hello world programm i got this error on console: Cannot open assembly 'Program.exe': File does not contain a valid CIL image.
Hey guys i installed mono on my suse 12.1. When i create a file say "hello.cs" and run "$ mono hello.cs " on the terminal, i get this error:
Cannot open assembly 'hello.cs': File does not contain a valid CIL image.
The contents of the file(hello.cs) are as below
class hello{
static voi...
I'm working with a WebApi project in C# (EF code first) and I'm using OData.
I have a "User" model with Id, Name, LastName, Email, and Password.
In controller for example I have this code:
// GET: odata/Users
[EnableQuery]
public IQueryable<User> GetUsers()
{
return db.Users;
}
If I call ...
not sure if I need it though ... as I have a generic view for CRUD stuff
I managed to figure out how to drive the UI properly in JS from meta exposed on the OData controller, so my base controller now has a GetMetadata() method that defines the type
my solution is quite simple, I leverage the telerik framework (so no code there) and I serve up the metadata in the MVC format from a single "generic" base constroller method, that has 1 line in it, that line calls in to a custom meta provider which is only need for a few custom attribs I put in the code
those custom attribs allow me to put things like a [Lookup(typeof(OtherEntity))] attrib on a property to manipulate the meta slightly for the putpose of knowing how to gen the drop down for relationships and what not
might not be absolutely bang on but it's pretty clean
I like the idea of swagger, but when I look at it I think ... did they really need all that code for basically achieving what I did in a single method and a small bit of codeon the js side?
I guess swagger in this case though is also doing what the telerik stuff does too, the advantage I have is that I can use it for all my UI not just that part of it
I'm not sure what the problem is, but some facts: - BlockingCollection *is* a ConcurrentQueue with signaling and a consuming enumerable - ConcurrentQueue *is* a FIFO collection with multi-thread safety.
its hard to say...something to do with a file-based status tracking...we've a mailserver...we need to ensure that each email is processed. So basically it has many states...
the app is a mailserver with some in-memory queues...
Yeah. You can just see it as an operation log of all the changes in your in-memory queue. In case of disaster, you can just process the operation log at bootup to reach the same state before explosions occurred.
That said.. a known message queue system is just.. better.
@ItayZaguri No. Because then it wouldn't match the signature.
You can declare one of them optional in the base and overriding class, if it's not necessarily relevant, but that would, again, mean that it's optional for all implementations.
Surprised no one mentioned C# 4.0 optional parameters that work like this:
public void SomeMethod(int a, int b = 0)
{
//some code
}
Edit: I know that at the time the question was asked, C# 4.0 didn't exist. But this question still ranks #1 in Google for "C# optional arguments" so I thought ...
Yes, it is. In this case, the smell points to your design including an abstract method that contains parameters that aren't required by all implementations.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I created an Abstract Class called Powertype and a Refill() method inside, then I Created 2 methods : One for a Fuel using Car and another for a Electric users
These are for cars\bike classes i made also
Now A fuel user car call the Refill with 2 arguments - FuelType [enum] and fuelQuantityToadd[float] while the electric car should call the Refill with 1 argument NumOfHoursToCharge [float]
That means your base class doesn't really serve as a base class for both implementations.
It feels like you designed a base class for scenario A, and you're trying to squeeze scenario B into it.
Because your float argument isn't hte same argument in both cases. Even if you only had one float arg and everything seemed fine, it would be bad design because the float means something different in the two cases.
Hey, guys, I'm having this error when I compile "the type or namespace name 'Office' does not exist in the namespace 'Microsoft'". I've tried adding the reference to the project but it doesn't exist. Do I need to install any additional stuff in order to have the Office dll available or does it come by default with the .net framework?
that's when I officially felt old. saw some kids skateboarding down the road, minding their own business. in the back of my mind all I could think was "fucking teenagers, up to no good I bet"
me : "eh, the printer guys (contractors) didn't fix the printer yet. they said today or tomorrow." boss: "not today or tomorrow, today or yesterday at most."
In this Web API code: https://gist.github.com/anonymous/1847334f6c74177022d528a48ad64d70 is the: `List<Task> tasks = Task.getAllTasks();`line called regardless of which route is navigated to?
Or is it only called for GetAllTasks? I believe it's called in both situations, but wanted to check.
Mike Wasson's article "Dependency Injection for Web API Controllers" on www.asp.net says:
Dependenecy Scope and Controller Lifetime
Controllers are created per request...
Am I correct in understanding that ASP.NET Web API creates a new controller instance (and satisfies its dependencie...
Imagine an abstract method "Delay" which takes an int param. Would it make sense for one implementation to take Hours and another to take Milliseconds?
user1630889
And you'd have tight coupling between your storage properties and methods, so an intermediate layer could easily turn your object into a javascript object with those properties and methods.