Ok, another smoke break then I'll attempt to finish answering @Hans' question... got about 6 paragraphs typed out so far, despite my opening line currently being "I'll try to keep this short".
well in all honesty I do wanna get past 2k (so i don't have to wait for peer review for every edit i make to a new post) but its pretty hard to earn rep :(
as such many of my answers go unmarked anyway so.. I'm not losing much out :)
I usually get more points from up votes than from answers themselves. Suppose part of the reason is necromancy. I tend to answer in ancient questions that I stumble on when i was searching and then left answer for others who may run into same answer
oh I've been stuck on this puzzle for about 3 years now i think - I've looked up haskell syntax.. even fixed it partially yet I'm failing to get it to run!
@Maverik So last night I broke into a mad scientists' house, and stole a diseased rat corpse. I then snuck past a few dozen armed thugs and deposited the rat into their secret drug distillery.
You should probably get on playing Dishonored.
Oh, I did this because a senile old lady asked me to. She gave me the ability to slow down time when I succeeded.
Has anybody checked out EF6 in its current form? I hear you can use multiple contexts in queries now? I'm wondering if that would allow us cross-database querying ability?
If you wonder "Why is this post so long!?" it's because I'm chatting to Hans and others in the C# hangout and had an idea (I think) of what it was he wanted to learn.
Hans,
It is completely doable to use MVP in WinForms, we have it full blown on an old Windows CE 6 device (winform style) app,...
@Maverik I like the idea of POJO objects to handle events in Swing as a concept, but WinForms events and delegates are fewer lines of code and the Intellisense makes it easy to generate an event handler
If you follow the standard winform events, nope. However, .Net support countless ways to subscribe and observe POCO's, which could be used as an event source
@Maverik Event handling with a POJO is simple as a concept - the 'event invoker' holds a reference to a list of 'event handling objects'. All it does is call a specific method on each of those objects.
@Smudge202 Sure, POCOs can be used but that isn't the norm - defining delegates, events of the delegate type, and attaching event handlers that match the signature of the delegate is the way it's normally done.
Mav, just use delegates instead of crazy lamda if you want to break it down, or even declare Expression<Func<Yada>> before hand and then pass them into the Rx
So long as you're careful with your lamda closures, you can pass out into other emthods Mav? Break down the function into multiple like you would do normally. (Is that what you mean?)
Hm... previously there was no calculation in this code block so I guess we got away with doubles but with this change, I will be adding and subtracting so I am not sure if I am covering all my bases
cos the project result wouldn't be a single exe anymore
basically he wants to be able to run the result without installing or unzipping. My boss doesn't actually have a problem with dependencies but the end clients are less than stellar on their IQ charts when it comes to computers
Although some PortableApps seems to be a kind of a virtual machine (I think I saw a VMWare message flash across the screen for one of them). There are lots of different kinds of PortableApps - some are self-contained in an exe, others are a bunch of files, and yet others seem like they are self-contained VMs.
@Maverik It's one of the things that keeps me from using Mono for Linux development. But Java is shunned by most of the open-source community, so C is all I can turn to.
@Smudge202 well thats what it appears from Han's last question. Though I think your way is the way to go - very reason I was looking forward to your answer as I need to learn how to do it
@Maverik With GTK+ available for Windows as well as Linux and sticking to common library functions, in theory it is possible to get an app working across both Windows and Linux and providing a simple source-based installer
@Hans If we want to really do things properly, you might introduce a Unit of Work pattern, which would greatly reduce the number of instantiated objects at any given point.
Hi... Searching solution for my question.. stackoverflow.com/questions/… Any more details to be provided then please post on the question as a comment. Thax :)
@AntonieBlom C# makes it easy enough to use native code DLLs; it's the folks who determine how the code should be written that enforce the no-native-code policies.
An hour of my day is spent chatting with my lead every day. I almost had to attend a 4 hour meeting. That would have been five hours accomplishing nothing. You know what I'm going to do today? Learn knockout.js. I've spent the last week doing javascript crap. GAAAHH!
@Billdr Speaking of Javascript, I always liked making all of my code self-contained instead of relying on jQuery. Unfortunately, somebody always influences the project decisions and gets some aspect of the project to use jQuery and then there's just no benefit of writing jQuery-free code
@Maverik The idea behind defining interfaces with XAML is great, except that I can't seem to re-use the XAML anywhere else.... yet another reason to use Glade + GTK/Qt :-D
@Billdr I learned knockout from its own sites walkthroughs. they were brilliant. simple and yet got me upto speed pretty quickly. I don't know who is behind that site though
@Maverik With ASP.NET, getting to put betas into production typically involves half a day of figuring out dependencies and configuration.... I had to alter an existing web app to support MVC bits in it. Had to use an existing Web.Config, making sure I had just enough in there for the app to run with the mixed-approach
@KendallFrey If Java had an official IDE that was as well-built from a user-friendliness perspective as Visual Studio, it would have had more developers for its platform
@KendallFrey MonoTouch for mobile app development is one way to get things done... not sure if it's supported on Android though
@Nitin Yo dawg, I heard you liked managed code, so I put your managed code on my managed code so you can write managed code while you write managed code.
@Nitin That seems like the start of a Bollywood version of "Live at the Apollo." "Dark Indians be talkin like dis, and light Indians be talking like dis."
I've heard. I was drawing a parallel to the US, where black people have their own variation of English (Ebonics) - also, a show where comedians point out that difference. I thought it had more multi-national cache than it actually did.
@Billdr Yes, but that's a dialect of a language. There's the national language of India, Hindi, and people speak different dialects of it all over the country, but each state has it's own language too.