I'm new to Silverlight and I'm trying to figure out how Microsoft did the animation on the "Theme" selection in the settings app of the Windows Phone 7 Emulator. If you go to settings > themes > click the theme name (dark or light) it does a nice little expanding animation and then shrinks back down once you select an item.
As I hinted in my question, I wondered about a solution using continuation-passing. The following extension methods allow me to have a fairly 'pretty' usage:
public static class Extensions
{
//Using an asynchronous selector, calculate transform for
// input list and callback with resul...
@TimRobinson, dunno, there's something in there about not having to 'come back to where you were', so if you CPS to the end, you never have to bubble back out again... something like that
right: with the async pattern, you can call BeginSomeMethod to start the operation, and you can pass it a lambda that executes the code in the rest of the method
Basically, "come back to" style execution pops the return address off the stack and continues from that
CPS-style execution pops the "where to go next" address off the stack and continues from that
In essence, both should be able to implemented without too many core differences in the execution engine, but there's probably a lot to be said for scoping and stack, returning from a method also has the side-effect of reducing the stack pointer to "free" the stack-allocated variables
Playing with dynamite all this stuff. I wonder how it will pan out. It's like the events-preventing-garbage-collection thing. If all this is delegates under the covers, I do wonder if people (i.e. me) aren't going to tie themselves in knots.
hi there
I have a grid bound to a linqed SP thus:
Session["results"] = db.spGetCaseByNumberOrSurname(txtCaseNum.Text.Trim(), null).ToList();
gvResults.DataSource = Session["results"];
on the sorting of it, i would like to be able to do this..
protected void gvResults_Sorting(object sende...
@thecoop Meh, not long ago I would have agreed, but all of the LINQ related language features that I thought were a waste of time I'm finding really useful at the moment.
@Benjol: I am. Monad comprehensions are always cool of course, but I'm not sure these are similar enough. Task.ContinueWith for example is subtly different from a monad Bind
@TimRobinson Interesting ... I was wondering about it, since Task continuations are basically CPS as far as I can see. But where a monadic Bind takes M<T> and Func<T, M<U>> to produce M<U> with a map-and-flatten approach, ContinueWith in a certain sense does the opposite (or perhaps dual): Task<T> and a Func<Task<T>, U> produce Task<U>
@NewPeople, by the way, if you want to reply to a specific message that is NOT the most recent, you can click on the reply button that you see when you hover over that message (to the right)
@bzlm so we are going to stop the person asking the question from having a chat at the bottom of the questions because we are afraid that they might get the answer too fast?
@bzlm but I would argue that the faster the answer can be developed the better of a Q/A site you have. Don't disable a great way for people to get answer, just give then an insentive to post their answers as actual answers
@bzlm - how about if they just made the comments that they currently have, update live?
@TimRobinson Unfortunately I haven't got enough rep. Ok. Lets assume I have collection of Tasks, basically it IronPython scripts. I have TaskManager, which should iterate through Tasks collection and execute each Task. From each Task (IronPython script) I have callback to C# code, which should suspend this Task. If Task is suspended Manager could take another one and try to execute it, but couldn't forget about suspended one. Everything should be done in cooperative mode.
@kralco626 I disagree. Many of the trivial quickly-answered questions here are pointless to the site. "WHy my code dont works?" ==> "You forgot a semicolon" ==> "Tank u:))))". Now, that's what chat could get us.
@TimRobinson For example I have one thread for Tasks execution, if i try to execute task it calls for sleep and thats ok, but how I could save Task's context if I use only one thread for execution, which is common for cooperative multitasking. am I right?
@bzlm - ya. this is true. However in a chat room this large even if people were asking real questions it would be difficult to help them. I agree that we don't want it to turn into this quick little answer thing. However I think we can have some trust in people to WANT to build the site
@bzlm - for example I always make sure that when I ask a question that I mark the answer and clearly indicate what in the solution helped me etc. If there is not one solution that worked I always post my own. Don't you think others might feel the same way? Even you gave someone the answer via chat to post the final answer as an answer?
@kralco626 If I gave the answer via chat, I'd be less inclined to stick around afterwards and "convert it into a real answer". And given the state of 99% of questions these days, I'd venture a guess that I'm one of the more patient users.
@Joren Yeah? Or would you submit that current discussions are C#y in nature? :)
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@bzlm - point taken. IDK. I think that right now people could just replay to the question as a comment. Much like this only not real time. And get the answer that way. However Ive never seen anyone do that... I just don't think making it real time would make it anymore likely that people do that. Maybe just make the comments under the actually question a realtime chat... idk. I think that someone could come up with a hybrid solution that would solve both problems...
But it doesn't generate code, or some sort of state machine, but just directly parses the input based on an in-memory graph kind of structure of the grammar
Pretty tough to get right, but theoretically it should be flexible enough now to change the grammar halfway through parsing
The idea being that you could use it to do metaprogramming of a kind that allows you to declare extensions of your language by adding new grammar rules, and defining a transformation of the AST generated by those new rules to 'normal' code
what are the reasons for generating code other than what I mostly do, which is to create proxies around wierd api's so my arch complexity doesn't spiral out of control
quick question: should I use IDbConnection or DbConnection types in my code (and their respective types - command, etc)? What's the difference between the two?
@Gabriel: I use TT4 to generate classes meant for propertyboxes in ides, instead of copy-pasting alot of [DisplayName], [Category], [Description], [TypeConverter], ...
joren, i don't get that prob though. you got 6gb ram and 2.8Ghz win7/2008?
oh, hey! maybe you can tell me the shortcut key so I don't have to use the mouse and hover over the corner and wait for the box, and sub-box to appear to get at that auto generate class feature, which I also love.
it's actually changed my workflow quite a bit
along with the right-click->generate test feature - i love that as well
I just checked, and the first time took 6 seconds to load the Add New Item dialog - far too slow. But every time afterwards is within a second, that's fast enough
DevExpress has a competing product (series), CodeRush + Refactor! Pro, you can get CodeRush Express, which gives you some refactoring and code generation, for free, for some languages (I'm unsure if you get for all now)
@MarcGravell You could just prevent VS from loading the resharper packages, admittedly not particularly easy but probably more temporary that uninstalling it.
combine all that with my tweaked out StrokeIt (yes that's really the name) mouse gestures config, and I feel like the king of code (in my office where I'm the only programmer)
@Gabriel That sounds like a neat feature - I need some sort of extension that can go through and do remove and sort on every file in our source control repository! :-(
And I prefer Int32 and Int64 over int and long, since the former is alot more clear on what they actually can contain. Makes it alot easier to write interop code.
the nice thing with TC is that if you wrote your CC.Net scripts/templates to call project-specific nant or msbuild scripts you can just bring them over
IMO, unless you've got a large number of build configs or users (beyond the free limit) there is little reason to stay with CC.Net