@DrTJ, no, sorry, I've used SourceSafe and git, nothing else. Yes, you can define work items, though I'm not sure whether you can break workitems down into sub-items - which seems to be one thing you were looking for.
@DrTJ, just to finish our last discussion, consider this as a question title, and modify the body as appropriate: What is the best way to break down and follow project progress?
Damned if I know why they had to shove a whole SharePoint server into the mix
There's 3 places you need to assign developers rights on projects, and if you don't get them all right, and they're subtly different, you get strange errors later on
@LasseVKarlsen, nice to hear all that. My boss is toying with the idea of TFS. Last time he was put off by the fact that you needed a CompSci degree and three weeks free time just to install it :)
@LasseVKarlsen, to be honest, where I've really had problems is with the .sln files. A designer.cs file you have a chance of understanding and merging visuallly. Solution files are a total disaster... I've taken to just taking one side of a merge and then correcting manually afterwards...
@LasseVKarlsen, to be honest, I'm toying with the idea of not actually versioning solution files at all. You version projects, then each developer 'mixes' his own solution depending on what he's working on. Pretty scary stuff, and I haven't actually tried it...
UPDATE:
This is one of my most-visited questions, and yet I still haven't really found a satisfactory solution for my project. One idea I read in an answer to another question is to create a tool which can build solutions 'on the fly' for projects that you pick from a list. I have yet to try that...
When you unload a project in Visual Studio, any referencing projects get warning triangles on their reference to the unloaded project. I've written myself a macro to do clever stuff (detect add/remove of project and transform any references from-to file/project dependency), but I can't believe th...
@LasseVKarlsen, and? carry on, this is really interesting, because I'd like to go in the other direction - we currently have nearly 200 assemblies, and one solution each
@LasseVKarlsen Each assembly has it's own solution, so we have to manage dependencies between projects by hand. But on top of that, each assembly is versioned separately, so there is a DAG of DAGs, because A may depend on B where A' depends on B', etc.
for instance, if I change something in framework today, teamcity will build that, and then the output will be reused for all datamodel and application builds for the next week, until I change the framework again, which doesn't happen too often these days
@benjol yes, exactly
we try to avoid this by just building everything that is needed, or at least we think is needed
so if I change the framework, the datamodel and application will be rebuilt as well, even though no VCS changes exists for those since their last build
this way things will be built with the right versions all the time, but it costs cycles
let me give you an example
if teamcity decides to rebuild application part, first it "gets latest" (what a joke), which is close to 1GB, from TFS
Then it downloaded around 700MB of files from framework and datamodel
dll's, pdb's, xml's, etc.
Then it does the build, which takes close to 20 seconds
Then it uploads around 500mb of files, the output, back to the teamcity server
it used to work fast, when the virtual machines we were on wasn't all that loaded
but now, that single build step takes close to 20 minutes
so we'll reevaluate it all once the current version is out the door
We use TeamCity to validate checkins. If I change something in framework, which builds, but breaks the application part, and I forget to test that, after checking in, teamcity will build and run unit tests for me, so I get an email back with the errors.
And TeamCity actually runs the entire run from checkin to test version on our network, so testers internally just double-click on a shortcut and always have the latest version running, fresh off of teamcity
provided no unit tests failed or builds broke
I'd like for us to go with Mercurial
But the form designer files scares me, and rightly so, so I doubt we'll go that route
our solution files doesn't change all that much
but when a team works every day with new functionality in a new window, it's bound to happen often that they traipse into others work in the same window, and if merging then becomes difficult, then it might not be worth it
@LasseVKarlsen Honestly, do you have bad experiences with designer.cs, or you just foresee them? Admittedly, I'm just a one-man team (with git), but I don't think I've ever seen horrible problems. Maybe some manual merges from time to time.
I'm trying to work out if it is possible to come up with a solution for branching by feature even if part of my application is based on inherently non-mergeable (i.e. binary) files.
The only (obvious) ideas I have come up with:
Keep a note of all changes and merge by hand
Implement merge in t...
With Subversion, your changes aren't yet committed, and the merge thus tries to merge the changes from the server into your local (uncommitted) changes. If that fails, your original changeset is nowhere to be found in one whole piece
Yes, it's surprising how many people think that parallel work is something to be avoided, whereas actually it's just simply inevitable. Even if you're working on your own!
Sure, I can foresee merge problems with form designer files, and solution files, it doesn't happen very often for me, but I'm skeptical with our current developers at the company I work for
We're not quite there yet with 100% planning, so I can easily see two or more developers opening up the same form to fix a case they've been assigned
Yeah, that question has 6 views, and a life of 2 days
Yeah, but if we just end up implementing exclusive checkout of forms, with another tool, did we actually gain much?
The data model project, with over a million lines of C# code, is actually mostly code-generated from a .xml file from a 3rd party, in-house system, used to build data dictionaries
So we considered this to be a problem, the data formats of that dictionary system isn't very merge friendly, but we could easily handle that part by just having an access card type of thing, we've done that before for certain things. Basically a laminated printed card on the wall, hanging on a rope
you can only work on that part if you have that card
But we can't very well make such a card for every form
And as I said, that's just exclusive checkout, done wrong
I have a WPF control that uses a WinUserControl (ctlArretSelection) on it.
this ctlArretSelection references an assembly (cllOperaStructures) that is referenced
System.IO.FileNotFoundException: Could not load file or assembly
'MyNamespace.cllOperaStructures, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, P...
With the "compiler as a service", I think CPS would fit nicely into something like that
If the compiler automatically chopped up all flow control into CPS constructs, you would get nice portions of code where you could inject or wrap aspects and similar
For instance, a for-loop expressed in CPS would probably be easier to analyze for automatic parallelism
But I haven't considered it all that much yet, I've read Eric's blog entries, but not much more than
Having read blog post 5, I think I wasn't too far off track, the only mystery is what the sugar will look like, and whether it will open the door to more stuff
@GeorgeStocker I read it just to 'expand'/'explode' my mind. This is the first time I think I've more than 60% understood - and that's only because I've been playing with F# for a while
I have an XSD file that is encoded in UTF-8, and any text editor I run it through doesn't show any character at the beginning of the file, but when I pull it up in Visual Studio's debugger, I clearly see an empty box in front of the file.
I also get the error:
Data at the root level is inv...
Back in the day I had problems with utf-8, asp and FileSystemObject. I had a Stripyp function which went lookup for ÿþ at the beginning of the string. Yuck!
can someone tell me wht the question mark and : mean in this line? _status = (!hf_StatusID.Value.Equals(New) && !hf_StatusID.Value.Equals(Pending) && !hf_StatusID.Value.Equals(Cancelled)) ? Closed : hf_StatusID.Value;
In computer programming, ?: is a ternary operator that is part of the syntax for a basic conditional expression in several programming languages. It is commonly referred to as the conditional operator.
It originally comes from BCPL, which equivalent syntax for e1 ? e2 : e3 was e1 -> e2, e3. Languages derived from BCPL tend to feature this operator.
Conditional assignment
?: is used as follows:
condition ? value if true : value if false
The condition is evaluated true or false as a Boolean expression. On the basis of the evaluation of the Boolean condition, the entire expression retur...
well, judging by hints of Eric Lippert's blog, they are cooking up something which should alleviate the kind of pain your experiencing.
In the short term, that's not going to help you though. The only thing I can suggest is: breakpoints (you can use breakpoints to do Console.WriteLine, by the way), and potentially trying to rewrite you code with events, if that's easier to follow
I have a 'generic' boiler plate static method for checking for InvokeRequired and invoking an associated action accordingly.
If an unhandled exception is raised by the action, the stack trace isn't much help because it starts from here. I can get information about the control, but that isn't alw...
I have the following class
public class AccountingBase<TItemType> where TItemType : AccountingItemBase
And in my AccountingItemBase i have the following property:
public virtual AccountingBase<AccountingItemBase> Parent { get; set; }
in my AccountingBase, I am trying to do the f...
@drachenstern lol, whats wrong with it? (i'm not the best at naming things) basically its a base calss for items such as Invoices/Pro Forma Invoices/ Purchase Orders which have near identical fields....
@drachenstern Any other suggestions for those type of documents are more then welcome!!! It's the only name I could come up with
Small question, is there any way to tell a Thread which thread to call back on? I'd like to do the InvokeRequired close to where I'm starting the thread...
/me has always wondered why no one implemented a SynchronizationContext subclass for Gtk#... would have made my life a lot easier a few years ago if 1) I'd known about it, 2) it'd been implemented.
Im going to throw my computer out of the window, when i run my app i get illegal access to loading collection, but when i debug it step by step it works fine. I'm using NHibernate, anyone have any pointers what i might be looking for?
does anybody else feel the love when your boss gives you vague integration assignments and says "just make it work, look it's already been done" and those integrations are against mostly irrelevant sources ... I think this is one of those assignments where I'm supposed to break down and cry (but I won't) for help
@entens uh sure ;) ... not been given that particular task before ... so long as you don't have to resort to a lot of COBOL, I suppose that might be ok . . . ;)
Does no such plugin exist?
So to be clear, I realize that RedGate has their own SSMS SCC app, and I realize that VSS2k5 will integrate in. I'm looking to stay with Hg as that's where my source already is, and I'ld like to find something that my team can stay consistent with on their tools.
As ...
if anybody has any ideas I'm wide open. Note that hgscc has already been suggested
I think I'm going to have to resort to a dual-window-maintenance strategy and use tortoiseHg with a SSMS solution and do it the "old fashioned" way
but I don't mind that. just that it's so much easier for my coworkers to look at pretty little icons now that I've gotten them used to working with it directly from VS (so I can make sure that they're at least pushing stuff to their local repos ... )
I have a WPF application with a TreeView that works like the file explorer in windows. It loads the folders and files in a backgroundworker. I believe its throwing an error because of the BitmapSource that is binded to the TreeView... When I use "this" in a function called by a backgroundworker does it reference the actual instance or a "copy" in another thread?
yes. via a unmanaged call... pulls the BitmapSource from windows and sets it to a local variable in my class which is then bound to an Image tag in WPF
The background worker retrieve the files, creating new objects for each. Each having a BitmapSource variable which is set in the objects constructor
I'm building the bitmap data on the background thread... in that background thread I set the file objects into a List<File> which is then set to the e.Result.... which is retrieved in the RunWorkerCompleted handler function (which I thought was in the main thread?)
you can generate the data - but you can't actually put it into a BitmapSource
since the UI thread needs to "own" the BitmapSource - all DependencyObjects that participate in binding have a thread affinity, so they need to be constructed on the UI thread
(which is annoying, but has been that way in windows forever...)
This question is pretty simple, but I'm not seeing why the code isn't working?
Here's how I set the members of a ComboBox I have on my form:
private void LoadUsersToComboBox()
{
ScansEntities3 db = new ScansEntities3();
comboBox1.DataSource = db.People;
comboBox1.DisplayMember = "N...
@SergioTapia I'm referring to this line at SQLite_Testing_Grounds.ScansEntities3.AddToDepartments(Department department) in C:\Users\Sergio.Tapia\documents\visual studio 2010\Projects\SQLite Testing Grounds\SQLite Testing Grounds\Model2.Designer.cs:line 89
I've been looking into building services with WCF and I've gone through a number of tutorials. Since I'm new to this, I'm curious about the benefits of using a web service vs. just POSTing to a web application that can return JSON or XML?
Hi @Josh ~ So what do you mean the difference between a web application that can return JSON/XML versus a webservice? The key to a WCF is that it's part of the Microsoft .NET Web Services Standards platform that most of the industry is trying to align to (including Apache, etc)
So if you write a WS application on .NET then you know that it will be platform independent, and will be more or less seamless to the connecting party.
But because they (WCF) generally run on a webserver (in my experience), then you'll still be using the standard GET, POST, etc (although it generally tends to be POST only in my experience) ~ You'll notice that I keep referring to my limited experience ;)
As for whether it's better to write to a WCF than to ... say ... a ASMX, that's a matter of personal choice, as ASMX are considered to be "out the door" (altho they are still perfectly servicable) and don't have all of the WS-* strengths
I feel like a might be misunderstanding the capabilities of a web service, but my impression is that web services for the most part return XML or JSON. Is that correct?
But if you mean instead of writing to a .ASPX then I would encourage you strongly to write to the WCF instead of an ASPX. (unless you're using PageMethods in which case you're not really doing the WS-* thing in the first place)
@Josh WebServices typically do - WCF services can as well. WCF just adds a lot of capabilities in that you can automatically handle a lot of things that are more difficult using JSON/XML - all of the serialization is handled automatically, etc
I guess it's just that I can see myself returning XML from a web application. But the fact that WCF can handle the serialization automatically does seem like a benefit.
I ask because it seems easier for me to set up a web application than it does a webservice.
Yeah I suppose you'd have to provide some sort of documentation, and each time you made changes you'd need to ensure that documentation was updated or something.