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08:44
morning
morning
what's up?
09:01
A lot, but it's fine. Improving someone elses code for a sec.
 
2 hours later…
11:25
5
Q: PasswordVault security when used from Desktop app

Andrey ShcherbakovI'd like to use Windows.Security.Credentials.PasswordVault in my desktop app (WPF-based) to securely store a user's password. I managed to access this Windows 10 API using this MSDN article. I did some experiments and it appears that any data written to PasswordVault from one desktop app (not a...

500
wow
 
2 hours later…
13:21
hiya all
hey
Quiet in here this morning...
It kinda is :P
Yup
maybe everyone is really feeling the programming vibe today
and don't feel like talking
13:26
Huh. They're killing off Documentation
That's not too surprising.
i think its useless
only you need is so answers and msdn
Hi all
hey alex
'morning Alex
Hey Lynn
13:38
morning all
mornin big
everyone have a good weekend?
Always too short
Heya everyone :)
13:48
Hey William
14:15
Does WPF come with any out-of-the-box solution that works with lists and lets me reorder the items in a bound collection?
something like Observable collection and and listbox? I am not sure what you mean.
- an and
:P
Do you mean like a pre-built control that'll allow sorting/filtering, etc.?
Nah, I was thinking drag and drop.
As far as my google skills tell me, it will require a bit of work.
Either that, or if you have an account with Syncfusion, you can get their controls for free
They might have something for WPF
@WilliamMariager DynamicData is your best bet
but it is far from out of the box
14:38
Ah
12
A: WPF C#: Rearrange items in listbox via drag and drop

Wiesław ŠoltésUsing dnr3's answers I have created version with fixed selection issues. Window1.xaml <Window x:Class="ListBoxReorderDemo.Window1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" Title="ListBoxReord...

I found this answer. I'll just update it a bit to be a bit more MVVM friendly and it should do the trick I think.
oh. reorder manually. i see
try Dragablz
Totally forgot, yeah Dragablz ^
 
1 hour later…
16:11
posted on August 14, 2017 by Diego B Vega [MSFT]

Today we are releasing the final version of Entity Framework Core 2.0, alongside .NET Core 2.0 and ASP.NET Core 2.0. Entity Framework (EF) Core is the lightweight, extensible, and cross-platform version of Entity Framework, the popular Object/Relational Mapping (O/RM) framework for .NET. Getting the bits You can start using EF Core 2.0 today by installing... Read more

16:23
posted on August 14, 2017 by Immo Landwerth [MSFT]

The .NET Standard 2.0 specification is now complete. It is supported in .NET Core 2.0, in the .NET Framework 4.6.1 and later versions, and in Visual Studio. You can start using .NET Standard 2.0 today. For the impatient: TL;DR .NET Standard is for sharing code. .NET Standard is a set of APIs that all .NET implementations must provide to... Read more

posted on August 14, 2017 by Rich Lander [MSFT]

.NET Core 2.0 is available today as a final release. You can start developing with it at the command line, in your favorite text editor, in Visual Studio 2017 15.3, Visual Studio Code or Visual Studio for Mac. It is ready for production workloads, on your own hardware or your favorite cloud, like Microsoft Azure.... Read more

16:42
morning all
pumped for the announcements above
morning
I thought those news substitute the low activity in the room
17:03
Is the opinion "WPF is very difficult" popular enough to not feel bad when adopting it?
I used AngularJS (1.x) and comparing the two technologies in terms of binding, in particular, WPF make things really difficult
not familiar with angular, i didnt find WPF very difficult when first starting out
at least, i dont remember thinking it was very difficult. lol
have you had a look at the binding sample ?
happy to try and help
where is this sample, please?
I think saying "WPF is very difficult" is a bit of a copout
most things are difficult when learning them
AngularJS 1.X has plenty of its own "difficulties"
and the announcements come through regardless :)
I still have nightmares around $scope.$apply()...
17:23
^ that
17:35
my issue was understanding how datacontexts worked... after overcoming that the same day, it was the lightbulb for me
Yeah, all tech have those "light bulb" moments
i didn't understand how they were used and inherited from parent controls etc
for instance my own nightmare in WPF is this sort of binding expressions:
{Binding Path=ChangeColorCmd,
                    RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType={x:Type Window}}}
find the closest Window
I've used those, with help from the good folks at SO and Google!
17:40
use its ChangeColorCmd
RelativeSource={RelativeSource Mode=FindAncestor, AncestorType={x:Type Window}} = find parent window
You don't have to use RelativeSource... almost ever
xaml is verbose, dont let it scare you
i use RelativeSource all the time
I'm not saying you can't use it; just that you don't have to
and I would agree that its probably the most complicated binding you can do
"xaml is verbose" .. this is completely true
but there are plenty of complicated things in AngularJS (directives come to mind) so basing "Binding is complicated" on RelativeSource just doesn't seem fair
17:44
Once you get the hang of what that statement says, you have nothing to fear but fear itself!
I must not fear.
Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear.
I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain.
I've never used AncestorType and at this point I'm too scared to ask what it does...
you specify the UIElement type you are looking for
maybe you want parent grid, or parent stack panel, that kidn of thing
so when is that useful?
Maybe you want to bind to a parent's size
17:45
say you have a listbox
and the listbox has items
or even a command like the one above
and you want to delete an item from the list
ends up being extra useful in control templates
where do you put the "Delete object from list" logic?
Not sure where you are going with this one Julien; wouldn't that go in the VM and remove an item from the observable collection?
17:46
^
"The VM"
or code behind and .Remove ;)
is that vm of the listbox, or the item vm?
EmployeesPageVm vs EmployeeVm
oh; sure, inline commands
which one houses the "delete from list" method
17:47
Now I get where you are going :)
But you get to pick between ElementName and RelativeSource
biggdivs; he's saying if you have a button inside your ItemTemplate it will pick up the item itself as the DataContext and so a standard command binding won't work
exactly. you want to invoke a method on the thing housing the item
not the item itself
you have to break out to the parent data context, which you can do with RelativeSource (or ElementName as above)
yeah; I use ElementName there just to avoid the RelativeSource syntax (which I still can't remember ;) )
i try to avoid naming my ui elements
me too; that's my one exception :D
That and doing Master/Detail when the VM doesn't care what is selected
I use it all of the time...
It isn't that scary :)
17:53
Which one?
To be fair, the number of times you actually need the property of a UI element is small
the command example is by far the most common
RelativeSource mostly.
Yes - commmands mostly
Is it at all feasible to have an ItemsControl with 10k's of items?
Trying to create a view for some bytecode.
18:09
yes
Alright, I'll give it a try and see what happens.
you just have to try it. some of it will come down to how complicated your item templates are
if perf is bad,you'll have to virtualize
I knew nothing about WPF and built my first MVVM app last year with help from the friends in this room. It's not a perfect app but I'd say WPF is nifty for desktop dev and not too difficult to learn/master
18:27
And with Xamarin supporting embedded WPF, the future's bright!
generally, is it always bad to write such code: txtEmpName.Text = _repo.GetName(id);?
yes
I thought so, I joined the current company with 0 experience in WPF and I argue that their design doesn't apply MVVM, I had to say that when a senior programmer , asks why I didn't make use of OOP for the feature I'm working on. that was difficult to do with such "wrote by hand" code
10k items; you'll want to virtualize
not just generally; it is always bad
^ @WilliamMariager
18:42
? put 10k labels into a items control, it will work fine
but you're not reading 10k labels at once
virtualization has side effects. dont turn it on just because you have a lot of items
who cares if they arent all visible
numbers around that large you'll start to notice performance choking without virtualization
nah
10k items, perf is perfect
your templates need to get pretty involvd to need virt
18:59
My link was more about perf in general than virt
images, for example will really kill perf
@Julien what control? most virtualize by default 😋
itemscontrol
? you have to set a virtualized panel from what i understand
they arent virt by default
what's giving you the scrollbars?
because itemscontrol doesn't scroll by default
i wrapped it with a scrollviewer
19:00
Hmm. Then when do you set IsVirtualized to true? Or is it true by default?
<ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
                <ItemsPanelTemplate>
                    <VirtualizingStackPanel Orientation="Vertical" />
                </ItemsPanelTemplate>
            </ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
I've wrapped stuff in scrollviewers too
^^ is what i would add to virtualize it
Alright, with TextBlocks performance looks fine. Takes a while for the window to load though.
i think that has more to do with filling the collection
in a real app that would be a background operation
By default, UI virtualization is enabled for the ListView and ListBox controls when their list items are bound to data. TreeView virtualization can be enabled by setting the IsVirtualizing attached property to true. If you want to enable UI virtualization for custom controls that derive from ItemsControl or existing item controls that use the StackPanel class, such as ComboBox, you can set the ItemsPanel to VirtualizingStackPanel and set IsVirtualizing to true.
19:07
it'll open faster with virtualization
it does slow down layout passes
(even with just textblocks)
makes sense
i didnt know about deferred scrolling
i have a virtualized listbox that scrolls super slow, i should try that
OH you guys remember my Uri problem with paths with a #
var filePath = new Uri("file:///" + actualFilePath)
if (File.Exists(filePath.AbsolutePath)
if (File.Exists(filePath.AbsoluteUri)
if (File.Exists(filePath.LocalPath)
if (File.Exists(filePath.OriginalString)
those all fail if the path has a # in it. lol
And the 200 rep bounty? How could we forget ;)
so my conclusion is that media element is a special little snowflake and needs its own special path property in uri format
using URI for file paths anywhere else is just broken
Bug, from the sound of it
it treats it like a web url, and uses the # as an anchor, cuts off everything after it
19:31
Can you bring this to MSFT's attention somewhere with a bug report?
Though that won't fix your problem now
how to implement INotifyPropertyChanged in model classes when using EF database-first approach ..
when they are auto generated?
i like to expose all model properties via view model properties. you duplicate properties but it is cleaner imo
I think a pattern becomes useless when I have to repeat code
view model properties are a bit different, because sometimes you want to take actions on them, or intercept them, or change them
when a model property changes, you know you want that change to propagate to the DB
that is not necessarily true with VM changes
20:02
feeling sorry on what I've learnt so far on MVVM, all of it just adds a model class and implement INPC , without using real-world models using EF
start adding things to your app I guess??
we have a couple people here that have used EF with mvvm
get their input maybe
sure putting a VM over a M can get repetitive, but in the end its worth it especially in complex scenarios
@Alex is one of them, right?
Yup, you're right Kevin
You wrap an M with VM, gives you so much flexibility/power
You usually don't want to touch your models, only modify your VM
20:21
Not to mention, wrapping your model in a viewmodel allows you to give it more features than the model would have on it's own.
Nice separation of responsibilities.
Question about EF?
Been using EF for a while. Ask away
I hope if I could help
 
1 hour later…
21:34
posted on August 14, 2017 by cartermp

Now that .NET Core 2.0 has been released, we wanted to take some time to talk about F# and .NET Core. F# and .NET Core 1.0 F# has been supported on .NET Core since 1.0. In the months leading up to the release of .NET Core 1.0, Enrico Sada from the F# community worked with... Read more

22:18
3
Q: overriding the browser's CTRL+F and replace it with Silverlight custom search

LetsKickSomeAss in .netCan anyone help me in Overriding the browser's CTRL+F and replace it with Silverlight Custom-search. I guess we can have JavaScript to handle this case.

22:32
Hello!
I have UserControl inside stackpanel, I get this UserControl ref into new variable (userControl1)
if I do this: myUserControl userControl1 = new myUserControl() will it update the original UC?
or I have to remove it from stack panel and add new UC in its place?

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