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07:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

07:57
hola
 
4 hours later…
11:51
hi mav
@Maverik you around?
12:39
Hey!
13:08
gotta get ready for work now. but i might ping ya in an hour or two. design questions :)
 
1 hour later…
14:18
@Maverik we had a talk awhile ago about menus
and menu items
i kinda remember the mention
and how each menu item may have its own view model, etc. remember that?
i have a ribbonbar, and want to mvvm-ify it
each of my buttons don't really have a view model for each button, and i'm not sure how to hook up the command for each button to my view model
hmm? datatemplate / style?
thats the answer to everything binding related :)
well i mean like in the applicationviewmodel
there would be a licensing check
and if user has X access rights, then i'd add 6 "buttons" to the itemssource collection, otherwise I'd only add 2 "buttons"
not sure what the itemssource should be
15:10
mornin
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/309485/c-sharp-sanitize-file-name


Is there really no built in method in Directory, or Path to get the actual complete list of invalid characters / sanatize?
seems a bit weird that you would need regex
@NETscape I'm still not sure where's the problem?
@Maverik I need to create an observablecollection that holds some type which represents my buttons, right?
yea and how you fill it up is upto your business logic
do it wherever you do your check right now?
how do I give them the commands they need to fire too? pass them RelayCommands to ctor?
oh
that or pass a Func<T,T>
that you can pass to RelayCommand
passing a RelayCommand in constructor is an implementation detail that i wouldn't want to expose unless there really was a need
15:21
well right now I have an ApplicationViewModel which has all my RelayCommands
you could even do this in two passes may be?
create buttons via license check
and then do the actual assignments in second pass of whatever was added to OC
now I am adding a license feature, so I need to not display some buttons... so I need to convert my ribbonbar to MVVM, and since I already have the commands in ApplicationViewModel, I need to pass them to these ButtonViewModels or something I'd guess
And Mark W: theres quite a few things that you'd think framework would have built in but doesn't :)
i'd say go two pass
users can enter product keys during runtime, so i'd need the ability to add/remove from collection
well I would have:
GenerateBasicButtons
If(licensed)
    InsertLicensedButtons()
so licensed is already "calculated" before generating I guess
is that what you mean two pass... pass 1 = license check, pass 2 = button creation?
sort of
but yea that makes more sense
i meant you could have like grayed out buttons that don't have any commands assigned
i things actually better because it shows functionality that they could get if they paid up
but since there's no commands assigned, you can't actually just tick a box in Snoop to use the buttons
(default implementation can just have CanExecute set to false which will keep it grayed wihtout breaking mvvm)
15:31
@Maverik okay, and if user enters license key, then just do ButtonVM.SpeicalFeatureCommand = ApplicationViewModel.MyCommand?
yea
that sounds good to me
replace CanExecute=False commands with real stuff
no need to add remove elements
15:58
helpppaaa
so those are all viewmodels which wrap models (except folder)
if someone renames Folder/File, then I need to call ProjectManager.SaveProject basically
interfaces?
also, who should be "saving"? ProjectManagerViewModel, or ProjectViewModel, or ProjectModel?
(of course innermost where it makes sense)
sounds like you want to save at ProjectModel me thinks
if you start doing everything at project manager level, then you're leaking concerns and you've broken that single responsibility pattern
even if that was ok (since i'm lenient on those things).. you'd still have a huge switch case that would be butt ugly to maintain
well i save Project.xml
which has the treeview structure saved
my thought was, think of notepad.exe... the "notepadmanager" saves the file, not the file itself...
that's what i was thinking
16:24
notepad can do that cos its so small :)
plus i doubt when they made that thing, they weren't all pattern concious :)
i'd be surprised if they did that sort of thing in VS, for example
as such you shouldn't literally be asking ProjectModel to save itself
that should be happening in repository manager
right, ProjectViewModel would be saving ProjectModel.. eh?
yea that sounds about right
model is poco i guess?
yea i see you mentioned it, sorry for confusion
i'm literally just creating DAL for my new project
I've created POCOs and then Code First maps on top in seperate EF project.. thus i can use EF when i need to but others can use POCO project for other client stuff
so by that logic, ProjectModel shouldn't be able to save itself anyway :)
16:39
@Maverik so how would my buttons in the grid call my ProjectViewModel's close? should they call ProjectManagerViewModel.Projects[0].Save()?
(there will always only be 1 project)
16:57
O.o
that feels wrong
Manager could raise an event?
to have vm close itself
how do you have it right now?
or you're tightly coupled since you were monolithic?
what do you mean?
right now I'm saving basically after one of the buttons are clicked
but that's a problem since i have contextmenus
and they should be calling commands in the viewmodels that are bound them
@Maverik so in File, I can't call ProjectViewModel.Save() because file doesn't know about ProjectViewModel atm
it shouldn't anyway
so now i'm trying to figure out how to save my project after File's bound Name changes
I'd raise event and listen on that to communicate the intent across .. that still keeps you loosely coupled
have ProjectVM listen to File's INPC?
17:08
one way to do it could be to listen on PropertyChanged (unless you have something more fancy) and Raise another event that your VM is listening on
OR..
nah..
since you're command based, it'll have to be chained
So ProperChanged -> enables your save button
i brought myself back to josh smith example... msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd419663.aspx#id0090102
save button then raises event and actual repo saves the thing
and his Customer knows about the customer repository they are in... is that right?
no
customer is poco as it should be
save button raises event?!
17:10
the relationships are one way
sure why not?
you could have a reference to repo too
depends on what level of coupling you're going for
also: CustomerViewModel knows about repo.. if that's what you meant
ahhh
that's okay, eh?
yea sure
gotcha
so if your vm knows about repo .. then yea you can have save command trigger repo's persistence
he kinda does the whole save thing in his demo, i think i could use the same pattern
17:13
its a pretty common pattern
i did that until last year
this year i'm all about super decoupled architecture :)
@Maverik well that's my question, should I have FileVM and FolderVM know about ProjectVM?
I dunno enough about your project to make that recommendation
it kinda feels ok
immediate parents can be reached generally
but if you find yourself hopping parents, then you're doing it wrong
well i was thinking... just pass IProjectManager to File and Folder... that would be hopping though i guess lol
@Maverik go on... tell me more master 0_o
oh this probably isn't relevant to you but i'm in message queue land now
so sean posts a message to queue to get something done.. i pull it out from one of my services and respond back that he then picks up at some point
networking complexities >.<
so i've gone decoupled to the point i can adapt to any sort of network config they'll throw at me
any message they put on the queue?
17:18
also lets you do some more fancy things like auditing, logging, heartbeats with little effort
well messages are keyed
i'm stuck with networking complexity also ><
doing half-duplex, multidevice datalogging
that also lets me be multi-tenanted out of the box.. which is nice
may want to check out rabbitmq
doesn't seem to exist on google
i really like its exchange / queue routing systems
what doesn't exist on google?
ahhh
that kinda helps
i am stuck between implementing a work queue or publish/subscribe messaging system
i will need to implement both now that i think about it
17:24
you can do that stuff with rabbitmq xD
but its server/client architecture
yeah
there's others out there wiht at least one inprocess
i need serial port
you probably want to check out ones that are using MQTT protocol
which is meant for embedded devices
one of the things about rabbit i love, is that its multi protocol
so sean speaks STOMP to it over WebSockets
and i speak AMQP to pick up stuff
(it also supports MQTT if it helps)
thx for the link!
17:33
good morning all
hiiii :(
Morning Brad
so anybody knows if there's a command in EF where I can just kill a migration (last migration) ?
(its in code only and hasn't been applied)
will removing files be enough?
ok i've killed and it builds fine, so i think i'm good for now xD
(just starting out on this migration stuff)
Haven't had to do migration with EF, so I'm not sure :(
17:51
yea me neither, but i'm trying to figure it out
seems like a pretty nice thing if done right
i really don't want to touch db if i can help it
and considering i can add custom migration operations, this makes it so much more tempting to stick with code first
also, i dunno how many of you know but EF6 now supports table sharing across models now so that makes it much more awesome!
Haven't tried code-first yet, but the migration options do make me want to try it :)
Table sharing across models?
So you have a table with data that relates to another databases data?
i have a nightmare scenario right now: i have a db that works with checksums for equality comparisons
hi @BradleyDotNET
everytime we have to add a table, i have to do a manual checksum migration - it doesn't always go right in first run >.<
17:54
Hi @BrianJ
and no Brad: EF used to support only one DbContext per database
but now we can have multiple DbContexts per database and they can share existing tables
instead of creating tables, you could use migrations to add your own columns or remove columns when migrating down
this was the consequence of having one __MigrationTable per database -- so i couldn't track more than one context
now that table has a ContextKey in it
and because of that it can track multiple Contexts
@BradleyDotNET I'm still working on refactoring my Home view, I've got as far as moving the browser code to it's own model, but need some advice.
@BradleyDotNET I'm still working on refactoring my Home view, I've got as far as moving the browser code to it's own model, but need some advice.
ping galore :D
18:00
no headphones on at the moment :)
Ok, what advice would that be?
oops didn't mean to send that twice
@BrianJ Something just came up, so I'm going to have to be gone for a while. If you ask quickly I'll give you the advice you wanted though
ok
gimme a sec
Otherwise I'm sure Maverik and NETScape can keep you on the straight and narrow :)
18:04
that looks fine
public fields = bad
but what was your question?
besides being a bad practice, you cannot bind to public fields either
and its one of those things that leave you scratching head because there will be no error but it won't work either
It should throw a System.Data exception still
if you bind? it doesn't
18:09
It shouldn't be able to find the property, and throw
I'm pretty sure I've seen it...
nope, it reports in debug console
doesn't throw
Thats what I meant :)
and it only reports if you enabled reporting binding exceptions in options
System.Data execptions are caught by the framework and logged
Didn't know you could disable that
by default binding exceptions are off
ok.. let me rephrase
18:10
I never turned mine on...
by default, Binding mismatches are not reported upon
(it used to be the case at least)
i now turn wpf warnings on every install as habit so I dont know defaults right now
I think all binding errors are reported by default
Anyways, got to go. Good luck Brian!
yea they are now
i just checked.. but it used to be off
years back :D -- i had a hard time figuring out what was going wrong and from that day i made it a habit to turn all reporting on
reproting + coloured output extension can save quite a bit of time
I've seen solutions that were bitten hard by bindings catching exceptions...
@BradleyDotNET my question is, have I refactored this to a method correctly, as in, is there any code in the model that shouldn't be there? I know the UI stuff should go in the HomeViewVm
18:14
@Jeremy its a trace item - there shouldn't be any exceptions
Yep - but (e.g.) you're binding to something that in the set/get manages to throw an exception
Will be caught by the binding, and the app won't die
Usually it's okay, but sometimes it's fatal and we want to die
Brian: I normally follow two rules:

1. Don't use code behind
2. Leave models in pure POCO state
if you followed that, you're fine
oh and yes, don't use public fields
also this is just a minor suggestion -- instead of doing like this:
 if (e.Uri.ToString().StartsWith("http://www.facebook.com/connect/login_success.html"))
{ ...
you can say if (e.Uri.ToString().StartsWith("http://www.facebook.com/connect/login_success.html‌​")) return;
makes it hard to read if you have many indentation wraps that could have been bypassed altogether
private FacebookClient FBClient;
private FacebookClient fbC;
be consistent in your naming conventions
so apart from this, I'm thinking the only code that needs to be removed from the model to the VM is, the code that sets browser visibility and code that sets txbx text value? Everything else is good in there?
sorry i can't see where that is
oh!! the commented stuff
initLogin shouldn't be in that model
again, following rule 2 you can make that judgement easily
do you know what a POCO is?
no, is it like POJO? :P
18:27
hehe
plain old C# object
just like a pojo
I created the user login model specifically for this method, where should it be instead?
have it in whatever creates that model
most likely in VM
once you get Repository patterns up (some day) this can land in repository manager
Okay so in summary all of the code in this model should be in the VM?
yes
(this is debatable though but that's a purity debate and people have slightly varying opinions)
but yes, generally go with automatic public properties in models
and that's about it
anything else should go in your VM
also resist the urge to do everything in one big VM
you can have a master VM that then just delegates model specific things to their viewmodels
In my (limited) experience: proxy and aggregate, proxy and aggregate...
18:39
okay I'll have a go at refactoring this.
thanks
I think i agree Jeremy, but i'm not sure if we're talking the same thing
basically I just need to copy the entirety of this model to the HomeViewVM, is that correct?
18:54
not entirety
that looks right
just need to figure out how the visibility and text box values will be set..
so the properties stuff stays in model
but behaviour comes from viewmodel
well thats easy
you can have a property called like IsVisible may be? or whatever your visibility criteria is
and bind that to Visibility in xaml using a BooleanToVisibilityConverter
so I don't need my UserLoginModel at all, or do I need to place the properties there and access from the VM? Bit confused
access from VM
your Model is your data store
all data is in there
but your VM does the manipulations
oh okay
18:58
and its ok to be confused :) it takes some getting used to
i've been doing this for years and i still get confused!
so these get moved to my UserLoginModel:


private FacebookClient FBClient;
private FacebookClient fbC;
private string AccessToken { get; set; }
private string UserName;
private string Gender;
private string Link;
and the rest stays in the VM?
as you go, you create your own rules and guidelines that help you quickly make a call on whether it should be model of view model
yes
BUT - make them all get;set; properties
and you need to fix that convention really
hmm wait! another problem!
you need to implement change notification on the properties that will be bound to UI
so where's that stuff?
I haven't set that up yet, thats just a property right?
and make all these get,set like my AccessToken property? Then place in my model.
is it possible to bind a WPF image to a byte array?
for the image source
@MarkW Probably not without a converter
But I suspect it can be done
19:09
this more like it?

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/806ebe98d4606246dc5e

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/e3695d35b2e6fb869241

Obviously now though I have the problem that these properties can't be accessed in my VM which is throwing errors, so my next step woul be to implement the change notifications?
public object Convert(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, CultureInfo culture)
{
BitmapImage img = new BitmapImage();
if (value != null)
{
img= this.ConvertByteArrayToBitMapImage(value as byte[]);
}
return img;
}
I think I can skip the byte[] part if I bind to a property of type image
:) markdown sux at times :)
as opposed to that
I thougth Source required a string (path) but that doesnt appear to be the case
well anyway
19:11
Source can handle multiple things i think
i think it can take a stream too
so what steps do I take after moving the properties to the model?
one sec
well more like one minute :)
my r# is bugging out
i was tyring to create template code for you
checking jetbrains
sigh.. gotta downgrade .. r#s wpf seems to be broken in latest builds
R# trial ran out, no company license/reimb, and I'm not sure R# is $150 valuable.
@Maverik is it?
it is
you can ask anybody in here that has r# license, you'll get a unanimous answer
like @JohanLarsson @AndréSilva @Sean @NETscape
19:27
I think so yes, really nice for wpf
i find the best value bit in the fact it teaches me new things randomly when it does its clipper moment "you could do x instead of doing y"
And for generating boilerplate code like equality etc
yea!
Yep. Can I customize the actions that R# suggests?
19:27
e.g., don't test doubles within epsilon, use DoubleUtil.AreClose?
yes it is very configurable
That was frustrating recently...
oh !! wait i'm not sure you can do that
but .. i'm not sure why it would test doubles
Yeah - R# doesn't suggest that resolution
its a coding aid
19:28
E.g., pre-existing code checking equality for doubles
if you want to modify its suggestion, you'll have to work via its plugin system
using ==
well you could have it generate the boilerplate
and then modify equality to use your function
Ah, yeah
it is just a warning when comparing doubles with ==
most of the time it is right to not do it
19:33
@BrianJ do you have access to c# 6 ?
Oh - I like that it catches that, and I agree that some other method for testing equality should be used
But the version of R# that I tested suggested a few different methods of resolution, none of which are DoubleUtil.AreClose
which seemed like the most natural one
i certainly wouldn't consider that as natural
my instincts tell me it should be exact match
Why is that?
developer world works with exact matches.. fuzzy matches are exception to rule
The issue is that all of this data is user-generated
and converted to/from other languages
But I see your point - DoubleUtil.AreClose might not always be the natural method of resolution
19:37
I've updated your code with backing fields + change notifications (this isn't 100% pure, but its a compromise we often make in wpf world)
i've also changed your access to properties to public
I've adjusted your names to what they should be roughly
the backing field names are also per r# convention (i didn't hand code that - i got r# to generate it for me)
on a side note: this is .net 4.5 code -- if you're still targeting .net 4, this code will need to have even more boilerplate added to it
You can remove the "NotifyPropertyChangedInvocator" bit, too - it looks like that's used by R# to generate the properties (but correct me if i'm wrong).
yea, i revised that
the link is to second last revision
thanks for pointing that out :)
@Maverik just cooking dinner, I'll have a look at that shortly, thanks
mhmmm
19:58
so this revision basically just sets up the properties and adds a listener to check for changes in the properties. My next question is how is this connected to my VM, how do the properties within my VM loginInit() access the properties within the model?
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