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01:00 - 23:0023:00 - 00:00

01:28
@BradleyDotNET who?
was that to brian or myself?
To brian
He was interviewing for a "Software Requirements engineer" job earlier, wasn't sure if this one was the same
Anyways, time for me to head out. Have a WPF-filled night everyone!
hellloooo
 
7 hours later…
08:45
hi everybody
09:00
I need to put into DisplayName a string that contains the I character used as subscript...anybody knows how to do it?
 
5 hours later…
14:18
I also have a problem of refreshing in PropertyGrid...
0
Q: How to initialize viewModel using MEF?

VishalI have a Module called ModuleMenu. In this module I have a UserControl called MenuView and a Corresponding ViewModel called UserControlViewModel. I also have a class called Module. All the code is as given below: MenuView.xmal <UserControl ..............> <ListBox ItemsSource="{Binding Men...

 
2 hours later…
16:22
Hurray!! Level Up: Ninja Skillz +1
important lesson for somebody trying out Migrations route first time: Create explicit migration for InitialCreate via Add-Migration InitialCreate
if you don't -- it'll never create the tables via migration and if you ever choose to go to Migration 0 and then back up again.. you'll be stuck without tables until you force create them somehow
The InitialCreate that you see before you do it yourself is Automatic Migration and can't be targeted when going all the way down and then back up
so i finally have a handle on migrations and Postgres tamed via EF 6
i feelz proz
16:39
good job Mav!
gracias master
and man, postgres is friggin awesome!
never heard/used it
its .net driver is in rapid development so not the best experience there but the db itself has tons of capabilities
it powers internets .org registry
its open source rival to oracle
ahhh
it runs Skypes databases
16:42
gotcha
you ever use nosql?
i attempted but didn't compute
however! with postgres, i can do that as well!
ahh.
ColumnType: Json .. voila.. do whatever you want
there's another hstore in there that is supposed to let you do that stuff
orly
it has builtin Enum support!
16:43
so your company provides like, services that you could use on azure?
hmm we've never tried that no :)
i'm doing stuff for inhouse stuff
power to stuff
i was just getting sick of beast that is mssql
ahhh
gotcha
question... how can make my IO non-blocking for something that's kinda... blocking
basically i'll make one call ComLibrary.ReadAddressValues(address, count) which will perform a SerialPort.Write and Read.
the result will tell me if device is there/detected.
@Maverik @NETscape What's the difference between setting (e.g.) Width and setting MinWidth and MaxWidth?
E.g., setting Width="100" vs setting MinWidth="100" and MaxWidth="100"
setting Width to something lower than MinWidth will end up changing Width = MinWidth
@Jeremy if you set them both, than the control will never change in size
That's what I thought. :)
Thanks.
16:49
Take a Grid in a Window for example. Setting Grid's MinWidth = 100, the grid will stay 100 even if the Window Width = 50
though that might be the case with setting Width too :p
I guess Min/Max width is used to constrain the size between two boundaries. Setting a Width is specifying what you want your width at, and trying to set it outside the boundaries will cause it to resize to one of its upper/lower limit
17:27
Good morning all
@ReedCopsey Could you review my answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/28586642/…
I want to make sure I didn't miss something, or provide wrong information :)
The main thing I'd point out
is that if you do MVVM
it's very easy to have shared logic in WinRT apps and WPF
(and Xamarin Forms for iOS/Android/WinPhone)
ok, I'll add that
also - WPF is by far the most feature-rich XAML platform
so if you learn it, it's mostly trying to workaround things that are missing when you go to WinRT, etc
yeah, I've noticed that :(
other way around is worse, though
because people tend to put WAY too much effort into reinventing things that are built in
if they don't start on WPF ;)
17:34
hey @ReedCopsey I couldn't reproduce FSXaml's bug
Just the other day I noticed there is no StringFormat in WinRT, you have to do a full converter
very annoying
@franssu Damn
I didn't try really hard, I was quite happy that it worked
yeah, I've never been able to repro it outside of VS extensions
:(
I'd love to find out how to repro, so I can figure out what's going on
because it's crazy
but, glad it's working for you ;)
let me know if you run into any other issues
I don't know if I'm using it as it's suppose to be used
17:40
(it works great on my production code...)
I'm new to typeproviders
and F# :p
my question above, since Mav left me:
question... how can make my IO non-blocking for something that's kinda... blocking
basically i'll make one call ComLibrary.ReadAddressValues(address, count) which will perform a SerialPort.Write and Read.
the result will tell me if device is there/detected.
@franssu well, feel free to ask about either ;)
@NETscape Can you wrap it in an async method and await it?
@NETscape you could push it onto a bg thread, potentially
but you'll likely still have com issues
which means you can't just Task.Run it (most likely)
17:49
@BradleyDotNET I thought that, but how can you call await in non async method
Press button, fires ICommand, nowhere to call await
@ReedCopsey do you have any idea why the (FSharpX) xml dataprovider don't provide access the xmlns definitions ?
If its a fire-and-forget kind of thing, you could always use Reed's extension method fo rthat
if awaiting doesn't make sense, then don't await :)
@ReedCopsey as in like TimeoutException?
@franssu The FSharpX provider is pretty dumb, in general
that was why I wrote FsXaml ;)
it wasn't really useful for anything other than (tiny) demos
well I could show a loading control, but i'd need to know when that test sequence completed
17:51
@NETscape well, and that it'll have to be STA, and at the end of the day, ti can still block, etc
not sure what i have as possible solutions
@ReedCopsey sorry I confused FSharpX with FSharp.Data. My question was about the FSharp.Data XML provider, not XAML provider
oh, sorry
not sure why
probably could be added, though
my goal is to keep track of styles' BasedOn keys
FSXaml resolves the basedOn if I'm correct ?
so my only way to find those out is to parse XAML as XML ?
Or use XML parsing directly, probably
17:57
(in reality, I have a markup extension which allows multiple basedOn style)
though that won't be as nice as using the type provider
fsxaml doesn't actually parse it - the xaml parsing "just works"
that's what i'm imagining should happen
that almost looks like you should consider an async message passing architecture instead of trying to call directly
nice drawing
@ReedCopsey can you confirm the xaml type provider resolves static resources and looses track of their name ?
18:00
@ReedCopsey any preferred links?
@franssu The type provider doesn't really do anything with static resources - the xaml loader does that, though, IIRC
the type provider just loads the xaml using WPF routines, and looks for Name and x:Name attributes
I mean static resources references
the type provider doesn't do anything with it at all
we just call the normal xaml parsing routines - and they handle that
(COM2 would mean another mailman is created)
18:04
I have to go home unfortunately
have a nice day
@BradleyDotNET can't tell if that's sarcasm -_- :p
No, its really a nice drawing :)
Mine wouldn't be that good, especially by hand
and can't really use fire-n-forget because i need to know when the previous message is done being received since its half duplex
You could certainly offload it onto a BG like Reed suggested
and listen for the completed event
18:09
Hi Brian
interview went really well anyways
that's great!
@NETscape it's sad - because this is trivial in F#
:S pain in the rear in C#, though
@BradleyDotNET where each Mailman is starting a new Thread?
but still not sure about it as the job doesn't involve much dev besides scritpting, its mainly a requirements and documentation job, guess its a good starting point though as you need to know how to plan and gather requirements effectively to be a good developer? @BradleyDotNET
18:13
or explicitly use BackgroundWorker?
@NETscape You should look into using something like Akka.Net
I'm not a huge fan of it, but it's probably the best actor framework for use from C# right now, as far as I know
but it makes this type of thing much nicer (and forces you to be clean in the process)
@NETscape I'm not really sure. Its hard to tell without a lot more code/domain knowledge :(
@BrianJ While that is an important part of being a developer, its not really a dev job
in particular, you'd probably want to design your system around "ask"
18:15
you'll learn that part by doing real development as well
yeah I told them I'd take the position if they could involve more development in the role, provide .Net certification training or provide a part time software development Uni course during my contract period. @BradleyDotNET Just so I don't get side tracked away from dev in the position.
haven't confirmed anything yet
.NET has certifications?
lol
maybe not that one
Thats one of those where I would say: "And that means what exactly?" if I was interviewing someone
passing a test does not make someone a good programmer :)
I know it was just a suggestion off the top of my head, if they offered a degree part time further to my current development degree would be great
18:20
@ReedCopsey ActorRef calculator = system.ActorOf<CalculatorActor>("calculator"); would all actorref created with "calculator" be equal?
anyways its another option to the pile, I like what the company does in general
That wouldn't be too bad of a deal
be aware that CS past BS level tends to get more theoretical
@NETscape I believe so (though I haven't used it much) - IIRC, there's a system per name, unless you configure it differnetly
yeah I'll see how it pans out anyways, even if I could get some sort of practical development course
@ReedCopsey and isn't var answer = calculator.Ask<Answer>(new Add(1, 2)).Result; blocking?
18:23
yes, though if you take off .Result, it's a Task<Answer>
so then it's non-blocking
and you can await it ;)
(not saying that's the best tutorial in the world, but it should give you the idea)
You should just tell them you want to do one/some of the projects you deal with :)
Akka.Net does a lot of extra stuff, though - including allowing you to run out of proc, if you really wanted to
which would make your diagram more accurate
i think i essentially need to be blocking, i need to know when i get an answer so i can send out another ask
yeah, i guess the drawing can be misleading. i was trying to show threads via boxes
@BradleyDotNET good idea, its not the only employer out there anyways, Ireland's job market for software developers is very good at the moment :)
application = ui thread, mailman = bg thread
18:25
@NETscape You can use async, though - doesn't need to block
await it, then send the next message
can you do:
foreach(var m in Messages)
{
    Response r = await ReadAddressValue(m);
    NotifyMessageReceived(r, m.DeviceHandle);
}
right?
yep
ReadAddressValue would normally be ReadAddressValueAsync(m), but yes ;)
the question is how to call from ICommand?
you'll want to make an async command
18:31
you can steal his code - it's not bad ;)
the 2nd impl. will prevent the user from triggerring the comamnd until it's complete
I'm a bit confused about these bool to visibility converters..

So this is my BoolToVisibilityConverter:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/bf3b3edb83d251419435

And this is my BoolToNonVisibilityConverter, which is the same code as bool to visibiity:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/f7b9cf541697746bcaa3

To set up the non visibility class, do I just set in the convert method, visibility.Hidden and in the ConvertBack method, just invert the visibility in the if statement or have I interpreted this incorrectly?
yeah, that's basically it
Thats pretty much it
I actually have a "BooleanConverter" class, which takes two objects for "true" and "false" values
and subclass it for the others
since it makes the code all shared
18:36
That's basically it
^
also makes it easy to have BooleanToHidden (instead of collapsed), etc, if you need it
okay cool, over thinking it I guess
so like this?

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/f7b9cf541697746bcaa3
No
you don't switch Convert and ConvertBack
Convert always goes to the UI
and ConvertBack to the ViewModel
returning a Visibility enum to the VM is probably not what you are going for :)
I didn't switch Convert and ConvertBack though, i just changes the visibility settings within each method to the inverse of the convert to visibility class
It looks like you did...
Originally your Convert method returned the Visibility enum as it should
On the standard BoolToVisibilityConverter
18:43
okay I did actually
lol
yesterday evening
now it should be ok
much better :)
actually, this is scary
I'm remembering random people's code better than they are
lol
maybe your a computer?
Nope, not a computer
though thats what a computer would say
exactly
waiting for my device to charge so I can test this...hope all the work I done yesterday doesn't break
Besides, I thought Reed was the computer here :)
^ why unit tests are a good thing :)
18:51
maybe I should create one while I'm waiting then, it would be in my VMTests.cs right as its testing the view?
Your VM Tests should be testing the VM...
If you don't have any, I would test your model
thats where anything related to the device would break
yeah I'll create a test class ModelTests.cs then :)
Probably one for each model
so you would have myoDeviceTests
etc
A good rule-of-thumb is one main class = one test class
gotcha
I can see my grades rising already :P
monoliths = bad :)
18:57
how is this for a start:

https://gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/9ceee3a8751c3d1eafcf
The name of your test is concerning
tests should test one thing, not the entire class
Some devs (not me) will go as far as to say "one assert per test"
okay so I should instead create a new test class for every part of the Myo device I need to test, MyoNetWorkTest? @BradleyDotNET
I would make many of those functions, not classes
19:13
okay I get you now, different test functions within the class, I thought you meant the test class.
yeah, one class per main class
one test per "functionality" area
something like this
TestMyoDeviceNetwork()
within the class for a start
okay so where do I start with this one? I obviously need to test that the network code is working but how..
can I use assert like before
like this
HomeViewModel vm = new HomeViewModel(new UserLoginModel());
string actualName = vm.Name;
Assert.AreEqual("Home Page", actualName);
but in terms of the network code
I think it may be easier to unit test something small like this method first
private void Myo_PoseChanged(object sender, PoseEventArgs e)
{
var handler = PoseUpdated;
if (handler != null)
{
handler("Pose: " + e.Myo.Pose);
}

e.Myo.Vibrate(VibrationType.Short);
}
assert is basically just an if statement
that function is certainly testable
19:20
I've no clue how to start it, I know though that I should check if, ie assert not null, is that correct?
This is part of learning how to write tests, the first thing to determine is what do you want to test?
testa on their own are useless
I want to test that the handler is not null
so assert handler != null
basically the same code in the method
I think?
if handler isn't null then that means a pose has been made, thats my understanding anyways
The handler is just for the event
so probably not
more likely you would listen for the event
and assert that you got the correct data off of it
One way to think about it is that when testing, the class is a black box
you give it data, it returns information, raises events, etc.
that output is what you test
okay
I think
what is the method to listen in a unit test?
firstly I need to create an instance of the MyoDeviceModel within the test class, correct?
19:49
like that, now set up the listener,but how?
The same way you register for any other event...
hmmm
can you give an example?
myEvent += someEventHandler;
okay
gotcha
not trying to beat you up, but you really need to get a handle on this
19:58
e.Myo.PoseChanged += Myo_PoseChanged;
I don't know where that e is coming from
with your code, it should be:
myo.PoseChanged += Myo_PoseChanged
Anyways off to lunch, I'll be back in an hour or so.
okay thanks, I've never done unit tests before besides the small vm test case, learning as I go along
no problem.
What I see that concerns me is stuff like that (the event listeners) that we've talked about before
and it seems like you are having trouble taking that knowledge and applying it in a new situation
thats all :)
anyways, be back soon!
okay yeah I know now though, after the second time being told ;) don't always get things the first time round
20:15
that 'e' is used to reference the Myo device: gist.github.com/BrianJVarley/ea3d7f38ed8bc37913d7
so I can't set up the listener using this code: myo.PoseChanged += Myo_PoseChanged
it seems
 
1 hour later…
21:19
I'm back :)
So in the code you posted, the event handler is registered inside of a callback
and it needs data that is related to the event args
so either you mock this event
or redesign the code so the event handler is a bit more accessible to your unit test
for that specific event
It looks like you shouldn't be testing that code directly at all, since its all internal
remember, you only really need to test public stuff
22:02
hey guys
I have a problem
I have 2 projects in the same solution
Project A has a resource dictionary A and project B has its own resource dictionary B
how do I use the resource A templates in project B?
Merged dictionary
In B's dictionary add:
<ResourceDicitonary.MergedDictionaries>
    <MergedDictionary Source="somePath"/>
</ResourceDictionary.MergedDictionaries>
is there a way to call XmlSerializer's Serialize to be async? Task?
Something like that anyways
@BradleyDotNET Happens more often than should be possible when using TFS.
What does TFS have to do with it?
22:11
@NETscape don't think so.
@NETscape Could you just Task.Run it?
@BradleyDotNET I never had the problem when using git
Of merged resource dictionaries???
Using (or not) one should have nothing to do with your VCS
oh, I replied to your merge conflict with self post from long ago :)
no cotext, just saw it now.
22:27
is calling .RunSynchronously() okay when the method is in OnDispose()
got it
@NETscape maybe...
basically i'm saving project using XmlSerializer when the application is closed (and project is disposed)
Why would it be a problem as opposed to asynchronous execution?
Unless its awaited, I would think you would want it to be synchronous
ahhh
I can just call Task.Run to call it async... right?
I was thinking I had to call await, but i don't.
@BradleyDotNET right? Task.Run runs the function async'ly?
Why do you need it async btw?
22:36
Task.Run returns a task
Creating XmlSerializer is very expensive. Caching them is a worthwile optimization.
so if you don't await it, you need to explicitly fire-and-forget
But it opens the door for bugs
He's not doing it in a loop...
How expensive can it be?
Task.Run is not very good for performance. Huge overhead with a task.
22:38
I think you're thinking Thread Johan.
Think it has to be ~5 ms of 100% CPU to be worth it.
Thread creates 2MB on the stack per thread made. Task using threadpool
@NETscape What problem are you solving? Performance? Responsiveness?
@NETscape Have you looked at the msil for a task?
The syntax in C# is really clean but the compiler generates a lot of code
my save function is async.... one place I'm calling it is in ondispose which isn't async, so I can't await the save function.
saving to disk?
or network?
22:40
yes
disk
One thing you can do is serialize to a memorystream and then stream.CopyToAsync when you save the file
how long does serialization take?
If it is a ssd I'd say don't async it.
XmlSerializer.Serialize takes a Stream as a parameter
yes you can pass a memorystream
and then use async when you save the memorystream to file
depends how many the profiles the user has... generally wouldn't take long at all, but if i don't await it, i get the warning unless I call .RunSynch'ly()
@drch tell us how this should be done.
saving a small file to ssd is like 2 ms
not worth the complexity with async imo
22:44
using(var sr = new StreamWriter(fileLoc))
    cereal.Serialize(sr, _data);
responsiveness feels like anonissue
xmlserializer calls the stream functions
why does Task.Run(() => _item.Save(path)); if i'm not calling start()?
@JohanLarsson are you saying doing something like what @ReedCopsey says on his blog isn't worth it--like updating a UI bound property's value?
var ms = new MemoryStream();
serializer.Serialize(ms, meh);
ms.Position = 0;
using (var fileStream = File.OpenWrite(@"C:\Temp\meh.xml"))
{
    ms.CopyToAsync(fileStream);
}
^ pseudo
@NETscape If something takes > 50 ms it is probably worth it.
If it blocks for 2 ms after clicking save it is probably not a big issue.
But as with all things it depends
I used to write a lot of async stuff when it was new.
Removing it now.
A webrequest is a perfect fir for async as it is insanely slow ~100 ms
okay
anywho... my other question
7 mins ago, by NETscape
why does Task.Run(() => _item.Save(path)); if i'm not calling start()?
can't parse it
you want to await Task.Run though
probably:
22:55
all I was calling was that
and the function still executed
try
{
    await task.Run(...); // try catch as it touches filesystem
}
catch(Exception)
{
 ...
}
right
how long time does save take?
i'm past that, not doing it async
my question is why did the async function get called if I wasn't awaiting Task.Run, and I wasn't calling .Start()
use async when it solves a problem
22:59
yeah i get that. however that isn't my question
@NETscape i don't understand
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