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05:44
0
Q: Silverlight BitmapImage cache not working

furqanmsI need to cache the image, but it doesn't cache. I have following converter : public class ImageSourceConverter : IValueConverter { public object Convert(object value, Type targetType, object parameter, System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture) { Uri uri = new Uri(UrlParser.GetRootU...

06:29
@JohanLarsson Can you feed XAML into roslyn analyzers, or only C# code?
I think C#/VB only, read somewhere that they are planning to enable xaml support
But I don't know for sure.
06:41
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan this will probably be some work but has potential to catch some bugs.
Please write issues if you think of things.
@JohanLarsson Oh, quite. A common enough bug.
Finally merged my resource dictionaries into one large bundle. Client promptly crashes on startup because it turns out we had a lot of duplicate styles in several dictionaries. :-/
Now I need to figure out which is the one that's actually used.
It's a meeesssss
07:01
still a step forward
07:29
The big step was removing all duplicate MergedDictionaries, banning all MergedDictionaries from views outright. That was a huge perf and mem improvement.
Morning
I remember when i was starting with WPF people were adding styles to Generic.xaml and including it in UserControls :D
6
Q: Create UserControl in non-UI thread Silverlight 5 browser application

GeorgeI have a Silverlight 5 browser application. There is a class public class ActivityControl:UserControl{ public void LoadSubControls(){ //Creates Other UserControls, does calculations and is very slow..No refactoring.. } } I need to create multiple instances of this class and c...

@#$%^& Wife woke me up to fix a hardware issue.
Going back to sleep now.
07:58
morning
morning
hey Foggy
how are you ?
fine :D
are you ?
cool
yeah, I'm fine, searching new job
and I've some interviews this week
:D
I had an interview last week, and the guy said "Technically, you're good, but we have a problem here, ... languages ... so you speak Arabic, like all of us, French, like all of us, English ? you're not good, ... and that's all ? no German ??"
08:17
hm
unfair
yeah, and I guess if they have projects with chinese companies he'll say "no chinese ???"
08:50
morning
what, ni bu shuo han yu ma ?
went to eat chinese noodles this saturday. so delicious
09:23
chinese food scares me :p
09:42
well, the restaurant is called "alive noodles"
hahahahah
@franssu Ooh, noodles you have to chase. Fun.
10:17
@franssu, I need your help
yes ?
analyse des besoins
in english please
is it requirments analysis, or needs collection, or requirements gathering
?
I would use requirements analysis
or business needs analysis
ok
thanks !
 
1 hour later…
11:37
This is driving me crazy. I have all my resources in one large bundle.xaml, and that bundle.xaml is loaded as a MergedDictionary in app.xaml. Now, most {StaticResource} references work... but some don't. And I have no idea why.
I have a view that crashes with a XamlParseException, even though that resource can be found with FindResource() and I can find it, in code, in my merged dictionaries.
Ugh. It's ordering. Styles that are BasedOn other styles that are defined later in the file.
Shouldn't your merge tool handle that?
My merge tool is currently dumb and only copies the items from one file to another. It doesn't track down style inheritance.
It should, yes.
11:59
Good morning
Is it? IS IT?!
Sorry.
Yes.
Good morning.
Hang in there. It gets better, Avner
I have to tell myself that, otherwise I'd be screaming each time I sat at my computer
My TabControl is acting weird ...
It's bound to a List, so the tabs change depending on what I have selected.
What's it doing/not doing?
@Alex I have a splitting headache from fighting with resource dictionaries all day. Good thing, though, is that I'm heading off early to pick up my daughter and go to the library, so that'll be fun.
12:06
The first time I select an item, it works fine, although it doesn't put focus on any of the tabs. Second time, it works even better, since it puts focus on the first tab. Third time I select it gives me 4 binding errors, and doesn't focus a tab.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan So it does get better :)
System.Windows.Data Error: 4 : Cannot find source for binding with reference 'RelativeSource FindAncestor, AncestorType='System.Windows.Controls.TabControl', AncestorLevel='1''. BindingExpression:Path=TabStripPlacement; DataItem=null; target element is 'TabItem' (Name=''); target property is 'NoTarget' (type 'Object')
System.Windows.Data Error: 4 : Cannot find source for binding with reference 'RelativeSource FindAncestor, AncestorType='System.Windows.Controls.TabControl', AncestorLevel='1''. BindingExpression:Path=TabStripPlacement; DataItem=null; target element is 'TabItem' (Name=''); tar
Are the tabs themselves persistent, only their contents changing per item?
A lot of times, when in doubt, I simplify things. Try having the tabs not be dynamically generated -- just a couple of static tabs.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan They are not. The tabs are sourced from a list.
<TabControl Grid.Column="2" ItemsSource="{Binding SelectedItem.Items}">
    <TabControl.ItemTemplate>
        <DataTemplate>
            <TextBlock Text="{Binding TradeItemUnitDescriptorCode}" />
        </DataTemplate>
    </TabControl.ItemTemplate>
</TabControl>
12:10
And SelectedItem is properly raising PropertyChanged when selected?
Yeah
#region public TradeItemGroup SelectedItem { get; set; }

private TradeItemGroup selectedItem;

public TradeItemGroup SelectedItem
{
    get { return this.selectedItem; }
    set
    {
        if (value == this.selectedItem)
            return;

        this.selectedItem = value;

        this.OnPropertyChanged();
    }
}

#endregion
12:23
hi guys
anybody has ever created webservices or API to interact with a WPF application from a web application?
I've read something on the web...and I've created a post on SO too
someone suggests about WCF
I've used WCF often. Very easy to use.
But you need an IIS/ASP.NET host to use it. :)
well my WPF application needs to run in windows environment
@Abdullah it depends on your goals - if you really want to use c# for non-windows platforms - then yes.. its worth it -- otherwise if you're going to target Windows platforms (mobile or otherwise), then no.. i wouldn't leave WPF
12:33
@FrancescoDS Doesn't mean your server has to. :)
@WilliamMariager of course!
pretty sure you asked this question roughly a year back Francesco and the answer was same :P
uhm...MAv I don't remember...
because only right now I received this new requirement :)
12:37
WCF is a dieing breed - i wouldn't go on it unless you need something that it excels at
from historical questions you've had, i'd say use something simple -- self hosted webapi probably is your best bet
treat wpf as a console app
yet, it's unecessary to specify that the app is using WPF
It definitely doesn't excel at being used with anything other than .NET clients. :P Trying to use it from javascript is a pain to setup.
I've resorted to using WCF with my .NET client and then a small manual API for the parts that need to be consumed by other clients.
try getting it to work with vmware's SAML tokens
goddamn it - i hate it when i edit the wrong sentence or worse.. when i dont even intend to edit!
MS left the WCF/WIF mess half cooked and gave no direction/documentation on how to make it work
all the mess is internal so you need to reimplement the whole serialization stack because they're using hardcoded namespace strings
I never hated WCF more than when i had to make it bend to vmwares will (another saint that one is)
Mav I've never heard about vmware SAML tokens...
@FrancescoDS so asp.net webapi -- nancyfx are two of your straight forward options
saml is a complex token - a lot of ways to create valid tokens
MS decided that their way is the only way to go about it - anything else and it throws
vmware uses the full standard so the two will not work together without you reimplementing half the wcf stack
anyways - stay away from wcf - its a lot of pain unless you have a lot of time to understand all of its moving parts
12:45
waves
hey lynn
hi Lynn
hi lynn
awake at a much more reasonable hour, this time around.
ha
12:48
@Maverik I need to investigate more about it
@FrancescoDS remove WPF from your searches
yea - Self hosted WebAPI / NancyFX -- thats what you should look for
do console app for testing - wpf is going to be similar (you'll inject the console hosting code into App() ctor before Application.Run() is called)
my WPF application does not use a db...I only need to call some of its functions to get results
irrelevant
"how can I drive a car to from A to B while wearing a green shirt"
12:50
:)
while wearing a green shirt is irrelevant
it's orthogonal to the problem you're trying to solve
and will reduce drastically the results
I'm trying to decide if wrapping an XDocument in a ViewModel is a good or bad idea.
depends on what you're trying to do
blindly speaking: probably not a bad idea
you are right franssu ty
XDocument (XElement really) is a model - so you probably want to have a VM on top
12:52
True.
And then just structure my VM's in classes that make sense.
@Maverik I am thinking that I could create a console app that has only the methods that I want to expose to outside
Good morning :)
Is it normal practice that a VM might have other VM's as properties?
Morning, Andre
Internet went out here. We all panicked. Like the scene from Aireplane!
@WilliamMariager it is in my apps - i normally have a tree based vm structure
13:00
@Alex Looks like I picked the wrong week to stop drinking...
Alright, that's what I'm doing too, since XML is inherently tree based.
@LynnCrumbling ...Picked the wrong week to stop sniffing glue!
oh name i meant more like MainWindowVM -> Different TabViewVMs -> ContentVMs with main controls VMs -> different CollectionItemVM
all VMs being singletons except for the collectionVMs - so once you have gotten hold of maiwindowvm, everything else can be tracked down - and of course the entire thing runs without UI
Lynn/Alex - may be this will help: soundcloud.com/stations/artist/builtbytitan
It seems like building a good VM takes time, but if done properly it just works so very very smoothly. :P
Ok... I need a vc++ person.
13:04
points to Lynn
The .map file offset used to be 0x401000
That no longer works. WTF?
Should VM's make prompts or should they take all data as parameters and then it's up to the view to make a prompt?
shrugs
imho, prompting is UI thing
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
you can taint the VM with prompting if you need to, but i'd avoid it if possible
13:06
So, commands only accept a single argument. This argument would just be another a data class of some kind? Like class LoginInfo { string Username; SecureString Password; }?
sure
i normally just pull data by getting hold of MainWindowViewModel.GetViewModel<LoginViewModel>()
Alright. I'm doing the proper VM stuff now, so gotta make sure I reduce the chance that I have to go back :P
I'm undecided on commands
Now is not the time to be undecided! I'm using commands!
reason I'm avoiding CommandParameter approach is I want to be able to run headless
lol no no DO use commands
but parameter.. that is something I dont' normally use
besides the headless thing, often my hands are tied by CanExecuteChanged
in order to raise it, i have to bind to some VMs change notification - thus it becomes irrelevant to pass a parameter in command's Execute or CanExecute.. i already have reference to the relevant viewmodel
13:11
That's a good point.
i used to try and pass viewmodel to commands ctor .. that resulted in circular dependency more often than not (so i had to resort to _isInitializing kinda thing)
i've given up on it and ever since i've got Singletons, i find it much cleaner to work with
Are we getting multiple return values?
we already have them
tuple types yay!
Preview 4 has been live for a month at least on my machine :)
but i just couldn't find an article covering c#7 - just found it now :) (i actually tried to search this time instead of hoping for best)
13:19
var element = this.Element.Element("gtin");
if (element == null)
    return null;
return new ValueVM(element);
So much element ...
Can it be shorted without additional lookups?
var element = Element.Element("getin");
return element == null ? null : new ValueVm(element);
thats how i normally write that kinda thing
though as I said a while back - there's almost no room for nulls in modern code :)
so i'd prefer to return ValueVm.Empty instead of null
ValueVm internally checks if element is null and sets itself to a static ValueVm.Empty instance
could be ValueVm.Zero - probably sounds better than Empty if its really a value
13:35
Hmm, alright, so the model can have nulls, but the ViewModel shouldn't?
William: i pretty much avoid nulls everywhere I can unless Null is a valid state for something
@FrancescoDS why repeat the question Francesco? we've clearly given our thoughts
Well, the model isn't in my control and can have a lot of null values, so best I can do is remove nulls from the ViewModel.
@Maverik only to let you know...sorry
thanks but no we've already been through this last year.. the options are clear and the mind isn't going to change
you're welcome to inflict pain on yourself if you wish
13:39
no no I don't like to inflict pain :)
William: nah, if your models aren't in control and will throw, then don't avoid nulls
trying to actively mask them will make life more difficult
to avoid nulls, it should be done all the way through at design level
13:52
public class TradeItemVM : XElementVM
{
    public TradeItemVM(XElement element) : base(element) { }

    public XElementValueVM GTIN
    {
        get { return this.GetElement("gtin", (e) => new XElementValueVM(e)); }
        set { this.SetElementNotify("gtin", value); }
    }

    public AdditionalTradeItemIdentificationVM Identifier
    {
        get { return this.GetElement("additionalTradeItemIdentification", (e) => new AdditionalTradeItemIdentificationVM(e)); }
        set { this.SetElementNotify("additionalTradeItemIdentification", value); }
I think I got a nice setup going. Looks like I can cut all elements/attributes down to a few lines for each VM.
Should save me a lot of time.
umm
i'd suggest you modify it and match xml names
so you can use nameof
that many string ops are very prone to errors during refactoring
So break C# naming convention? I did consider it, so that renaming wouldn't be a hassle.
no no
Make a private field with the correct name and then a public field with the name I want?
nameof(AdditionalTradeItemIdentificationVM).Camelize()
Humanizer is your friend nuget
humanizer is one of our permanent stars
dang it not enough time to make a fifth edit but you get the idea xD
:P
I do yeah. :D
I use the property name and I camelize it. :P
public XElementValueVM GTIN
{
    get { return this.GetElement(nameof(this.GTIN).Camelize(), (e) => new XElementValueVM(e)); }
    set { this.SetElementNotify(nameof(this.GTIN).Camelize(), value); }
}
yea - you can even use a TitleCase then Camelize to make sure only initials are capital
that library is very verstile
I wish I could have a constructor with parameters constraint, so I can avoid passing a constructor delegate.
with GTIN you're not following convention
it shuold be Gtin
13:59
Right
otherwise you'll have to use .TitleCase().Camelize() to force proper casing
I actually told Johan the same a few days ago. :P
your SetElementNotify will need editing
its going to raise wrong notification
No no, it uses CallerMemberName as an optional parameter.
oh ok thats what i was going to suggest :)
14:01
public T GetElement<T>(string name, Func<XElement, T> creator) where T : XElementVM
{
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(name))
        throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(name));
    if (creator == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(creator));
    var element = this.Element.Element(name);
    return (element == null ? null : creator(element));
}

public void SetElement(string name, XElementVM value)
{
    var element = this.Element.Element(name);

    if (element != null)
        element.Remove();
That's the base class.
I think my notify should be improved to only notify when the value changes.
that'd be a good idea
also why the extra parenthesis ? return (element == null ? null : creator(element));
I dunno, I feel like it improves readability for me.
k :)
whatever happen to that guy making the pr0n site?
umm i sort of recall something of that kind but can't put my finger on it
14:11
He's a billionaire now.
Mar 6 '14 at 16:24, by antman1p
Let me explain what this program is for. LOL. This is a form on my website where people who are interested in being in adult videos will enter their information (height, weight, age, chest, contact infor, etc...) THey will have to upload at least two nude photos, front and back, and have the ability to upload 10. I am saving all of this info in a database. I will then program another app where I can search all of the info and bring it up on a sheet with info and pictures.
that guy
yup! i remember that conversation
i dont think he came again xD
yes over the years we've seen all kinds :P
the old residents are true veterns now - seen it all :)
@Kevin Lol! Did he ever get his app built?!
14:19
we can only assume thats a yes
"two nude photos, front and back". wow
since he never came again ;)
Hehehe
Dang
And it's only Monday here
:)
you've yet to see me wearing a dress :p
~~~
Been living in this room and javascript for far too long to find projects weird...
14:30
Wee! The view model is alive!
Now I just have to figure out why the TabControl is acting up. But it's progress.
The essence of motivation.
Need some help. How do you set the ItemsSource when it's multiple levels deep?
what does multiple levels deep mean?
<ComboBox DisplayMemberPath="Description"
	ItemsSource="{Binding Source={x:Static vm:DrugResultsViewModel.ValidDrugs.Result}}" />
That throws an error: Nested types are not supported
That's a static property on the class
yeah for static
try:
<ComboBox DisplayMemberPath="Description"
	ItemsSource="{Binding Path=ValidDrugs.Result Source={x:Static vm:DrugResultsViewModel}}" />
guess
Ahh. Why do I keep forgetting Path?
Thanks, Johan
14:34
not sure it works
Modifying it now and testing...
It worked with a little modification...
ItemsSource="{Binding Path=Result, Source={x:Static vm:DrugResultsViewModel.ValidDrugs}}"
@franssu patiently awaiting...
please post a front and back shot.
and up to 8 other images.
hi guyx Assalam_O_Alikum
Thanks @Maverik for your suggestion
i'm not sure which suggestion are we talking about .. but you're welcome ;D
When making views, should I have a control for each view or should it be possible to template most/all of it?
14:47
control for view? i'm not sure what you mean
i normally use the ContentControl -> DataTemplate per VM approach
As in, a full UserControl
no i left that behind ages ago
everything is a DataTemplate in my app these days
All in one huge file or can it be split up?
i do split it up but after seeing Avner's pain - i'm not sure
splitting itself isn't an issue - problem is deep dependency and multiple merged dictionaries
keep it flat and you'll be ok
I use usercontrol per view most of the time
But I have a way to do ctor injection in usercontrols
14:50
Ohh, two different opinions ... a fight to the death seems the only way to resolve this.
it was nice knowing you Johan, I'll send a search party to Mav's house in a couple days.
Did I read Trial by combat ?
@JohanLarsson Yep, that's how I've done it. One UC per view
15:09
this makes sense as a rule right?
why can we not have INPC on structs Johan?
My thinking is that as they are value types we will likely bind/subscribe to changes for a copy
await @Reed is probably best here
because structs are immutable ?
they can be mutable but they are copy by value
INPC on structs would lead to some peculiar behavior if not handled carefully.
15:14
oh ok
a good questino to check out on this topic:
^ sample of copy by value quirk
yea that makes sense but foo.Value++ in proper scope would have worked just fine
I struggle to think of a situation where inpc on a struct would make sense
i agree its a very odd case, but technically not wrong
can warning be suppressed in analyzer?
15:18
rules can be disabled, writing it any way
yea ok sounds good then
@Maverik yep, they are very configurable
I'm guessing something like resharper comment disable
you an set level {Error, Warning, Hint, None}
and suppress per class, method etc.
like hey on this particular struct.. i know what i'm doing - don't squiggle spam this struct
cool cool
15:21
private static pIncrement(ref Foo foo)
15:54
^ is how we want the squiggly right?
Looks right to me
I count on you guys to make PRs or ping in chat if texts are bad or wrong.
Give me one sec to see what the errors are in VS when I don't implement a method...
Here's a generic one from VS:
'TestDataService' does not implement interface member 'ITestDataService.RemoveTest(ITestViewModel)'.
Just broke one of my methods to see what the error would be
So you might want to keep with the ... does not implement interface member.... language
@JohanLarsson I'd squiggle it as blue may be? it should be a warning not an error
Rather than what you have, which is the opposite
16:01
@Maverik You can configure it yourself, hold on I'll update the nuget
Oh, then follow what Maverik says. I'd lead you astray :)
no color isn't my concern
my point is, right now it seems like its an error to implement the interface -- it should be a warning
an Analyzer shouldn't be marking valid code as error IMHO - its just confusing
it should be warning about pitfall of doing something like this instead
its your analyzer, you get to make the final call :)
so much for the input I nag about :D
We let Reed decide
Should not come up often any way
16:04
I of course don't know how Reed will weigh in on this, but any analyzer bringing errors on perfectly valid code will swiftly see the door on my system
(i suppose this is one of my biggest reasons to not use any analyser at all)
far too much big brother effect
question is how valid it is
I think it is an uncaught bug
my stance remains - if it compiles, it is not an error
it's likely a bug - but by that logic, we shuold mark all things that can return null as error
but the point of analyzers is moving things from runtime bugs to compiler errors
because most of the times its a likely bug imho
like i said you have the final call of course, but I'll stick with my stance. I could just be the exception
its sad we don't have more people weighing in on this
What about:
public class FooControl : Control
{
    public static readonly DependencyProperty BarProperty = DependencyProperty.Register(
        nameof(Bar),
        typeof(string),
        typeof(FooControl),
        new PropertyMetadata(""));

    public int Bar
    {
        get { return (int)this.GetValue(BarProperty); }
        set { this.SetValue(BarProperty, value); }
    }
}
That is a nice example of where we want it to be a compiletime error no?
16:17
sorry not following on this example - what am I looking for?
(the dp is registered with string but we have int in the CLR property)
oh yes
that is indeed a runtime error
but struct with INPC isn't a runtime error either
but you want it to be only a warning?
no not on the DP, it will throw at runtime -- but a stuct with inpc will not throw at runtime
not for just implementing the interface
ok, fair enough, the latter example is simpler
I still feel error is right as default for the struct
16:19
so i completely agree it being an error at compile time via analyzer for DP
but struct feels wrong to me
you can leave it - if somebody else feels otherwise they can open issue
1) Install the analyzer in a project
2) Configure it to be a warning projectwide
yes of course, but this is a discussion about defaults really :D
that is projectwide, then there is pragma and attributes
16:25
Sexy
17:10
@Maverik I tried binding to it, did not work
Still a warning?
it probably didn't work because WPF doesn't bind to fields
and i believe structs dont have properties
leave it to error Johan - its not worth spending this much time on :)
we will know when Reed shows up
05:00 - 18:0018:00 - 21:00

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