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00:27
posted on September 14, 2017 by Preeti Krishna - MSFT

This post describes the new ASP.NET, Configuration and System.Messaging features and improvements in the .NET Framework 4.7.1. More information on the build these features are available in and how to get the Developer Pack is covered in the Welcome to the .NET Framework 4.7.1 Early Access blog post. Configuration builders Configuration builders allow developers to inject and build... Read more

 
6 hours later…
06:15
For today's bug-tracking enjoyment: a TabControl whose tabs are data-bound to a list. For each item, a custom view is displayed. In the view, there's a control, and to that control, a behavior is attached, which (among other things) reacts to the Click event on that control. Now, it seems that even when there are multiple custom views instantiated, there is just one instance of the behavior that catches clicks. So even if I click on the control in Item3, I get the click event on Item1.
WPF, I love you but you're bringing me down.
06:35
Ahhh, so it's the Tab Control that's to blame. It does tab virtualization and reuses the internal control.
(yes, I'm bouncing my ideas on the empty room as my investigation continues)
This workaround is simple enough to use, but hides a lot of code behind the scenes. codeproject.com/Articles/460989/…
Ah, but of course, it conflicts with our reskinning of the tab control template.
07:28
Morning guys!
Looking in my Visual Studio (2013) there are theses dotted lines on panel headings...
A-ha! Rather than try to disable tab virtualization, I'll work with it, and have my behavior be aware of tab switching.
Ah. It seems it already was aware. But I had a bug that didn't release the event subscriptions when I was switching data contexts. Stupid bug.
Spot the bug:
  var oldVm = e.NewValue as IWorkflowViewer;
  if (oldVm != null)
  {
      oldVm.GraphManager = null;
  }
(Yes, it's C# 5, so I dont have the ?. operator. :( )
Morning
08:09
Good Morning Everyone :-)
08:35
I mean like this: imgur.com/a/9Ppe2
The dotted line, how do you recon they have done that?
 
3 hours later…
11:54
Hi all
Hey Markus
12:13
hi
can i borrow your eyes to take a look at some js code?
12:34
nobody likes js :/
what?
well, ok
bring it on.
basically on the first one i get a 500 error from the server, while the second one is working fine. the data is the same on both of them when i log it
im missing some obvious error
12:52
So... are you the famous anonymous?
13:27
@Proxy the ajax code is identical. your problem is likely the value of the session items being sent.
alert this.props.session.id, this.props.session.company, this.state.msg, and this.props.session.title right before you send them, for each of the two pages
the 500 error coming from the server is probably because something is null
(an expected value wasn't provided)
nah i did that already... the values are the same.
but seems like the problem is with our servers
now the second one is not working as well
13:59
that makes sense.
You should be able to find out what generated the 500
If it's windows, with IIS, check the application event log.
14:57
morning all
just trying to stay above water
hiya biggi!
yo
@LynnCrumbling shot you a message on skype
15:57
Off-topic, because it's MVC, but if you guys have any input: stackoverflow.com/questions/46223582/…
16:37
i use basic authentication in my web project
you can analyze the route a request is taking before it hits
and deny access
doubt that helps you much
you could also make custom attributes
16:59
Thanks, Julien
morning all
Hi Bradley
17:25
Ok. So. ... SynchronizationContext.Current ... is null.
TaskScheduler.FromCurrentSynchronizationContext() reports "The current SynchronizationContext may not be used as a TaskScheduler."
17:38
@LynnCrumbling happens if you don't use that on main thread
typically, need to cache the ctx somewhere (or a task scheduler) if you're running into that
also can happen if you are constructing the app manually... because things can construct before the context/app is setup
Yeah... I think that might be what's happening.
 
1 hour later…
18:49
So, i'm about to build an XAML form but it will be ran by PowerShell. When it comes to window resizing, how do you manage the size of the controls? I've been searching online some and have found people talking about anchoring and setting horizontal and vertical alignments to Stretch, but I haven't found any solid examples.
Does anyone have a good example of how to do this?
Or best practices, etc
? controls dont resize when the window does unless you are explicitly telling them to somehow
Well that's partially what I seem to be asking I guess, what should the controls do if someone makes this form maximized for the entire screen? there's going to be plenty of open space if they were to do so
or I imagine I could disable that somehow so they cannot resize the window
Cory, it is possible to make a grid and have a say a button fill that grid. as the window expands, the grid would (as long as you don't hard code widths/heights) and it will resize
Might not be the /best/ way to do it, but it would work
you can set windows to not be resizable
^ or that
18:56
you will have to decide which controls you want to expand and shrink with the window and build a layout that matches
for eg, a grid with * sizing will allow you to specify sizes in percentages
I think making it a fixed size would be the easiest
^ that's what i was getting at
Honestly, the * grid thing works well and easy
it completely depends on your UI
I did it if you want an example
if you use fixed sizes and make a really big window, it can look funky
18:57
Well what I meant was make the entire windows a fixed size so it isn't resizeable
you can do that in properties
that way I don't have to deal with the problem of resizing
theres a setting in window options
Schweet
ResizeMode="NoResize"
When doing your window
18:58
I'll probably go that route then
thanks Julien and biggi
if you decide you want to go the route of resizing with controls in the grid let me know, i did that and have an example thats fairly easy
haha alrighty
if i could do it..anyone can ;)
 
2 hours later…
20:32
another visual question... when you create a wpf form on one computer, and then run it on a another computer with different DPI settings, how do you handle that? or is there a specific way to avoid this? It cause controls on the form to shift and be covered or look unusual
Usually only a problem if you use fixed size/position items
Try to avoid that
So how do you dynamically set sizes and positions? instead of fixed
more concerned about position than size
Usually by using Grid extensively
and * type columns
Also the key to making a UI that is easily resizable btw
So going with what biggi mentioned earlier might be a good idea
don't know if you read the chat
glanced over it
yes; biggi's approach is correct
doing a fixed size window is almost never a good idea
20:37
@biggidvs can you send me the example you mentioned?
thanks Bradley, i'm not planning on being a full time developer but I do find these things interesting so I'd love to learn them
All i've known is windows forms in the past
@CoryEtmund even with "fixed size" stuff it's usually okay - WPF uses virtualized sizing
but using grid/other layout is still the right way to go
So the controls should stay in place as long as they're inside of a grid?
I used powershell to create a windows from, obviously far from xaml. Should've started it in xaml in the first place
Reed, we had a calendar control made using a fixed size WrapPanel. Didn't end well when the DPI scaled :)
Of course; the first problem was that we made our own calendar control
let me rephrase.. no matter what a computer has for DPI settings, if a xaml form is used and controls are inside of a grid, they won't move out of place?
"Out of place" is a pretty specific phrase; but no, they won't overlap or do anything weird
relative margins, sizes and whatnot will change dynamically based on the current environment (DPI, form size, etc) as they are supposed to
20:50
@CoryEtmund If you use xaml layout correctly - you can resize windows/change DPI/etc, and the controls change, but the scale appropriately
so things always "look good"
even if it's not exactly how you designed it - it's impossible to keep it exact as DPI + font system changes require things to shift - but WPF does a good job of keeping it sane
I see. So basically wpf is much smarter than windows forms and can handle these kind of things
was designed for it from day 1
winforms kind of tried to tack on some of this later... and didn't do it well
Thanks Reed!
(WPF does it well enough that I very, very rarely even think about it, and our main product we sell is WPF 😀 )
Our current WPF app (based on MahApps) has never had any problems with resizing/DPI either

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