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06:52
@CoryEtmunddon't worry about this, it is a pain point in xaml but you will learn it over time.
I understand the frustration, annoying when that happens.
 
4 hours later…
10:56
I changed the namespace of a view, now I got error in view.g.i.cs .. what can I do?!
The type or namespace name 'View' does not exist in the namespace 'Project' (are you missing an assembly reference?)
I would remove the reference of the ViewModel from the window
and rebuild the project
after the rebuild add the reference to the view model again.
you could also clean the project
11:28
@MohamedAhmed Did you also change the x:class reference in view's xaml?
Restart VS :D
I deleted it and and pasted the old code.. now it works
 
1 hour later…
12:46
'morning
hi
13:25
taking it out, saved it and ran it. Put it back in and now it works
morning all
@LynnCrumbling I'm working on a beautiful present to you.
public string FirstName
{
get
{
return this.firstName;
}

set
{
if (value == this.firstName)
{
return;
}

this.firstName = value;
this.OnPropertyChanged();
this.OnPropertyChanged(nameof(this.FullName));
}
}
that is how FirstName is defined in the binding sample, is this the same place where I would want to do my sql query to get information from a database?
my fault, i thought i did a ctrl+K on that
I don't know enough db to answer but it gets a bit trickier with async
Typically you want a property access to be instant
If i understand things correctly, you put the information you want into a variable and then bind that variable in you xaml?
s/variable/notifying property
13:43
dont have a clue as to what that means Johan :)
var localVariable = 1;
I think
@JohanLarsson Oh yeah?
@LynnCrumbling hopefully releaseable late tonight
Also Cory, try to ctrl + k your code to format it to make it easier to read. Or there's a button next to the upload button when you paste code to format
13:48
or maybe it will be a Christmas present
I thought i did biggidvs, like I said right after it
sorry np, i'm a bit out of it today...Lynn knows more haha
that globe map is pretty cool
@JohanLarsson Hahahahaha ok :)
@biggidvs He's busy plotting to take over ... the world! (queue pinky and the brain music)
14:07
error "Ambiguity between 'ViewModel.UserID' and 'ViewModel.UserID'"
I have private string UserID and the public string UserID, following the bindingsample
is that another one of those "falsep positives" ?
1
Q: TreeView with nested List

PhiliesI want to display some objects in a treeview, but so far unfortunately without success. I've a ObservableCollection <ICustom> of objects: Settings.ListOfCustomers The interface of the object ICustom: int Id { get; } int age { get; } CustomerType CustomerType { get; } ObservableCollection<IValue>

Cory: relevant code?
14:25
is it relevant? i think so. Again i'm just trying to follow the BindingSample as closely as possible while learning this stuff
So the exact same thing works in the bindingsample but does not in mine for whatever reason
you can go ahead and assume I have no idea what i'm doing
Cory: I think Mav is asking for the code where you're getting that error :)
Lynn: I don't want to run the world...too much work.
oh, i think it's because there definitely are 2 UserID strings. I thought they would be different somehow since 1 is public and 1 is private
i'm silly
@CoryEtmund I think Mav's asking for a gist of just your relevant code.
Mav: I thought you were going on vacation? Perhaps I didn't read closely enough and you didn't leave yet.
yes I was asking for code that's giving the error
and Lynn no it's end September.. i was giving advance notice
30th Sep - 10th Oct
14:41
    private string UserID;
        public string UserID
        {
            get
            {
                // get info from DB here
                return this._UserID;
            }

            set
            {
                if (value == this._UserID)
                {
                    return;
                }

                this._UserID = value;
                this.OnPropertyChanged();
                //this.OnPropertyChanged(nameof(this.VariableToUpdate))
            }
        }
I did a ctrl+k before that and it didn't format it?
select all text then do Ctrl+K
there it goes
yes you're doing it wrong
all symbols need to be unique within scope
All I had to do was rename the private string UserId to _UserID
yup that creates two distinct names
also No - you do not want to pull db in UserID
properties are meant to be simple - they get accessed more frequently than you first realise
db access should happen through some command or as part of initialization perhaps but never through property getter
(or setter for that matter)
14:49
posted on September 19, 2017 by Rich Lander [MSFT]

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So, this form will be searching through a database for particular records, then displaying all relevant records in a listbox. Then the user can click on one of those records in the listbox the display all of the information of that record into other fields on the form
the listbox will just have a UserID, the record has information of their particular workstation
what is the best way to go about doing that?
operate like a search engine - get query from user - let them click a button.. then do your query and post results your VMs Result collection
    public class ViewModel : INotifyPropertyChanged
    {

        public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;

        // variables to be used to populate fields
        private string _UserID;
        private string _FullName;
        private string _ComputerName;
        private string _ComputerModel;
        private string _IPAddress;
        private string _NetFramework;

       // query database and return results to variables here

        // Use this to make everything update
So my view model would be something like that? And a button push would start it
I appreciate your patience with me Maverik..I definitely don't have anything more than an outdated very basic knowledge of C#
15:10
np - you'd have an ICommand instance whose Execute will do the querying
you'll have a VM property that exposes that ICommand and bind it to button.Command in view
would that ICommand be defined in code behind?
ah no
Its another class that sits next to your viewmodel
there must be a command in johans sample?
I'll have a peek
(Most of the guys use a helper class for this purpose so it could be RelayCommand or DelegateCommand in code)
15:31
So, I created another class named Command.cs, and did some things following an article I found for ICommand
@CoryEtmund gitlab.com/so-wpf/samples/RelayCommandSample <- that has the commanding sample with RelayCommand implementation in it
i'll take a look
oh ok - i personally stick with ICommand implementation but that's the shortcut if you want to take it
you shuold definitely implement icommand in start to get the hang of it though
RelayCommand implementations assume you know how ICommand is implemented and interacted with.
they're also called DelegateCommand and both things mean the same thing
So ICommand
    namespace PSDesk_AdminConsole
{
    public class Command : ICommand
    {
        //ICommand.CanExecute(object)


        //ICommand.Execute(object)


        //ICommand.CanExecuteChanged

    }
}
something like that?
i guess yea
15:43
Mav - Do you usually have the ICmd impl take the vm as an arg in the ctor?
There's an ICommand in my own sample "Context Driven Views" if it helps (though it's got more stuff going on in it)
depends Lynn.. if I'm doing a command that's getting initialized once and doesn't depend on its context then I'd do ctor
if its context dependent, then it'll take in parameter
for example a Refresh command may be done via ctor but a Delete command will likely have applicable vm supplied in parameter
ah, so you're saying you narrow down the scope of the arg as much as possible
(why expose the entire vm, if it just acts on a specific obj)
of course it's not necessarily an either or case - i usually have hybrid situation
again for Delete command example - i'd have outer VM via ctor while the vm that needs deletion be supplied through parameter
while i could certainly provide both via parameter but it just complicates things due to packing two parameters in one
I guess a more generic rule of thumb i follow would be: singletons via ctor (unless you have access to it via some static member) & multi-instance via parameter (sending in as little information as is really needed to execute)
16:35
morning all
mornin
Mornin
Anybody seen this before? 7 Ways to Maximize Misery <-- loved it - can even relate!
17:44
I love their "UK explained" video
17:54
hehe
 
5 hours later…
23:02
@LynnCrumbling not gonna be today, najt
no worries... whatchya doin?
don't want to ruin the surprise :)
think you might actually like it
hahaha
k...
headed out for the night...
'night guys! See ya tomorrow..

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