I want to create a Factory (that manages all my customers). I need a reference of my database connection in there. What is the best way to couple those? Constructor, singleton (they told me yesterday that you never want to use singleton), or do I keep my factories in a class, together with my factories?
@TravisJ it doesn't work that way... i tried to explain our new guys why we should use this and that pattern, and after all he just make everything public static
I disagree, respectfully. You should be writing code and refactoring to a pattern as needed. Let junior devs concentrate on learning how to write good clean code first. No junior dev should be implementing patterns in any non-trivial production application
@TravisJ I agree with the idea, but in practice I don't think it will make a difference. Most devs have a hard enough time learning how to use the syntax of c# correctly. The pattern adds more noise to the signal. I want them learning how to write good code.
@CharlieBrown - If you work with people who don't know the difference between reference and values there are probably more problems than understanding design patterns :P
@KalaJ We generally work a product with 2~3 variating between different combinations of the people. More people does not always equal getting a product done sooner.
@KendallFrey @RoelvanUden how do I open to git from the command prompt. When I installed git I have an option to right click on any folder and click get bash which would open the git terminal but how would I go about accessing it from the command prompt?
@CharlieBrown but you have to think about how long will be their learning curve, we have to punch all those things into their brain in a very short time and make them productive, you don't want to keep educating some kid for 4-6 months and then he/she start to really create some value for another 4-6 months, and then they just change a job
I have some code that relies on the HttpContext.Cache, where I want it to re-cache something if a certain criteria is met. However, this introduces a potential stack overflow, and I'm not sure what would be the appropriate approach here.
Look at this code snippet:
void OnCacheItemRemoved( strin...
I have installed msysGit 1.7.10 on my Windows 7 machine.
What I need to know is if I can still use Git from command line?
When I try the git command in the command line right now I see:
'git' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
Is there any...
Thats business. Any business that takes on college grads should understand that training is required. Hiring college grads and not training them is irresponsible, and imho bad business
Training for more experienced devs, is a combination of personal time and company provided time. The more experienced you are, the more you are expected to do your own training
@CharlieBrown it's 100% correct, but doesn't apply properly to the current job market. if i can guarantee a college graduate can really stay in the company and being productive for over 2 years, i don't mind to spend 4-6 months for them to learn. but kids nowadays changing job as frequent as changing girl/boyfriends
@CharlieBrown the fact is in west coast a lot company encourages low dev to transfer job if they don't get any promotion in their company, and it is also a fact that the best way to get a raise is to change a job for mid-low level devs. under this atmosphere, you cannot expect kids to be "loyal" if that's a good word to describe
@tweray - As soon as I hear someone complaining about employee disloyalty I wonder what the company is doing to try to inspire loyalty. Companies that offer two weeks vacation, bare bones health insurance, open office designs, aging equipment and no mentoring education programs are a dime a dozen.
@SpencerRuport well, i am not asking ppl to be loyal, my point is "hey kid, you are not going to stay in this company for longer than 12 months, then how the hell can i offer you 6 months to get used to the job"
@tweray - If your company doesn't foster the growth of it's employees it would be silly for them to stick around. This industry moves fast and being loyal to a company where their skills are stagnating is going to have a huge negative impact on their career.
today you are still mentoring someone, tomorrow that guy send the boss a 2week letter. i mean, have you even ever asked for a raise? or you just know you don't deserve it?
@tweray - All the things you're saying are the direct result of an industry where the employees have the upper hand. Most management handbooks were written by people working in industries where employees were easy to come by. You have to change up your strategy.
Hi, I am all set to create my first web service in C# that people can consume. The design etc is in place but I am lost wrt technology to invest time and effort in. ASP or WCF or xyz...could someone guide be a bit here please?
@tweray - Maybe? Scope it out. Assess your employees individually, try to find jobs they would apply for and try to figure out what those companies are willing to pay. Are you paying less? Then give them a raise or risk losing them.
@thePetProjectProgrammer For internal operations SOAP is nice. It comes with WCF. WCF has a ton of different options and mechanisms, and is pretty steap to learn and hard to master/debug. ASP.NET MVC Web API is easy, straightforward, and offers XML/JSON over HTTP. Easy.
anyway screw it, it just hurt my heart when i tried to mentor a guy can really do some help and they turn to help someone else. it's my boss's job to keep them here. i'm too oldschool i know and i guess i am not very capable to change how it works, at least in short-term
@tweray I look at that as, you should be happy to help people, no matter where there career takes them. Your not mentoring a worker bee, your mentoring a fellow developer in your industry
@tweray - It's not personal. They're making the best decision for them. It's your company's job to try to make sure staying with the company is the best decision.
i know this is going back a bit...but the way I asked for a raise was to look at what others in my position was getting and walked in and asked. When he said no, I applied to another company and showed them what they were willing to pay me and then he said yes
@tweray - And yeah what @CharlieBrown said, I bet they are grateful to you as a person. Don't confuse your company with you. If you take the time to teach someone a new skill they'll remember you.
@jishi - Are you taking steps to ensure that the timeWindow you use is significant? Because no amount of work would save you from infinite recursion in the case of a very small timeWindow
that's all they understand! They will say they can't because its their hope that you are "stuck" or that you will not go look somewhere else. The truth of the matter is that they need you or they would have fired you. They are just not going to opt to pay you more unless they feel they need to
@TravisJ So what did you mean by caching the recursive call? I'm thinking that maybe it is removed directly with reason "Removed" or "Underused", and in that scenario, the stack will build up
@thePetProjectProgrammer It's the leading communication platform for Windows .NET applications. It won't run at all on other platforms, e.g. Linux or Mac. Consuming a service from those platforms is no big deal. WCF will have a future, for sure, but almost all development is shifting quickly to open and simple systems. For .NET, that is Web API. The future is the web; not whatever-other-transfer-system. Web API is IMHO the best bet for new applications (certain circumstances/requirements not mentioned)
Also, Web API will merge into MVC6 and will run on Linux/Mac. Cost effective.
@TravisJ The timeframe is relevant, it is always 30. And I was under the impression that a regular invokation of the callback, would not have the initial stack (according to my debugging test)
@jishi - I was thinking that there was a large call stack which was unwinding and causing issues, but your problem seems to be from an infinite "drill" if you will where the calls never stop and cannot stop. I think you are probably accurate in that the remove reason can be looked at. Are all scenarios correct in needing insert?
@thePetProjectProgrammer - WCF was originally proposed as a one-size-fits-all web service framework. It works but WebAPI works just as well for most web applications and is a lot easier to work with.
@jishi - The two scenarios you would need to worry about with freeing memory is when the system needs memory but is constantly adding and removing the item, which would cause thrashing.
and honestly, I was a tester before a dev in this company, they initially gave me a 1k raise for the new title and they promised more when I was with the company longer, never happened
@TravisJ Yes, it should be fine, however, I'm concerned about if there could occur a race-condition, where the insert would call a OnCacheItemRemoved on itself somehow, with "Removed" reason
@KalaJ I usually send a nice reminder email about the review. Then, do an honest assesment of your abilities VS your internal peers and your external peers for pay scaling
@TravisJ No, no unmanaged resources. Well, I was under the impression, that if an item, with a certain key, was invoking the CacheItemRemoved callback, an insert for that key couldn't trigger another CacheItemRemoved callback on the same item?
@jishi - If you call with a duplicate key it triggers the ItemRemoved callback. https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.web.caching.cacheitemremovedreason(v=vs.110).aspx Removed: The item is removed from the cache by a Remove method call or by an Insert method call that specified the same key.
@TravisJ Yeah, but this is called in the callback, and by that time, I would assume that it is already removed. This only happens occasionally as well, not for every callback.
@TravisJ But the main point, is it usually safe, to reuse a callback within a callback the way I did? Call stack wise?
@jishi - Right, if it happened every time it would be more obvious :) Which makes me wonder about the remove key. If it is thrashing from the unused, it should show up in your system resource monitor. As defined, you should not have issues with re-insertion on removal as that shouldn't happen very often.
The callstack should be rather small
@jishi - Earlier, did you say the timeWindow was 30? As in seconds? That seems rather quick.
@jishi - How many items are going to be in the cache? How many unique keys basically, and how are you generating the keys?
@TravisJ Yeah, sorry, it is actually 60. But it's small by default, it's for identifying spams to certain URLs, and blocking them. During busy traffic, I expect it to be around 2-3000 items for this
@TravisJ The keys are basically [IP]/path/from/url
Your case of 3000 doesn't seem to be too harsh. It is basically one call every 20 milliseconds which is a little rough but probably not enough to cause an overflow.
I am not sure they would race. I think the first would enter just fine. The second would hit the OnCacheItemRemoved on insert, and then attempt to insert itself in that callback; and then hit the OnCacheItemRemoved on insert, and then attempt to insert itself in that callback... etc.
@jishi - Perhaps if you added their session guid to the key
Although even then you may still get the existing key scenario
@CharlieBrown well, sliding expiration will be extended for every access to the cache. I experienced that it never really released itself, but I have done some changes since then and maybe it was an oversight on my part. Thinking about it now, makes sense.
Am I misreasing this post from Stephen Cleary? stackoverflow.com/a/23549221/1026459 He says "I don't think that the "build a list of tasks", "await Task.WhenAny", "remove completed task from list" approach is very clean." And then seemingly goes and implements that exact pattern.
@KendallFrey - You meant more generic, I thought you meant using the type as object. Even if you use a more generic interface it can still have less access. For example using IEnumerable on an IQueryable
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@KendallFrey - 'xxxxxxxx-xxxx-4xxx-yxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx'.replace(/[xy]/g, function (c) { var r = Math.random() * 16 | 0, v = c == 'x' ? r : r & 0x3 | 0x8; return v.toString(16); });
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