private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { clsDestination.Hours(); // my class name where the variable hours is located MessageBox.Show(); }
Rubber duck debugging is an informal term used in software engineering for a method of debugging code. The name is a reference to a story in the book The Pragmatic Programmer in which a programmer would carry around a rubber duck and debug their code by forcing themselves to explain it, line-by-line, to the duck. Many other terms exist for this technique, often involving different inanimate objects.
Many programmers have had the experience of explaining a programming problem to someone else, possibly even to someone who knows nothing about programming, and then hitting upon the solution in the...
Sorry about always talking about EF lately, just trying to understand it. This is my first week really using it.
But i was concerned about layers of separation. The Context itself sort of acts like a Half and Half business layer and Data Access layer, right?
So if I have a winform with a datagridview, and I want to populate the datagridview, In the code behind Its perfectly fine to do a Using(context){ context.Object.getData();} right?
@Failsafe winforms. So like if I have a person class, which has a SaveChanges() method I can do :
SaveChanges(){
using (Entities context = new Entities()){
context.Contacts.Add(this);
}
}
@Failsafe okay. So right now I actually have all this extracted out to a static dataAccess class:
pastebin.com/1BwHCR0z
and then in a Contact Class I might call:
public bool SaveChanges()
{
bool result = false;
if (this.Id.HasValue) //Update
{
int returnValue = ContactDataAccess.UpdateContact(this);
result = (returnValue > 0) ? true : false;
}
else //Insert
{
int? returnValue = ContactDataAccess.InsertContact(this);
@Failsafe here it is:
public static class ContactDataAccess
{
public static int InsertContact(Contact c)
{
using(LitTrackContext context = new LitTrackContext())
{
context.Contacts.Add(c);
return context.SaveChanges();
}
}
public static int UpdateContact(Contact c)
{
using (LitTrackContext context = new LitTrackContext())
{
context.Entry(c).State = EntityState.Modified;
@Michael Then you must realize that making repositories like this is a terrible, terrible idea. Even more so considering you're ToList'ing entire tables.
I have a large string I need to parse, and I need to find all the instances of extract"(me,i-have lots. of]punctuation, and store them to a list.
So say this piece of string was in the beginning and middle of the larger string, both of them would be found, and their indexes would be added to th...
@Michael public static List<Contact> GetContacts() what if you have a million contacts? Boom You serialize all of them. Then you just want to show 10 on a page. You still have to serialize all million of them.
@Michael In a UoW you'd just expose an IQueryable that enables you compose the query it fires of to the database down the line, including the eventual limit and paging constraints, very efficiently. Repositories can do that, somewhat, too, but not like you did it. It's terrible to ToList anything.