@1_bug If it's just a question of the fields you mentioned here, you're fine. The problem arises when there's a big difference between the two cases.
Let's say, your first view needs only title and ID, and the Details view needs the full file contents, which can be large. In this case, it makes more sense to have separate viewmodels - don't load the full file contents if you only need the list.
Now, you're going to have to predict the future. If you choose to have a shared VM and your requirements change in the future, forcing you to split them, you're going to have to do more work to separate the two.
I could use the same casing and bracket styling in C, C++, PHP, Java, JavaScript and they would still follow the majority syntax convention. C# and VB.NET are the only exception
I have this problem. I can't stop myself from refactoring existing code that works but is, in my opinion (and perhaps objectively), badly designed or contains other "code smells". This can have a significant negative effect on my immediate productivity. But ultimately will be a big maintenance...
Hi everyone. I would like to let the user choose a condition out of 3 fields. Something complex like (1="something" AND 2="else") OR 3="something". Do you guys have any idea how to bring that ability to GUI?
The only thing I can imagine is creating a matrix out of textfields...
Columns would be ORs and rows would be ANDs. But thats not very user friendly I guess.
@mr5 Personal story: We gave several devs from india completely new projects, only the stack was given, no legacy whatsoever. We had to rewrite 90% of their code
So I guess you mean enum ConditionalCheck { Field1 = 1, Field2 = 2, Field2 = 3 }. And then? Using binary operators?
I think you missunderstood that.
Imagine using a search engine for emails. The user should be able to choose something like (sender="mail@somewhere.de" AND subject="mySubject") OR text="Hi there".
The most common one I've seen is a data grid where the user selects AND or OR, a field name, a comparison (=, >, <, !=, etc.) and a value to compare it to. It then combines each row into one big condition
I'd make it using the grammar: S=>Expression Expression=>(Expression) Expression=>Expression Operator Expression Operator =>{OR,AND} Expression=>Field Field=>{field1,field2,field3}
@satibel then for the gui, use comboboxes for Operators and Fields, and make an add button to make an Expression into either a parethesised one or one with an operator. (show expressions as Fields by default) @C4u
It can't infer usage automatically because s => val = s isn't explicit. You'll either have to explicitly state it as PrepareSetter<string>, or specify the arg type: PrepareSetter((string s) => val = s)
The compiler can infer a generic type from a parameter passed to a method, but it can't infer a generic type by usage inside an anonymous method.
Even though val is string and val = s will only compile if s is a string, it can't infer it .
I have a WCF Service and have added a service reference to a wsdl service that will be posting SOAP messages to my WCF Service.
Here is my code that will consume the message
public Message ProcessMessgae(Message message)
{
MessageBuffer buffer = message.CreateBufferedCopy(8192);
// Get a copy of the original message. This will be used to read and extract the body.
Message msgCopy = buffer.CreateMessage();
// Take another copy of the same message. This will be used to return to the service. Returning an identical message forms part of
// the acknowledgement in this case.
Message returnMsg = buffer.CreateMessage();
For a "hello world" type xml document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- see http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/ -->
<bk:book xmlns:bk="urn:loc.gov:books" xmlns:isbn="urn:ISBN:0-395-36341-6">
<bk:title>Cheaper by the Dozen</bk:title>
<isbn:number>1568491379</isbn:number>
</bk:book>...
Isn't it a big slap to the face for all police officers who do get shot by rouge people, that the guy who dealt the weapons to them is ultimately their boss?
@mikeTheLiar [life](http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki?curid=8394) (uncountable) The state of organisms preceding their death, characterized by biological processes such as metabolism and reproduction and distinguishing them from inanimate objects; the state of being alive and living.
(biology) A status possessed by any of a number of entities, including animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, and sometimes viruses, which have the properties of replication and metabolism.