I have a service that has users that connect to it. I would like to loop through all the connected users, and if they have a message, process the message.
what is hte best way to continuously loop through a collection that is mutable?
Define "bad". It will mark you as someone outside the company's social circles. It will have social consequences. Whether these are bad or not depends on what your goals are.
Don't worry, there' always people who dont go to social events in a company. We even have a guy...he is like a meme of a programmer. He doesn't really talk. You never hear him greet anyone. He's a bit fat. Not a good posture. Usually looks towards the ground. I like him.
Also he doesnt attend social events.
Also this is in germany so your social norms may be different.
@Squirrelkiller That doesn't necessarily imply that his behavior is smart or beneficial. He might be regularly passed over for promotions, or interesting projects, because of his less than sociable manner.
1) The "interesting projects" in our company are very limited. Very. 2) Promotion also is difficult here, since there isn't much fluctuation. Still not sure how that works in other companies tbh. Also he doesn't really look as if he wanted a career change.
Dude's nice being around. No thinking of what to say. No thinking of whether I already greeted him. No pointless talking for the sake of getting your head away from work for a moment.
We have really old code that is kinda...dangerous to touch. So many upgrades here are using the onion.pattern. Isn't good, but works without breaking stuff.
@Squirrelkiller An Adapter pattern? As in, the first step is to wrap the existing class in a wrapper/adapter, and once that works, replace the inner class to a new implementation?
@Squirrelkiller Because gear drops are random. Unless you're willing to grind until you have exactly the gear you want (I rarely am), it's best to optimize for what you've got.
@RoelvanUden In tabletop RPGs I focus on the narrative and character interactions. In video games, I focus on the story and experience, rarely on winning.
I played WoW for a couple of years with a build that caused serious raiders to choke up, laughing. Had fun with it.
@RoelvanUden Define "combat heavy". Mass Effect has a lot of combat, but it lets you dial down the difficulty so that you can have fun with combat without having to be optimized. Smart devs.
In Dark Souls, the difficulty is a central part of the game, so I simply don't play it.
I don't enjoy those aspects of the game, neither the mechanical puzzle of topimization, the fiero of challenge and victory or the agon of PvP domination.
Or if I'm on the dominated side but in a position where it's really on me so I have a chance to change it. In Battlefront (EA), if you have a bad team, you can get dominated and it just sucks. You can be the best of your team, try to fluctuate between fighting and getting goals, but still be dominated because team mate suck.
@cubesnyc We kind of hijacked the conversation. Not sure exactly what you mean by "upgrade to a LoginCommand". It looks like you want some sort of CommandFactory.
var myCommand = CommandFactory.ParseCommand("login -u root -p rootpass -h 192.168.1.6");
myCommand is LoginCommand; // true;
myCommand.Username == "root"; // true;
This post won't be well organized so lower your expectations first. When Rob Conery first wrote "The Imposters Handbook" I was LOVING IT. It's a fantastic book written for imposters by an imposter. Remember, I'm the original phony. Now he's working on The Imposter's Handbook: Season 2 and I'm helping. The book is currently in Presale and we're releasing PDFs every 2 to 3 weeks. Some of the id…
I think he touches on a good point there that experience shouldn't necessarily mean that you know everything, it's that you know what parts of what you don't know are knowable, or specifically easily knowable.
It would have been nice to have some sort of code analysis tool that would raise some sort of "You appear to have called AddOrUpdateAsync, but there's no call to CommitAsync within the same scope. Are you sure you meant to not actually store your goddamn data, you idiot?"
Here's the code,
Self explanatory but here's the follow,
Load XML file
Desearlize to list in c#
Map xml object to c# list
Merge orders but increment order's product count
public Order[] Load(string path)
{
var element = XElement.Load(path);
var orders = new List<XElement>();
...
var order =
from c in orders
group c by new
{
c.date,
c.categoryId,
c.Id,
} into gcs
select new Order()
{
date = gcs.Key.School,
categoryId = gcs.Key.Friend,
Id = gcs.Key.FavoriteColor,
productCount = what will go here ????,
};
I'm ignoring for the second that you're grouping by date, categoryId and Id and then projecting using a combined key that has School, Friend and FavoriteColor.
I'm trying to figure out if storing user data in the cache in MVC is a good idea. Regular user data I'm storing in the session, but in addition there are big blocks of data associated with the user that I don't want to always be hitting the database for. Is the cache better for that or is there a different solution?
You are modifying some IEnumerator while enumerating an IEnumerable, this means if someone calls foreach(var x in foo.LeftStream) {} then the IEnumerator will have reached the end and subsequent calls to foreach(var x in foo.LeftStream) {} will likely enumerate nothing
I'm creating a site to show aggregate graphs of person data. There is a set of filters that the user can use to look at different cross sections of the data. One of the filters is to select a list of people in the database that the user already prepared.
public static void Main(string[] args)
{
var chars = new List<String> { "A", "B", "C", "D", "E" };
var nums = new List<Int32> { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
var (newChars, newNums) = chars
.Zip(nums, (s, i) => (s, i))
.Unzip();
PrintList(chars); // list: A B C D E
PrintList(newChars); // list: A B C D E
PrintList(newChars); // list:
}
private static void PrintList(IEnumerable<Object> objects)
{
Console.WriteLine("list:" + objects.Aggregate("", (s, o) => s + " " + o));
}
@M.Aroosi I dont get this, doesnt this call enumerator.MoveNext() and enumerator.Dispose() on the source data enumerator each time you enumerate the result lists?
I am designing a service that people will log into and communication with via websockets. My service class has a server class that triggers a ClientConnected event whenever a someone connects. The client starts reading for messages on connect, and storing them in a queue. I also wrap the client in a ServiceUser class to define functionality.
How would you consume the messages that accumulate in the ServiceUser/wrapped client class? Would you do it through the Service class? Or from within the user class then having to pass in a reference to the service class?