2. the main dialog which set as a singleton through startup.cs services.AddSingleton<MainDialog>(); with the above params, specifically the IBotServices, in order to use that as a singleton in other classes I need to pass that param to the other classes... Is this called ctor chaining?
@nyconing I don't how MainDialog is started other than that singleton... that is the only thing that calls it but it doesn't call it with its parameters
public class Foo{
public Foo(string str, int i, float f){
Console.WriteLine("Im Foo. Im initialized.");
}
public void Really(){
Console.WriteLine("Yes. Im initialized.");
}
}
var type = typeof(Foo);
var ctor = type.GetConstructors()[0];
var parameters = ctor.GetParameters().Select(x=>GetDefault(x.ParameterType)).ToArray();
var instanceOfFoo = (Foo)ctor.Invoke(parameters);
instanceOfFoo.Really();
Hello, world! 08:23.28 03.07.19
Im Foo. Im initialized.
Yes. Im initialized.
Reflection way to initialize a parametered class. This code worked but ran slower.
the results are always paginated getting a page throws an exception when you exceed throughput capacity (in that case, you want to retry and slow down) counting cannot be done, you must retrieve all the records and then count on the list in C#
I was dealing with a library in java specialized in synchronizing a map across multiple weblogic nodes, and they had the possibility to paginate the results. Great! I need to show paginated results on my page!
Come to find out, there is zero support for knowing how many pages there are
so you end up having to load everything anyway just to know how many pages there are
Just found a practical bug in the Immerdiate window!
If you do sth like `collection.ToList().Select(s => s.Name)` You'd recieve an ErrorMessage: "Evaluation requires a thread to run temporarily. Use the Watch window to perform the evaluation."
Now if you do: `collection.Select(s => s.Name).ToArray()` then youu'd again get the same errormessage "Evaluation requires a thread to run temporarily. Use the Watch window to perform the evaluation.".
But once you've did that you can execute the first command again (First .ToList() then .Select()) and it will run and give an output.
Might also be due to the fact that I ran the code without .ToList() inbetween, not really sure ^^
I got a covariance and contravariance question. Are there defaults for these? Or am i just a dumb dumb that never needed to do this and always used classes that already had this?
> System.Data.Entity.Validation.DbEntityValidationException - Validation failed for one or more entities. See 'EntityValidationErrors' property for more details.
Covariant is what we all want for List<T> but we can't have: A list<Animal> may contain Cats, because they're animals. But you can't put a LIst<Cat> into a List<Animal>'s reference, because they aren't covariant. Covariance is basically saying (type of another type) -> (type of yetAnotherType) "inherits" the relation of anotherType -> yetAnotherType. IEnumerable is covariant. You can stuff an IEnumerable<Cat> into a reference for IEnuemrable<Animal>, because the IEnumerbale<Cat> "is a subclass" of IEnumerable<Animal>. Note the "".
@user23333 that article you linked yesterday sounds like someone at that org who's job it was to secure such things, didn't like the fact that someone exposed them at being shite at their job and said "HE HACKED US"
OR
It was someone that literally has no fucking clue what they are doing