« first day (4086 days earlier)      last day (1092 days later) » 

12:09
what is this ?
christmas?
!~shiba
12:38
im an island now
the way it looks
Just 'til I get back :)
strange hat
Btw I fixed my botched Repo
it says secret hat
hmm
Huehuehue
12:39
this is my island !
its all MINE
 
1 hour later…
13:53
Does the island have wifi? :)
5G, why else get all these vaccine shots?
:)
14:10
Hello all,
What is the recommended approach to using in-memory "list/storage", that is global to the program (public), and thread-safe, I will set and update it in a `BackgroundService`
Sounds a lot like an in-memory database
So I guess that
 
2 hours later…
15:46
@Alex yes
@Squirrelkiller what is in-memory database? SQL-lite?
I think so
Not sure if SQLite is in-memory
But basically that: a kinda list/storage, global to the program, thread-safe, managed by its own service
MS says SQLite, yes
16:05
but if this is not available, is there an option I can Implement, a pattern that can be applied?
You mean like, build your own DBMS?
If there is a slight chance, just use EF with an in-memory provider.
If you absolutely have to build it yourself, fuck transaction levels and just lock on the singleton background service while manipulating the list
I already started with something like: public static ConcurrentBag<x> AppData .. but seems awful
you use an in-memory database
so, you would use a library that built their own dbms and run it
> Data Source=InMemorySample;Mode=Memory;Cache=Shared
that connectionstring should work for most stuff
16:28
But won't it needs to be abstracted (like using a repository..)? also I will keep a connection open during the lifetime of the app.. is that OK, I will update it in a BGService every 500ms
 
2 hours later…
18:40
it doesnt need to be abstracted
you just have an sql instance running in-memory
you can connect to it using an SqlConnection
and query it using SqlCommands
Entity Framework can use that same connection string to connect to an in memory database
and it will work
at least, that is the idea
> C# 9 introduces records,
also ms:
> You'll need to set up your machine to run .NET 6 or later, including the C# 10 or later compiler.
19:31
@mshwf EF core is all the abstraction you need, it's literally a repository. Unless you have more specific queries you'd like to abstract away from being a query (like a hexagonal architecture), just plug it into your service.
 
1 hour later…
20:53
Tested, and works great
In a Record (C# 8+), Is there a way to exclude a property from the equals method?

« first day (4086 days earlier)      last day (1092 days later) »