naming paralysis. I have a message consumer that consumes EnquiryReceived messages (which have the attached enquiry - firstname, lastname, email, interestedIn, referred) which job is to check the crm database to find a matching customer (ExistingCustomerSpecification - email matches, first 3 letters of firstname and last name - will be tweaked later) etc.
. and either create a new contact entry with new enquiry or append the enquiry to an existing customer, i know i shouldnt ponder over naming but I want to least keep the class name under 80 characters lol
There appear to be no rooms like the one I want and I doubt anyone will be coming along shortly.
We are working with WCF on a SOA like implementation. We were wanting to use EF for our persistance layer but we have notice something rather annoying
when we want to update/delete an entity, all the examples out there have you select the entity first then update/delete it. This results in an extra call to SQL server to first select the object.
We want to avoid this, and I have found out that you can just attach the entity and set its state to modified. But is the best approach
Is it better to let the entity framework select the object again? What benefits are there?
Have problem while getting data from Memcached on .NET MVC solution.
I have this custom repository:
public List<DropDownLocalization> GetLocalization(string key, string lang)
{
var result = cacheClient.Get<IQueryable<DropDownLocalization>>("DD_" + key + "_"...
all was putted well, but in the global.asax at app_onstart i put the line to flush all from memcached. so when i comment the code to get data from db abd rebuild app it automaticaly destroy all data in memcached - as result Null exeption
if not you should really attempt to at least encrypt the password on the client side
but that's not really a full solution as anyone can decrypt that password enroute by looking at your client-side code... thus the general advice for https
i'm not talking about the password for the webserver, I'm referring to the password that was entered in the textbox you mention above
once the user submits the form the values will be serialized and sent through the internets to your webserver
but it is not a direct connection from the client to your web server, there are a bunch of stops along the way (that's the way the web is designed to work)
each one of those stops could read that password because it is not encrypted
if you run the whole thing inside of a https session you get that encryption for "free"
My question is similar to below, except that i dont know whats the alternative.
Why is my bound DataGridView throwing an "Operation not valid because it results in a reentrant call to the SetCurrentCellAddressCore function" error?
When user finishes editing, the datagridview shoul...
A simple/naïve implementation would just instantiate the plugins in the same domain as your application. This gives plugins the same set of privileges your application has.
Sometimes you don't want that.
In this architecture, if a plugin corrupts memory, for example, your whole process is dead.
ok, thanks for all information you gave me! actually I should give my plug-ins the same set of privileges as for the main application. They will do some operations with files, configure them and I will use them to retrieve some information too
Hello everyone! Does anybody speak VB.NET ? If so could you please translate this answer's code from c# to vb.net: stackoverflow.com/questions/6117293/… ??
Private Sub Wait(seconds as Double)
Dim frame As New DispatcherFrame
New Thread(CType(ThreadStart, Sub()
Thread.Sleep(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(seconds))
frame.Continue = false
End Sub)).Start()
Dispatcher.PushFrame(frame)
End Sub
Note: VB2010 only, I think.
Otherwise you may need to get the lambda out to a named method.
I'm having trouble determining whether ObjectContext.CreateObjectSet<TEntity>() actually creates the set every time from the data source, or whether it looks to the ObjectStateManager to obtain objects from the cache for subsequent calls