Just for the fun : I am debugging a 8 year old code in ASP.NET 1.1 :p It's pure pain. We have sever memoery issues because of very high w3svc worker processes, and we realize the guy who code things did not even only .Dispose() a single SPWeb and SPSite object, nor he .Close() data readers :D
A few days ago, we had a code review done by MS experts. One of the comment was that we used "latest C# 3.5 techniques such as lambda expressions and methods extensions".
Luckily, management plans to move towards Sharepoint 2010. That will enable us to rewrite the whole thing. I expect this to happens in 2017, after Win7 workstation migration.
@controlbreak no SO Qs, but the gist of it was trying to pass around classes that implemented IDisposable. At seemingly random locations, there'd be using(instance){ }.
@cofiem I like using() statement. I'm using it to be sure my objects are disposed in every case, including returns and exceptions. I rarely use explicit .Dispose() statements, but I'm convinced it is not the best solution in any case. Especially when involved object Dispose() implementation involves unknown costs or side effects... That's why I'm trying my best to use using() with object I know a little bit about their lifecycle and Dispose() implementation.
@Richard I regret vb.net did not default them to on :D
@controlbreak yes, it is certainly a good idea to use using, but just be careful with it. Make sure you know an object's lifecycle/lifetime, and that there is no built-in way to check if an object has been disposed.
@cofiem You're right. Talking about this, I think Reflector deserves a Nobel price. It helped me to understood strange things. What about an Atwood's price for such useful pieces of software ?
I just had to explain to some coleagues how String and string in C# are exactly the same. They inist on saying that there's an article on MSDN that states the differences.
@Philippe They're right: `string` is a language keyword, `String` is the name of a BCL type. This is seen in syntax colouring. You're right: they mean the same thing and can be used interchangeable.
Sure, there's a need to know the basics, but you should focus on whether the candidate can think on his feet, nor whether he can memorize some specification
Again about string, we had a comment from MS saying that we had some "+" in the code, and that they should be replaced by calls to Concat, for "performance optimisations". I choked.
only to mention that those "+" where in a method called GetHelpMessage in a class that is a custom command for stsadm. Performances are indeed crucial there.
@Philippe where doesn't matter. The compiler converts + on strings to String.Concaternate where is cannot do the concatenate at compile time [I accept this might be stating well know facts -- unless you're one of the reviewers]
I expect the answer is: it depends. So StringFormatter would only provide a measurable net performance improvement where the ToString calls on the parameters are trivial.
@MarcGravell I surprised a discussion about MS Compliance + a interview question, sorry, Concat("MS Compliance", "interview question") started an actual useful conversation
Please poke some holes in this, what did I do wrong? (I don't know that I did, but before we do any real work on this, make sure we're timing the right things)
The output of that program gives me 309ms for String.Format, 230ms for +, and 248ms for StringBuilder, but some times StringBuilder is slightly faster than +
hmm one more thing... its a distributed sort of app... the real "app" is a windows desktop software that records lot of financial portfolio data and how this banks managers perform, how much they sell etc...
the data goes up to the server, and the asp.net app is there for mostly administration...
guys will hopefully log into the web app and see whats going on... and manage user logins etc..
the only problem i've always had with asp.net is the whole html/css/javascript world which is like chinese to me... and worst of all my main visual associate is taking a hike..so i've had to wade through css and html for the last 4 months like crazy! =S
Comet is a web application model in which a long-held HTTP request allows a web server to push data to a browser, without the browser explicitly requesting it. Comet is an umbrella term, encompassing multiple techniques for achieving this interaction. All these methods rely on features included by default in browsers, such as JavaScript, rather than on non-default plugins.
The Comet approach differs from the original model of the web, in which a browser requests a complete web page at a time.
The use of Comet techniques predates the name Comet, and is also known by several other names,...
I agree, I'd be very interesting in hearing how the backend service works. We're doing a similar thing at my work. Using GWT as a front end to communicate to a .NET backend. We were initially talking directly to SQL Server, which was painfully slow - so we put in a Memcache middle layer to take off some of the load, but it's still not the best setup. We didn't want to dive into long polling either. So maybe a C# service sitting in between the WebService and SQL would be better a route.
I'll take a look at the aforementioned comet wiki though.
Agree, let me change it, and please keep thinking about it :)
Also, since I created the room, I'm the only one, except for the moderators, that can change such details, we should probably come up with a couple of more people to keep the room in check
What are the advantages/disadvantages of keeping SQL in your C# source code or in Stored Procs? I've been discussing this with a friend on an open source project that we're working on (C# ASP.NET Forum). At the moment, most of the database access is done by building the SQL inline in C# and calli...
@TimRobinson What LINQ without stored procs leads to is databases which are wide open and tightly coupled to code. If you actually thought about the services your database would be providing and who gets what kind of access to it, SPs are a natural way to implement and describe that interface and allow your database to be refactored (tables partitioned vertically or horizontally) without changing code.
@TimRobinson I think the religious wars come from language monoculture bias. I imagine we would see more bias against JavaScript if there was a C#Script available for client-side coding so that people could learn the one and only true language C#.