@CharlieBrown in case you were still interested: I've been deleting empty folders for ages and it seems to go on forever; current theory is that something in there is a symlink
My favorite thing: Arguing about implementation of conflicting requirements for 2 weeks, when it turns out that it's just a conflict in terminology instead. "Oh, I thought you meant the *other* type of carriage"
@scheien happens all the time. Each business unit has their own terminology, using the same words to describe different things. I'm tasked with automating business processes across the entire company...
Morning guys, I have question here. I Have DataGrid, so it shows list of product and one of the colums is price. out of DataGrid i need to get total of price. Now I'm calculating by going one by one in foreach() and doing Total+=each row price, any suggestion to do that, some think like MyDataGrid.Columns["price"].Sum()?
Difficult to describe as a StackOverflow question: Why won't the 'package location' field in the first screenshot here accept dotted paths i.e. ..\..\Out, and how can I make it output to that folder? By 'not accept' I mean it ignores the dots and defaults to the project folder
enter ..\..\Out and publish - the package is published to solutiondir\out, and ..\..\Out is saved to the profile xml. That's what I wanted. However clicking the browse button sets the folder browser to the project dir, which is wrong. So there's not really any problem at all :)
Hi, Is there anyways that I can host my webapplication into IIS and can work all together in LAN? using visual studio I really have no idea but I'm searching for something like more then one people can work together in LAN with same source I know about TFS but finding something called *offline*
@Justcode TFS works fine here, and we all know how to use it. 30 developers, 15 projects, automated builds, continuous integration tests, automated deployments...
I've had no objection to just using an MSI to wrap web deploy, but why they have a problem with just using web deploy the way it's designed to be used...
@RoelvanUden I think the actual justification is the aforementioned versioning - as well as 'consistency'. There are some components we get as msi's that we have no choice about. They'd like everything to have the same deployment path
@scheien I haven't been able to get any concrete information out of them. At the moment decisions are being made without consulting the developers who are going to have to write it, and who are the ones using it day to day
because without that behavior... it makes it so that if you want to make sure all derived classes of an abstract class implement some interface, you have to provide the implementation in the abstract class.. which may not be the desired behavior
where as in java... if in an abstract class I implement an interface, it pushes the contract to the derived classes
allowing me to have disperate implementations across any derived instance of the absract class
@KendallFrey The
using (var output = File.Create(file.FullName.Replace(".xml", ".gz")))
using (var compress = new GZipStream(output, CompressionMode.Compress))
{
content.CopyTo(compress);
@KendallFrey That, will remove the .xml from the name and apply the .gz which is correct so when the gz is named it won't contain the previous extension of the file. But when it compresses the file in the gz it is extensionless.
@MarkW - Maybe this will help a little? It is about decoupling but shows the use of interface and abstract with a blurb about using them stackoverflow.com/a/13613544/1026459