This blog post is likely not for you, unless it totally is. Which is why I'm posting it. My Dad's Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro was driving him batty for months. It was bugging me even more, as I am the assigned IT manager for my family. I'm sure you are also, as you're reading this blog, right? Anyway, I talk this computer up for months, he gets the computer, and it has this tiny Micro-HDMI connecto…
@SJD A DelegateCommand is simply a specific, easily reusable ICommand.
The approach in the first link is the standard, classic MVVM approach - you have an MVVM-aware control (like the core WPF controls) which supports command binding natively - instead of catching a button's Click event, you bind a Command to its Command property, and the button knows to execute the command when its trigger (a click) is raised.
However, sometimes you have controls that don't natively support MVVM, or don't support it for triggers other than the default. Let's say you want to bind a command to a button's OnRightClick event. WPF controls usually have one Command binding, for the main trigger (Click for buttons, for instance).
In the cases where you want command bindings for other events, you use the approach in the second link - an EventTrigger to define a sequence of actions to call when an event occurs, and an InvokeCOmmandAction to bind to a Command in your VM.
@SJD There's no reason to have any code or logic whatsoever in your code behind. Anything that can't be handled by declarative XAML markup can be handled with Behaviors.
And again, I recommend heading over to the WPF chat room, where people will probably be more receptive to this topic.
A LINQ to Objects question: I have a list of items that I need to divide into itemsToAdd and itemsToUpdate based on a simple HashSet.Contains query. What's the most elegant way to divide them? Two Where queries with reversed conditions? One Where and one Except? Something neater?
It's simple enough to do, but I want to find the cleanest and most expressive idiom.
@SJD: You can have view specifics in the code behind, and if you by any means need to reference some other stuff, do it through an interface, and not a concrete implementation. Never ever put business logic in the view. :)
@BenjaminDiele: Not much. Working from home today since it's my oldest daughters birthday.
unless you drink a couple more than you should, and when you wake up the next day you are like: hey, this is awesome, who wrote this? ahh.. me... (it can also be the oposite way. it usually is the oposite way.)
but Entity Framework (the popular Microsoft ORM which is used to map .Net classes to databases) has a specific under-the-hood implementation which helps it do all of the heavy work in the database
so using a LINQ .OrderBy() will translate directly into a SQL "ORDER BY" clause
your database might order things differently to the in-memory implementation of OrderBy that's normally used
I need some help basically setting up project for debug
not C# related but its an IDE setup kind of question
for vb6 app and dll code
how do you reference a dll project instead of the dll itself inorder to debug?For vb6 even though this is not a C# question.I can't remember how I did it cz its been a while.Am guessing its similar to the proce4ss you would use for a vb.net or c# app
Also, generally speaking, it's better to avoid using ToUpper/ToLower for case-insensitive string comparisons, since every call creates a new string object.
You can use string1.Equals("string2", StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase).
It's not a matter of optimization, just of convention.
ToUpper/ToLower has no advantage over case-insensitive Equals, has several potential edge cases in international scenarios, and should really not be taught at all, even if it is intuitive.
Is this a good way of using a try/catch? : try
{
((Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel._Worksheet)newWorkbook.Sheets[workSheet]).get_Range(cellname).set_Value(Type.Missing, value);
}
catch
{
((Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel._Worksheet)newWorkbook.Sheets[workSheet]).get_Range(cellname).set_Value(Type.Missing, value);
}
inside try you put something that you suspect might fail, but inside catch you should put something that will not fail (what to do when you catch the error)
but in this example, you're trying to do something that failed inside the catch block
Best Asp.net MVC solution - use action method selector
Why not simplify controller action methods by removing unnecessary code branch and have this kind of code as seen here:
public ActionResult Index()
{
// do something when there's no id
}
[RequiresRouteValues("id")]
public ActionResult ...
I have an Edge class with two int properties, To and From. I have a nodeId which matches either the To or the From. What's the clearest and concisest way to get the other nodeId? Say I have nodeId = 2, Edge = {From:2, To: 7}. How can I get 7 from the Edge by giving it 2?
Another object might be nodeId = 2, Edge = {From:5, To: 2}. I want the same line of code to return 5.
for a search I would have two actions, one GET and one POST. The GET shows a preliminary form with search options, and the POST recieves a viewmodel containing the search parameters, and gets populated with the results.
but if it fits your structure, layout and such, go for it.
argh, webforms, why do you have to be so cruel? :'(
I first send a search to the server. Then I want to ask it every half second if that search is done. When the search is done I can retrieve my results of the search. Not sure how I should wait though
@BenjaminDiele True. But you can get killed while cycling, walking, showering, driving a car, taking a bath, getting on an elevator, walking the stairs, etc...
You can't often avoid an imminent car crash even if you see it coming. You often can on a motorcycle. But yes, when you actually collide, you'd rather be in a car.
Wow. Recruiter e-mail. "From one of your old colleagues we've heard that...". I don't have old colleagues, this is my first job, and nobody quit during my time here. How about that?
My boss sent out an email asking for CVs. The recruiter called back and spent 15 minutes asking questions which were already answered in the email that was sent out
@KendallFrey ooh the HTML5 audio APIs are fun! I was making a HTML5 app for my smartwatch that automated things based off clicking my fingers and gesturing :-]
@Squiggle I second this. I think they sit back and let a poorly programmed CV keyword algorithm spit out candidates that have a chance of getting them commission.
The only problem I know with recruiters here is they ask for both breadth and depth from a candidate e.g. One job offer wanted someone who has "five years working in JQuery, HTML5, JavaScript, PHP, C#, Java and Android"