It only abstracts away only the logic of converting your query result to a SelectListItem, while remaining explicit about being a collection transformation function.
There's a ) that should be a } there, but you get the idea.
hi guys I have a webapi which I has a custom error filter on it. Its working well. but I've just had an issue where I tried to do a POST whilst the programmer was updating the so I got a out of context error. Issue is the http header was 200 for some reason and it didnt run through the filter. any ideas how I can trap this?
AAAHHHHHHHHHH if I have to have another "Yes, Dictionaries CAN be serialized because this is 2015 and we're not busing SoapFormatter anymore" I'll kill someone.
WinForms creates a property on your class with the name of the control, but in this case it's hiding the "Name" property that's inherited from Control.
okay, maybe i'm doing this wrong. So the requirement is to only hit the DB once a day. I decided to do this with Second Level Caching (EF). So what I'm doing is, once a day on first load the data is all copied to cache and then later multiple refresh etc doesn't hit the DB. Problem is, some of these are as big as 25MB so the first load takes 2 - 3 minutes!
anyone got a better idea?
smaller multiple hits to the db is not an option -_-
Why are smaller multiple hits not an option? Is it possible that whoever formalized the requirements meant "Don't hit the DB on every operation", but this was written as "Only hit the DB once", when what was meant was "only hit the DB during the daily cache loading phase"?
Because they only want one request to the DB every 24 hours because of their "internal limitations". Which is why they initially suggested creating a "holding DB" where at night data from the DB that must only be touched once would be pushed to the holding DB from where folks can read the data
that is still on the table, but its shitty because they want PHP scripts that they already have from 3000BC to be used and nothing else...FAAAAAA
i'm trying to come up with a better solution that doesn't depend on shitty software, keeps them happy, and is more durable. i'm afraid i may not be thinking outside the box here
the thing with the "holding db" is going to be a separate db on one of their servers which they don't mind getting hit multiple times. they want me to use their PHP scripts though. and secondly my application will have to communicate with their servers still.
in terms of time that it takes to load, it will be considerably shorter obviously
since i'd be getting smaller chunks at a time (its a paged grid so thats not a problem)
however i'd be responsible for maintaining those scripts ugh!
might have to go with that if these load times don't improve i think
i can't copy the data over to my servers though, no
FFS for some reason Resharper is causing VS to grind to a halt. I can't type anything, and when I right click it hangs for 30 seconds before opening the context menu.
Any ideas, people?
disabling code analysis and restarting seems to help for now
@Squiggle Ok, then. I've found that VS's XAML Editor process (XDesProc) misbehaves a lot and causes Resharper to slow to a crawl, and killing it sometimes helps.
@KendallFrey I recently discovered that the Windows 8 (or 8.1?) ResourcesMonitor can also tell me which process holds a file handle. And also shows me which process uses which network port. No more netstat!
@Shoe Foreach predates LINQ (it's from .NET 2.0, I think, with List<T>). Also, someone exploring the framework via intellisense would hook into a word he's familiar with ("Foreach? It's like a foreach loop!") and ignore words that make no sense.
@scheien I would like a library similar to RestSharp, but it uses the old HttpClient framework, not the Windows.Web.Http framework. If you try to install the RestSharp package in a Windows 10 application, it states there is no package which targets UAP 10.x.
if you forgot to disconnect your 56k, you will get a cell phone call saying "dude, i've been trying to call you for an hour, cut your damn internet." but for dsl, you just have to take the bill if you forgot to disconnect
@NicolásCarlo My first phone was this or something similar. It fit in my pockets only because I had huge pockets, and it would burrow it's way out of them every couple of months.
that thing is just plain beautiful. My first cellphone was a hand me down from my sister: extragsm.com/images/phone/big/Nokia/7210/Nokia-7210-02.jpg suffice it to say I wanted to dig a hole every time i used it in public @AvnerShahar-Kashtan
it was good though, made me want to work my ass off in life so i never have to be stuck with my sister's phone again :)
when you think about that, my philippe phone used to be able to stand 2 weeks without charging, and i also have a backup battery. so i can keep connected for almost a month without plug anything
@krillgar yeah, i somehow know. my question is are you doing load test on application level, or in lower level like module level or class/method level?
@tweray I have a bunch of Integration tests to call my API within a Unit Test Project. My Load Test is set up to call the specified integration tests. But I can't run the tests because the controller and agents aren't set up.
I'm looking forward to getting a Lumia 950 or Surface phone, I don't have a tablet or a laptop so I use my desktop for everything I do at home and my phone for everything I do elsewhere. So if I can replace a tablet/laptop with my phone all the better...
Ugh, everything keeps saying "Use VS Online!" I don't wanna use my own, and I work for a non-profit, so they've really been dragging their feet moving to Azure.
@RoelvanUden because now instead of hacking your production, you can invite all hackers to do peer hack on your dev
which we call early feature delivery
and what's better, you even get a surprise chance to have a super duper hacker party in your source control and source code, they can help you pick all security flaws and hackable portal from an expert's point of view, think about that, how wonderful
In my last blog post, I introduced U-SQL as the new Big Data query language for the Azure Data Lake that unifies the benefits of SQL with the expressive power of your own code. Today we are announcing the availability of the Azure Data Lake in public preview. You can now try U-SQL in Visual Studio and run it over massive amounts of data in the store and across relational store such as Azure SQL…
So we're using some azure worker roles + storage queues to handle background processing of user uploads, right
And we have azure's very-neat autoscaling feature enabled, where it looks at the queue count as a trigger to change the number of active worker instances
But now we want to switch to a database-table-backed "queue" for more granularity in how we process things (i.e. so we can process multiple users in parallel, but never multiple items from the same user in parallel, since it causes a handful of concurrency issues)
And azure doesn't have built-in autoscaling for such a notion.
So we're probably going to have some code that simply monitors the database table's number of distinct user IDs, and fills/empties a dummy queue to have the same count.
I'm trying to pass an XML document I setup with some test values to the associated web service.
Its throwing back And its throwing back : <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><soap:Envelope xmlns:soap="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"><soap:Body><soap:Fault><faultcode>soap:Client</faultcode><faultstring>Unable to handle request without a valid action parameter. Please supply a valid soap action.</faultstring><detail /></soap:Fault></soap:Body></soap:Envelope>