mmm, my gf packed me a lunch today. tuna salad wrap on spinach wrap, half an orange cut up, a mini gouda, homemade trail mix, and a little chocolate truffle, along with a coconut water :)
@SteveG buy small amounts of spices in bulk and keep them in containers. As you use smaller amounts, they are fresher when you use them because you refill more often
my kitchen smells AMAZING every time I open my spice cupboard :)
I'm using VirtualBox on a Windows 10 machine along with Docker to deploy ASP.NET websites to local Linux Containers. To be clear, this isn't accessing websites with http://localhost, this is accessing locally an VirtualBox virtual network. For example, my local IP and subnet is here, but my VirtualBox is here: Ethernet adapter Ethernet: IPv4 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.0.140 Et…
I'm doing some work in Expression Trees, a rules engine of sorts.
When you call ToString() on an Expression Tree, you get a lovely bit of diagnostic text:
((Param_0.Customer.LastName == "Doe")
AndAlso ((Param_0.Customer.FirstName == "John")
Or (Param_0.Customer.FirstName == "Jane...
Ok. However my question is: why do I have to create the query inside the report? Wouldn't be more logic/flexible to have the report format saved in the database and then inject the query programmatically??
@Squiggle no, the report designer uses the query builder with wich you can create a SQL query. What I'm saying is that the design and the query should be decoupled, but from what Ipm seeing they are tighly coupled: infact you define the query during report design. It's not what I need. I want to simply define the look of the report (the first name of the person stay here, the last name here, and so on...) but the query must be injected programmatically.
That function will be executed every time a keydown is pressed, regardless of which key it is.
The if checks that the key pressed was the Return key. When the breakpoint is hit, you should be able to hover over the e.KeyCode with your mouse and see the value.
documentation for customers must be the hardest thing to do... I want to figure out a way to standardise documentation for all our customers regardless of how their system is custmized..
@Squiggle Thanks... The thing is... I see sooooo many flaws with all the documentation that has been made so far... I am getting a bit... Itchy...
@BenjaminGruenbaum I think that you might need to specify a little? It happens quiet frequently that you render the page with data sent from the server
@JakobMillah I find a decent wiki and some hard discipline is the best approach for creating good documentation. It's notoriously difficult to keep artifacts up-to-date during development of a product.
I find it pretty easy too. But what they do at this company is pretty much taking screenshots of all the different windows they encounter and what information that is required... They make it EXTREMELY confusing though since they are so inconsistent with the inserted data and where it's required etc...
I like plain text the most.
But I would like to come up with a way to make it easy to translate the documentation to different languages
@Squiggle I find it common sense.. But somewhere.. something went wrong.. I guess someone made some documentation and then the others were insecure how to write, so they pretty much did it the same way the first person did...
I find it very very weird to take screenshots of an UI when you make documentation about a UI?
nah, I often add them to the core documentation. But first I write the walkthrough in plain English and only insert the screenshots where it makes sense to do so.
how to map list<T> of viewModel from view to the post method of controller? ViewModel: GameResultViewModel{ ... public GameResultViewModel() { this.SetScores = Enumerable.Repeat(new Score(), 5).ToList(); } ... public List<Score> SetScores { get; set; } }
View: for (int i = 0; i < Model.SetScores.Count; i++) { @Html.EditorFor(model => model.SetScores[i].Home, new { htmlAttributes = new { @class = "form-control" } }) }
Controller method: [HttpPost] public ActionResult Create(GameResultViewModel gameResultViewModel){...}
It has come to a handful of people's attention that at least some of the newly elected moderators might not be exactly up to challenge.
Here's a message that very clearly demonstrates this incompetence, that was a result of a particular argument that appeared in one of the SO chatrooms:
Madar...
Gonna give it a go this weekend I believe.. But can only start MVC projects on my VS Studio version (?) and I will probably never learn that stuff... So much magic