var collection = new Dictionary<string, string>();
var properties = employee.GetType().GetProperties();
foreach (var property in properties)
collection.Add(property.Name, property.GetValue(employee, null));
The problem, is the GetValue(employee,null) isn't correct because it expects a string. But, not sure... How to correct.
@Bardicer - I don't see any evidence of off topic dumps from you in the past, so no this isn't the right place to dump you. That would probably be in the form of a text, email, or perhaps tinder depending on your preference :P
Do System.OutOfMemoryExceptions cause some funky behavior in exception handling down the line? Like, sometimes they just decide they don't want to be caught?
Is it possible to construct a snippet of code in Java that would make a hypothetical java.lang.ChuckNorrisException uncatchable?
Thoughts that came to mind are using for example interceptors or aspect-oriented programming.
well, for managed environments, an OOM will fire but the allocation fails, so there shouldn't be any memory requirements to "recover" - if your handlers allocate mem, they can fail again, though
Page files are usually capped at some point, and if it is result of an infinite process the size of growth should be hit no matter what. Unless you mean to handle the issue, which would require deallocation at that point, right? However, the key problem of what to deallocate seems to be hard to solve all the time. You don't think an OOM could bring down an application pool for example?
My companny put me back on manual testing for a little bit... Um, I was wondering are there any good automated tools for testing UI? Something like Selenium for .NET? Can I use Selenium?
Install Nuget packet manager
Download link: https://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/27077b70-9dad-4c64-adcf-c7cf6bc9970c
Create a visual c# console application
Right-click on project -> Manage Nuget Packages.
Search for "Selenium" and install package Selenium.Support
Done now you are re...
So Amazon accidentally sent us 3 $15 gift cards in the mail.
I asked them what we should do with them, and they said "Merry Christmas"
I raffled them immediately :)
Random time clock winners were:
var rand = new Random();
Console.WriteLine(rand.Next(1,84));//74
Console.WriteLine(rand.Next(1,84));//50
Console.WriteLine(rand.Next(1,84));//6
@Nick I'm in Seattle proper. Leaving work early because YOLO (and everyone else is)
I gotta run some errands for my GF but if you wanna meet for a beer or something I know some places
how mobile are you? car etc
@TravisJ I got JetBrains to sponsor my user group ^_^ Gotta see if MSFT wants to, as well
@TravisJ yes, for a unit test refactor I did. I deleted several hundred lines of code
basically I pulled a bunch of services into a base class and made them lazily instantiable as needed via microservices for each of the test classes the inherited it
When I draw a button and go to properties and choose a picture, it appears. Then I go to project..properties..resources..images and I don't see it listed there. Why?
> I tend to lack coherence and get stumble when talking in thoughtful topics. Unless I really take note, cat always got my tongue, even thought I know what to say. My writing is, nonetheless, not having that problem.
In order for that to impact either spacial or time complexity the set would have to be so large that the set size itself would have already caused performance degredation.