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19:00
postman's job is to pick up all the post bags in his van.
postman pat, postman pat,
postman pat, and his black and white cat,
user47589
Fiddler is awesome for inspecting stream traffic, like with SignalR.
@Amy The thing I don't like about fiddler is if i forget it is capturing data I can't use the internet
user47589
why?
Idk
it installed a cert that blocks traffic
user47589
weird
19:10
It's to intercept https i think
19:20
I hate SSIS
user47589
So say we all.
SSIS: shitty, super-irritating stupidity
why even use it?
user47589
i have no idea, business people who aren't programmers seem to love it
When it works it works very well. When it breaks it's awful.
And it breaks a lot.
19:30
Is the notion of visually-designing data munging just bad?
Or is it a sound idea marred by shitty implementation?
the toolbox is for reference only
Little of column A, little of column b. Part of the issue with SSIS is that it interfaces with a lot of different endpoints. Also, behind the scenes they're just giant XML files so attempting version control is just pointless AKA impossible
version-controlling XML files is plausible as long as the schema is sane and you use line breaks sensibly
@TomW these XML files are programmitcally generated by VS and several bazillion lines long.
I have yet to find a diff tool that could handle them
@TomW - Don't be
silly
19:33
Yeah, BizTalk does that, with the mapper. The twat.
Just switch to JSON and enjoy less stress :)
And smaller file sizes!
@Amy my logging framework does that
My logging framework builds chairs and canoes
My logging framework selects only the premium old-growth varietal species in order to leave the habitat largely untouched
@TomW If you can manage to properly display complex data in a visually appealing manner, then that is the best way to show analysis.
user47589
19:37
@wadry Good for you.
SSIS exists to keep consultants in business
user47589
^
19:38
v
So does SAP
lol check out Picard's wood! It's massive!
it's the captain's log :P
user47589
oh captain my captain
oh captain my captain
oh captain my captain
I miss Robin Williams :(
So, I have a list in my DbContext POCO object. List<MatchEventTimestamp> Snaps
When do I allocate it?
With a join
@TomW - "Visualizing Algorithms" by Mike Bostock bost.ocks.org/mike/algorithms
user47589
@Asheh we're going to need more information than that.
19:40
a.... join?
Yes.
public virtual DbSet<MatchEvent> Matches { get; set; }
public class MatchEvent
{
public int ID { get; set; }
public int? FinalScoreHome;
public int? FinalScoreAway;
public List<MatchEventTimestamp> Snaps { get; set; }
}
Snaps == null
It should be virtual there also
19:41
I cant add to it and do a db.save
user47589
is Snaps a collection of subentities from the database?
If it is not virtual, then it will not be included in queries
the property needs to be virtual?
user47589
it will be, @TravisJ, virtual only controls whether lazy-loading is supported.
19:42
yes amy
It must become a dynamic proxy like its tables before them
    public class MatchEventTimestamp
    {
        [JsonIgnore]
        [DatabaseGenerated(DatabaseGeneratedOption.Identity)]
        public Guid ID { get; set; }

        [JsonProperty("event")]
        public Event Event { get; set; }
        [JsonProperty("markets")]
        public Markets Markets { get; set; }
        [JsonProperty("stats")]
        public MatchStats Stats { get; set; }
    }
@Amy - It will not be a dynamic proxy without virtual. Joins will not work on it. It will not be marked as part of the change tracker.
user47589
public class Foo
{
    private ICollection<Bar> _bars = new List<Bar>();

	public virtual ICollection<Bar> Bars
	{
		get { return _bars; }
		set { _bars = value; }
	}
}
user47589
something like this is pretty standard i think
19:43
So dare I ask. What takes care of the allocation?
@Amy you typically don't want to have a setter on something like that
It has to have a setter for EF
The DbContext behind, or do I allocate it and it gets "loaded in"
EF sucks :p
19:44
@Asheh the dbcontext
user47589
why not, @ReedCopsey?
The model builder will take care of it for you
Why create a private collection to support the public virtual one?
The DbContext allocates it?
Thats what im saying. So why is amy saying we need to allocate it
user47589
19:44
you can't initialize members in the constructor if its virtual.
@Amy it's a leaky abstraction
@Asheh - EF will populate it
I AM SO CONFUSED
EF populates, We instantiate the object
Right?
and you normally don't need/want to modify the collection itself, just its contents
no it controls creation as well
19:45
@Asheh you don't need to do anything. Make it virtual and tell EF how to map it to the database
Done
As amy has shown?
In her example she allocates it
user47589
@ReedCopsey you can't initialize a virtual member in the constructor, though.
That's basically the whole point of EF
@Amy - Why would you want to initialize data in a constructor for a domain entity?
19:45
AND makes it virtual?
user47589
@TravisJ in the case of complex types its required.
or this?
@Asheh - I don't fully agree with her example.
public virtual List<MatchEventTimestamp> Snaps { get; set; }
this?
@Amy - From an EF perspective it is not required.
@Asheh - Yes
19:46
ok this is madnes
user47589
try inserting an entity with a null complex type.
ill try
user47589
it won't work.
@Amy - I do it all the time.
user47589
complex types cannot be null when inserting into the database.
19:47
Ok
So. I added virtual. I ran Add-Migration init and Update-Database
A complex type is simply an object in memory. That it is null means nothing to the database.
Re-Ran my code. And the collection is still null
user47589
@TravisJ No. I'm using the Ef definition of complex type.
You need to join the collection by telling EF to populate the foreign relation.
user47589
!!google entity framework complex type cannot be null
hehehe - and people wonder why I saw EF sucks ;)
travis that is french to me
ill googles
@Amy - Ah, apples and oranges.
user47589
yeah we were talking about different things.
@Amy - You are talking about a purely in memory property of a domain entity.
Okay I get it. Yeah then your point is valid.
19:49
What am I googling here? " how to join a collection entity framework " ?
But I don't think that is what he had in mind.
@Asheh - entity framework Include
user47589
right, we got off topic
@Amy - I had fun.
I think you are googling "entity framework tutorials"
nice joke mike, if the entity framework tutorials I had followed showed me how to "join a colllection by telling EF to populate a foreign relation" id have done ti by now ;)
in the one i followed there is an ICollection but there is no information on how its populated so I assumed EF would take care of it
19:52
Are you using data annotations or the fluent api?
Or some mix of the two?
@mikeTheLiar - As an aside, I never liked the fluent api
user47589
me either.
user47589
annotations all the way.
user47589
or conventions
One aspect I always appreciated was that if it followed convention then it just worked
19:54
oh god
i have no idea what i am reading
That is teh meat and potatoes of EF foreign relation management
databases used to be easy
I believe there are things that you can't adequately define using just annotations, correct?
I want to say I read that somewhere.
I don't think so.
I have all sorts of stuff in mine with just annotations
many to many, self referencing, multi referencing, etc
87
A: Code First - Are Data Annotations or the Fluent API better?

SlaumaEverything what you can configure with DataAnnotations is also possible with the Fluent API. The reverse is not true. So, from the viewpoint of configuration options and flexibility the Fluent API is "better". Configuration examples (for sure not a full list) which are possible in the Fluent API...

19:56
Yeh, opinions.
I am using DataAnnotations
Not fluentAPI
user47589
there are some limitations to annotations, yeah. for example, you can't set up dynamic filters (using the EF Dynamic Filter library) using annotations
"Everything what you can configure with DataAnnotations is also possible with the Fluent API. The reverse is not true." doesn't sounds like an opinion.
It is unfortunately also not accurate
@TravisJ entirely possible
user47589
19:57
used to be, you couldn't do unique indexes with annotations. they fixed that.
Is there no way to Annotate a collection to say "[Allocate Me]"
user47589
@Asheh please show us a MCVE
Allocate me! We will arrive on the gates of Code First all shiny and Chrome!
Amy, its massive
@mikeTheLiar - Slauma is pretty awesome though, that may have been true when he wrote it before EF6
user47589
19:58
show us a minimum, complete, verifyable example
My DBContext is 1.2k lines
I'll be honest, I don't think that will impress her dude.
user47589
then boil it down to just the one issue you have.
Impresses most girls
oh boy.
19:58
public class MatchEvent
{
public int ID { get; set; }
public int? FinalScoreHome;
public int? FinalScoreAway;
public virtual List<MatchEventTimestamp> Snaps { get; set; }
}
user47589
I am unimpressed.
here we go.
@TomW it's not the size of the repo it's the number of imports
Snaps is null
user47589
@Asheh that is not a complete example.
user47589
19:59
create a sandbox project, make the minimum amount of code needed to replicate the issue, and share that.
@Asheh - The information from the database cannot be populated into properties without getters and setters
!!mcve
If you would like assistance, please create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Example

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