Because like many MS attempts at web services, it really is good enough. Not great, but good enough for conservative shops who want to stay in MS-land.
I've worked in many projects over the years, with many combinations of source control and issue tracking. I've used source control better than TFS, and used issue trackers better than TFS, but I've never used a combined solution that was as effortless as TFS.
@QuietNaN That depends. Do you need to update from multiple threads or just read?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan i am practicing Saga pattern, i have several bounded context which talk to saga, so i have to persist it and than restore to continue process, i have seen in NServiceBus sources that they use ConcurrentDictionary for inmemory persistence, thats why i ask
Generally speaking, I'm leery of static members because of their inflexibility.
A ConcurrentDictionary is probably the right tool - it's lock-free on reads and has granular locks on write, so it's both thread-safe and relatively performant. It's the "one static dictionary to rule them all" approach that might be a problem.
Do you currently use any DI solution in your project?
In that case, I would probably create a class that wraps that dictionary - a MemoryStorage class or whatever - and register a single instance in StructureMap.
Now any class that needs persistence can get a reference to the MemoryStorage class and call get/update/delete on it. It abstracts away the fact that it's a ConcurrentDictionary (maybe you'll want to add disk-based persistence in the future? Just add it there) while also allowing test code or alternate scenarios to replace the implementation.
@QuietNaN Yes, but if you want to do so in the future, you'll just have to update your SagaDataPersister class, without any other class caring about its internal implementation.
@JakobMillah well before i had a "normal" clipper so stuff was flying around, now i bought a new one with "storage" and its an improvement... you know stuff you wanted to have that is simple but yet you were unable to find it :)
I have a user control in wpf it is hosted in Winform Now, I need to raise an event in winform control and listen to it in wpf user control. Is that possible?
@JakobMillah Yeah. Actually I hosted a WPF ribbon in winform. And I want to change the ribbon's content according to the winform's requirements. So was confused.
https://mva.microsoft.com/en-US/training-courses/querying-microsoft-sql-server-2012-databases-jump-start-8241?l=WFbhCtJy_7204984382 Is this good for after work?
http://www.tutorialspoint.com/sql/sql-rdbms-concepts.htm Am gonna go and read all these shits for now
That's not naive @JakobMillah. Learning about database design is the critical step, normalization forms are important but when you're designing you often reach the normalization form with sane design. Rule of thumb; make proper foreign keys, make indexes on columns you use for searching, and if you have a performance issue, profile it rather than guess.
@RoelvanUden Thanks. Yeah, my thoughts too. Then you have all the fluff if you are going with SQL server that is stored procedures and what not. Nothing I've worked with and something this company is moving away from, so not sure if it's useful or not
@Proxy Sure, your database is the perfect place to start. Just identity slow queries using the profiler, look at their execution plan, and see if you can optimize the plan through indices and/or a different order of execution.
@JakobMillah Yes and no. It depends. If you want to put control on the application side, that's convenient for developers, source control integration, and a more direct line to the database. A large organization with a huge database, a dedicated (good!) DBA, and you will prefer stored procedures for every mutation the application can make. The constraints and rules would be managed by the DBA, and can be optimized/changed independently of the application.
All depends on what data they contain, what kind of queries you are making. Sometimes more tables with less data is better than few tables with more data and vice versa. I still believe that splitting as much as possible using relational thinking is the way to go in all cases. Easy to administrate and add new stuff
the way we cache nupkgs is by having a shared folder on our build server where we drop our nupks, and each project has a nuget.config file that looks in the shared folder before hitting nuget.org
@StevenLiekens that's what I was thinking. Like I said, the documentation isn't so clear. Still reading up :) Just wondered if anyone had any experience here.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Hey can i have multiple events when i am working with sagas. Example: OrderPlaced (this one is used to notify by email), OrderPlaced_v2(this one is handled by saga)
to start next step e.g Billing
or Resrvation -> Billing
thanks
or it is better to have 1 Event and handle notification + next step command in Saga handler
Ask yourself this - does the class raising the event care what is done with it order?
I mean, if I have to make the decision to throw EventA to do X or EventB to do Y, then I haven't really decoupled any logic here.
I don't know the specifics of your app, but I would expect the order placer to raise the OrderPlaced event, and have some sort of centralized workflow handler know which is the next step.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I felt I had to check that, as it didn't.sound right. Google results suggest that actually spinning is quite cpu intensive whereas sleep consumes very little
I want to know if it's possible for a program to get a thread from the thread pool, let it sleep for some time, then crash because the thread can't resume for some reason (like running out of threads)
I hate those pooling design patterns where even calling Dispose() doesn't actually free up resources but insteads causes the underlying object to be returned to a pool
Hey Roel! just wanted to inform you that I have successfully implemented the stdout option, and its just 4 lines of code on python side :D took me a while to figure out i will update my stackoverflow answer so that it could help others too
it does, i have implemented both already - socket + stdin/stdout. stdin/stdout seems much optmised as i dont have to run my C# application additionally + easy to debug