@RyanTernier I do WHCK/WHLK Certification for our company... I got a call at home from 'microsoft'. I asked how our submission package was doing, they hung up.
I have this code to list objects in the folder.
var accessKey = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AWSAccessKey"];
var secretKey = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AWSSecretKey"];
using (AmazonS3Client s3Client = new AmazonS3Client(accessKey, secretKey, RegionEndpoint.US...
get branch > restore packages > build code > deploy to dev server > execute unit tests > execute end to end tests > mark build complete > pray I covered enough of the code that noting massive is still borked
I also gave Micorsoft my deployment code as they said I was doing stuff they were hoping to do "one day"
I'm currently working out the release management side of things so I can 1 click migrate stuff from dev > test > staging > prod ...
one click per environment migration of course not one click for the whole lot
in between theres a ton of manual testing that goes on
Testing is a life jacket. It's always good to have, and usually wearing one isn't going to do anything because most of the time you're safe... in fact wearing one is sometimes a pain in the butt.... but when shit happens you're glad you have that damn thing on
@RyanTernier that is like log files. building logging into you entire system seems like such a massive wasted effort... until you trace down the non-deterministic error on the production systems because logging caught the thread thrashing sequence in just the right order that it exercised the error.
@Wurd or when all connections are behind multiple levels of firewalls... and you will never actually touch the production system you software is running on, then ALL your have is your precious log files.
well, at least the new dev box runs faster =/
this is still going to take days to come back up online.
@CuddleBunny no more curious about the organization of code - like what the data layer (model) might look like and how they handle so many different objects that can be placed on the canvas
@erotavlas there aren't too many architecture details available for the stuff in the office family afaik. I know they're made using a custom UI foundation and C++ and not WPF/MFC
the performance probably is a direct result of everything being so low-level
I imagine the code itself is scary and wouldn't feel very organized to anyone who hasn't worked on it for ages
apparently visual studio code was made using this tool - anyway my question is how do they get the full desktop functionality in it including the file access on local disk? is that a feature of electron?
sorry visual studio code is a web application packaged by electron to run on desktop
nevermind, I think it has its own modules for giving the app certain desktop features "Electron native modules – Shell which provides APIs for desktop related tasks,"
What would be the name of the creational pattern for creating an object based on a string? For instance, the user enters the word "Dog" and the the system creates a Dog object? A Factory?
Parser is an idea, but a parser is something that matches a string to a syntax. Not much of syntax in this case. More like a simple map between a string and a class. I also thought about Lexer, but seems to be a terminology only used in compilers.
@BernardoBotelho A function which takes a string (GUID in my case) and returns an instance of an object class based on the string as parameters in the instance constructor... is a Factory Pattern.
Yeah, you were right about the object comment then
Factories can be an alright pattern to use but I usually prefer the mediator pattern for that.
Often when you have a class instantiating objects it also has the opportunity to maintain the set of objects, and if any sort of processing is needed for the entire set then using the mediator pattern works a little better in that scenario.