I've seen fluent builder implementations which were nice at first glance, but ultimately I felt they weren't really necessary.
What was that scheduling library? Quartz.NET? That had complicated fluent builders.
// Trigger the job to run now, and then repeat every 10 seconds
ITrigger trigger = TriggerBuilder.Create()
.WithIdentity("trigger1", "group1")
.StartNow()
.WithSimpleSchedule(x => x
.WithIntervalInSeconds(10)
.RepeatForever())
.Build();
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@RoelvanUden Kinda sucks, because that test was EZ AF and it was rather BS
Easy test...
I don't know. Guess I havn't been challenged with my programming for a year and therefor my head is working a bit too slow. I know programming, just that there wasn't enough time to solve the logic and then write the code.
Hi there guys :D I've got another "Can this be done more efficiently?" question... I've got this eyesore of an if/else chain:
if (query.StandardId.HasValue)
model = GetDocumentsForStandard(query.StandardId.Value);
else if (query.StandardControlId.HasValue)
model = GetDocumentsForStandardControl(query.StandardControlId.Value);
else if (query.ImplementationId.HasValue)
model = GetDocumentsForImplementation(query.ImplementationId.Value);
// 10 more of these
@Cerbrus The problem here is that you have 12 different control branches that are chosen based on the existence or non-existence of 12 different parameters.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan PBKDF2 is a password-based key-derivation function, which takes your password as input and does an algorithm on it to produce a key. This always yields the same key. And the iterations merely mean that the output key is used as input key again to do it again, thus increasing load factor. HMAC is a form of data authentication, meaning it is used to sign the encrypted payload to check it's not tampered with. I don't know Identity framework, but I presume it adds a HMAC to avoid tampering
public QueryType QueryType
{
if (query.StandardId.HasValue)
return QueryType.Standard;
if (query.StarndardControlId.HasValue)
return QueryType.StandardControl;
/// etc.
}
I bought Mass Effect 1 via Origin a few years ago. Didn't work. Just flat-out didn't work on two different machines using two different Windows versions. Asked for a refund. They said "yeah, that happens a lot, here's your money".
I recall the conversation I last had with EA going something like ... Yeh the route trace may show that we are dropping the packets but it's clearly your ISP as others are able to connect fine, maybe you need faster internet?
I sent that to virgin who at the time were supplying me a connection to EA with <20ms pings @100mb/s they replied with a whole bunch network diagnostics ripping apart EA's network setup
claiming if they knew how to setup servers properly they wouldn't be blaming the world for their poor service
Hey, guys, could you take a look at my question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/39613831/how-to-solve-asp-net-web-api-cors-preflight-issue-when-using-put-and-delete-requ