depends on how intoxicated you are. Just buzzed at the right amount can give truely awesome results. More often though I drink too much. Think im fucking killing it and the most awesome code ever. It generally runs but when im sober I want to find the developer and kill him slowly.
used both a little. CAD definitely is not my calling but I've heard developing extensions especially for solidworks you can charge super high rates and companies will pay because of a shortage of developers
I agree, most of the guys using these types of softwares aren't the most tech savvy, if you will, they only know construction specifications, anything on the software side they get frustrated very easily.
Very blue collar people, if you will. So they'll pay someone to just write software they want LONG before they try and research solutions.
In regards to the duct tape comment, I wish. There is a shocking amount to hanging up sheet metal and moving air around, especially in Commercial/Industrial applications.
@hilli_micha Yeah thats a lot of people. I wrote some software that converted folders of images into a long pdf document. If you just google jpg to pdf converter you can find the solution under $20. My price? A few hundred
Yup. There's actually a funny example of that for Revit. In Revit, every year the file type (.rvt/.rfa) has to be upgraded to the new software version and becomes incompatible with previous years. (Files saved in 2017, for example, cannot be used in previous years).
A lot of firms and such will need to take all their working files (which can be numerous) and upgrade them whenever a new version comes out.
Here's the kicker, Revit actually comes with a batch file that will do this automatically for you. It's a little bit round-about, but you can take an entire folder at a time and upgrade.
Well, there's this guy who literally took that, made it in .NET, stuck a GUI on it and charges $100 USD for it on the AutoDesk Marketplace. He's still going today lol
I made a similar add-in for my personal needs in like an hour. I've debated on sticking it on GitHub to be nice, but I almost want to charge for it.
Yeah, it just gets me that Revit has that batch file there, even more so there's a "readme.txt" file in the folder in the install directory that teaches you how to use it, but nope, people will pay $100 bucks for that add-in.
back in highschool I wrote a program called Mouse Trapper. Its for multiscreen setups so unless you are pressing the hotkey you can move the mouse to the far right for example and it wont go to the secondary screen. I did almost no marketing and a lot of people have downloaded it all things considered.
I still use it even
funny thing was the major "selling" point was a cute GUI and easy to use
because there are other programs that do what mine does, they are just ugly
@hilli_micha well... how many people do you know who will actually browse into program files haha
There's a LOT of interesting and intense arguments that have been made around how you should version your Web API. As soon as you say RESTful it turns into a religious argument where folks may just well quote from the original text. ;) Regardless of how you personally version your Web APIs, and side-stepping any arguments one way or the other, there's great new repository by Chris Martinez tha…
i'm making a repository pattern, has class "Boss", but sometimes the Boss has employees, so, im thinking Boss and BossWithEmployees class? god this is horrible
"For example, when using the Blog entity class defined below, the related Posts will be loaded the first time the Posts navigation property is accessed"
You may access the Employees only when needed. This way only than will be the join queried.
That works, but it essentially requires you to ditch your repositories in favor of unit-of-work pattern, and to use EF. I would highly recommend that because that's how you 'can have nice things'.
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Yeah, linq2db is one step higher architecturally, that is you work with linq. Which would allow you to return a derivative of IQueryable<T> and expose eager loads without having to explicitly implement a method for that yourself.
that means, the order that i wrote my join statement, is the order you should use to join the tables (being, A to B etc. dont try to figure it out yourself)
if you have 1 table with 10 rows, and one with 1 million, should it start with the big one or the small one ?
either loop 10 times, or 1 million times
it usually does a good job figuring it out (thats what all RDBM's do) but sometimes, the SQL is complex enough that it can get it wrong, thats when you have to say "ok ok ill just tell you"
Yeah, sounds like they introduced a whole new system of providing hints because they couldn't figure out how to make regular operations sane, predictable and performant. Oracle. :-)
its called nested loop, all RDBM's sometimes do them, because they can be faster than index joins etc
its not that oracle is bad at optimizing, i dont think any RDBMs can compete with oracle at that (correct me if im wrong), but that they also provide the ability to "hit the manual mode"
90% of the time it would figure out , hey this table is so small it would be much faster to just loop on 10 rows
making a mapping between 12 property in one class (which is spread across 3800 lines of code) and ~72 property in other class, and check it manually if it works
because there are no tests
rest property should be filled with some value, which might be 0, null, or some extremal value
basically there was an old form (win form) left to rot, and a new form, where You could check deals. The new form uses a DealChecker with its own Data format. I have to transform the legacy shit into that format, and switch the viewport. So if it was a buy deal, it will be a sell deal...
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan btw I just realised I know the verse without googling it. Holy shit pink floyd is great.
Ugh. I have a plugin DLL that requires app.config data (registering a managed provider for EF), but I don't want to have it edit the main EXE's app.config since it's an optional plugin.
Hi, really quick one, I have a console app that I do read line and parse the int, then subtract one... I'm a little confused as I had id=id--;, but, it seems it is delayed by a line or something as I get out of bounds... if I pause the app and go to immediate window, I can type the following:
@Nerdintraining I wanted to throw my opinion in there real quick as a Winforms dev, Winforms is "simple" sometimes but I've heard that WPF controls are less prone to flickering on update. I guess if I had the choice I'd try WPF next time.
See stackoverflow.com/search?q=flicker+[winforms] for a preview of the kind of stuff I've had to deal with. Even with updates capped at 2 "FPS", flickering can still happen if you're not careful.
A.Fake<IFileService>() creates a mock of my IFileService with default implementations; it handles async by default and tracks all calls without you having to set up handlers for them in advance of actually executing the code under test.