Resharper question: I got thousands of files in my solution called potato.one.js, potato.two.js and they're all being analysed by resharper. How do I add a mask so that anything with potato in the filename is excluded? potato.* ?
@HamreenAhmad You are asking people to take time out of their work, stop everything they're doing to give you hands-on support. This is not a reasonable request.
@KendallFrey mm, that's right. Let me clarify. I mean that first used the Mutex and MFF and would like to know whether it is possible to use them in this way (I understand that there are other solutions which are more appropriate)
@RoelvanUden Sensai, do you know the answer to thiss? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/40630835/visual-studio-nodes-in-projectexplorer-for-partialclasses
@DefinitelyMidTwo No, no, no. No no. No. I've worked with people who thought it was a good solution to make code more modular (it isn't) and to avoid merge conflicts, but neither of those are good reasons to use it.
@DefinitelyMidTwo Nah, partial classes were made so generated code and human code work together. For example, WinForms generates a designed class and you can plug methods into it without tinkering with the generated stuff. That's what it was for.
Hi all. Say you're creating a VM for ASP.NET MVC model. It has some list properties that it needs to populate async. Where should the async calls take place to make the VM ready for the view to use? You don't call async stuff in a c'tor.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I'd do a review, figure out if it was the right tool for the job, if it was use it and establish a standard ... any dev that can't get their head round the established standard should be fired
@Kieran if you structure your code correctly (more so in C# than any other language) it should near almost read like a native spoken language (like english) and document itself
I'm sick of people coming in to interviews telling me they know this and that tech because they used it once but they string out the explanation of it to make it sound extensive then you ask them to use that and every task is literally "oh I didn't do it like that last time"
@War - Personal opinion - if someone doesn't know a technology but is willing to pick it up and learn it, would you rather hear just that or bullshit padding to make it sound like they can be immediately dropped in?
I had a guy who banged on about loving the new stuff in .Net Core in response to a job ad that stated all over it "async stack using C#" and when faced with a task just crumbled