Heh. I think this is very true of the original stories as well. It's easy to be a brilliant detective who can divine the truth from barest nuance, when you're, well, written that way.
Holmes displays brilliant chains of deduction that, when submitted to modern scrutiny, are simply luck (or, well, plot).
As in, there are any numbers of alternate explanations that could match the facts easily, but Holmes deduces the right one because he's got Plot Armor.
I remember the second story was about some kind of a circus african man from some unknown tribe who is only 3 feet tall that climbed through the attic to murder some fellow
I cant deduct this
wait now I am going on how the original author was silly, but I just wanted to say steven moffat is silly
Hmm. EF question - I have a list of Tuple<string,string> signifying Category and Subcategory, and I want to find items that match it, like indicators.Where(ind => tuples.Any(t => ind.Category == t.Item1 && ind.Subcategory == t.Item2)). Meaning I want to find items that match a pair of values.
But EF can't do an Any query on a Tuple, just on primitive values.
given a list of ids, I can query all relevant rows by:
context.Table.Where(q => listOfIds.Contains(q.Id));
But how do you achieve the same functionality when the Table has a composite key?
I want to store a List using EF4 in my db, I am using AddRange() method but encountering the error "Collection was modified; enumeration operation may not execute"
There's a MultiSelectList in my HTML, I am saving it's values in a List. I want to save multiple records depends on the multiple selection in MultiSelect List
I don't know where the second foreach comes in. Is that the entirety of SaveItemList?
(Also, why are you called SaveChanges for each item, instead of calling it once after Adding all items?)
You have two foreach statements you've shown - one over _itemMaster.ColorsList, the other over whatever Items is. In one of these statements, you're modifying the collection you're foreaching over inside the loop.
I went for a relatively ugly hack. First retrieve all rows that match "Category in [Categories] and Subcategory in [Subcategories]" - which can accidentally retrieve a row that matches "Cat1,Subcat2" even though I searched for "Cat1,Subcat1" and "Cat2,Subcat2".
But it still narrows it down, since these cross-categories are relatively rare in my data.
Then I do a second match, with the tuple, in-memory.
Anyone have any suggestions on learning how to pull data from SQL database and how its specifically parsed into memory? Basically, I usually use Entity Framework now I gotta use Dapper. Im familiar with SQL queries, as in, I understand joins and stuff, but the big question mark is sort of how 3 joined tables get mapped into memory if that makes sense.
Im drawing the blank in how the data selected from the DB gets entered into memory by C#.
It's probably worth remarking that Entity Framework queries are deconstructed by the EF Linq provider, and used to generate SQL, so you only pull back the data you need to populate the entity objects
And I guess? it only reads rows from the recordset when you enumerate the query result, and only as many as you read, not all of them
The basic structure is that the library takes your query and constructs a DB query, executes it and returns a tuple of values for each row. This tuple is then used to generate an entity class, using reflection.
How can I evaluate an expression in visual studio without running the project, sometimes I want to know the value of, for example: DateTime.Now. Do I have to write a code and show it in console window??
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan @TomW Thanks. That makes sense... The hardest part for me to visualize is joins. So say I do a SELECT and join twice, so 3 tables are involved in total... How does this get actually put into objects with respect to how the data is actually combined? For example, when you do JOINs in a query, visually, all the data is displayed in one table basically... But in memory, you cant just smash 3 classes into one, does that make sense?
as far as I remember it's a cartesian map and it crosses the results and checks when an occurrence happens more than once let´s say if you have John in table one and in table 2 it will cross those tables and get the rows where that name is repeated. I may be wrong tho
@Mr.Toxy Yeah that totally makes sense. The thing Im lost about is for example in the join itself, we have Name which is from Customers and Date from Orders, right? So when mapped into memory in C#, there is no model which contains both a Name and a Date. The Customers model has the Name and the Orders model has the date, right? So how would it be stored in memory joined together in the same way it is displayed on that page?
Its almost like C# would have to have a viewmodel called CustomersOrders which now has a Name and a Date, and then store the data into that joint model... Thats where Im lost lol
because if your using like EF you have different models yes but they are linked together (relations) like in sql, so they should retrieve the information much like in sql
The other thing with dapper is, its raising questions as to should most of the stuff Im doing even be in C# or just as stored procedures
Unfortunately, I seem to always be working with guys who are less experienced than myself (which isnt to say much; dont worry lol) so Im really in the dark here, but the challenge is good because its forcing me to learn more about the SQL Relational/C# relationship
I didn't. But the guy who did did because he thought it would be good for performance reasons. But the question I guess is, is Dapper something that is used "here and there" or is it normal to be writing an entire suite of repos and even using Identity all with straight Dapper?
It's definitely gotten complex fast, compared to EF, thats for sure
the thing with the ORMs is that they give you the possibility of, more easily, make changes to a database without knowing it and you can start and any point of it's development. You can add/remove tables without worrying about whats behind
@TeeSee the EF query generates SQL, there's no intermediate .net type as such. AFAIK it only creates entity instances as results, not for any join calculations etc
The join is done in SQL and the results returned to EF
@TomW got it, so it must basically just populate the models as-is and then with LINQ it "appears" as though they're join such that they are in an actual visual table join
The LINQ statement if you have one is actually called an expression tree, which is a hierarchical data structure that retains all the type information so it can be inspected and translates
The LINQ statement if you have one is actually called an expression tree, which is a hierarchical data structure that retains all the type information so it can be inspected and translated
The EF data context comprehends your intent by inspecting the expression tree and generating SQL from it that satisfies that intent
@TomW thanks, that was helpful! Btw do you know of a way to actually "see" how SQL Server parses the results of a query in a non-table way. In other words, SQL Server must be sending a string back to Entity Framework somehow, of the result data, huh?
when I do queries in SSMS manually, results are always just displayed visually as a table
@Mr.Toxy I have to admit, I'm pretty anti-Google because I have ethical issues with all of this tracking... Not to the point of Richard Stallman, but close to it lol. But aside from that, my friend was searching for a lot of programming/CS stuff lately and his search screen changed funny
a special popup came up and it said "You're speaking our language, you up for a challenge?" Then it took him to a blacked out terminal window inside google
presented him with 5 timed algorithm challenges, and if you get all 5 right in the right time, you get flown to Google
Hes not making it up either, I saw screenshots
Pretty sure they do it if you do a lot of Java/Python googling as thats your choice in languages and my friend has done that whereas I do not. They've never displayed me anything, but they probably also know I've bashed the shit out of them before and I dont care haha
But thats still pretty nuts. Theyre tracking people to the point they can make hiring decisions off of your searches
Yeah DateTime doesn't allow you to have just a date part with no time, but if you only have a date and the time is irrelevant you can just ignore the time part
I have prepared some P/Invoke wrappers of the memory functions from stdlib:
public class Memory
{
[DllImport("libc", EntryPoint = "malloc")]
public static extern IntPtr Allocate(uint size);
[DllImport("libc", EntryPoint = "calloc")]
public static extern ...
foreach is helpful because it forces you to declare a loop variable and won't compile if you don't, and you can't accidentally use the wrong index variable when indexing into an array in a for or while loop, for example.
If I were marking your work, I'd ask you to explain why you deliberately used while when it makes it less obvious by reading the code what your intent was
Actually, SqlDataReader is kind of like an enumerator. Enumerators are like a cursor that holds your place when iterating over a collection. What foreach does is gets an enumerator for you under the covers and sets the loop variable from it. A SqlDataReader is similar, it has a boolean to tell you whether there are any more elements and a method to move it to the next element, just like an enumerator
Does your assignment specifically say "write some code that uses foreach"?
What's the translation of 'eigen' in this context? I remember when I studied physics there was a concept in quantum mechanics called an eigenvalue, coined by a Dutch physicist I think, and a professor of mine admitted he was never comfortable that he had understood the implication of the word, he thought it was perhaps difficult to translate