I have a service that reads 100 records from the database and processes them. I want to start up a second instance of the service on another machine. What's the best way to stop them treading on each other's toes?
Q: After joining two datatables dt1dt2, i would like to get all columns of dt2 and a column of dt1 how can I achieve this??
var asdf = (from dt1 in IDTRANS.AsEnumerable()
join dt2 in FINALTABLE.AsEnumerable()
on dt1.Field<string>("OrderId") equals dt2.Field<string>("OrderId")
select new
{
});
@satibel Usually in this test situation I just keep replying, that I would ask why is all 5-7 pages are necessary, and point out, that this kind of overwork shouldn't be accepted in the first place
I would like to export SQL database to excel with following requirements,
1 tab per table
All tables should retain relationships e.g. if I have categories and products table, I can't reference a category in excel products sheet if it doesn't exists just like SQL
Open to use C#, WCF Open data we...
@ntohl depends where you work, but there are often times where you need to hold the deadline and shell out the decentest product you can. So generally if someone doesn't panic and delivers something correct, even if it's not the best, it should be good, if they ask pertinent "why is this needed" questions that make it obvious what needs to be done first, it's great, but if they spend half the time complaining that it's unfair, they shouldn't work here for their own good.
@satibel it depends where You work, and also how much You consider yourself a responsible worker. If You accept to work on a condition, that there will be a lot of bugs/flaws, than it's still You who will be responsible for the failure
I'd rather have someone say "I have only 2 out of 7 functionalities, but they work flawlessly, and we can add the other ones after" than someone who rushes all the stuff, but that has an app that crashes every 5 min.
I had a test, where they kept insisting to concentrate on the task, but I did not. Also mentioning, to be creative, and find out a clever evasive (where You cut down the tasks in half) idea, is not a test environment. I go out, drink a tea or something, than maybe come up with something. But not like that
@1_bug What you're describing is commonly called a Marker Interface. It's an interface that signifies identity rather than functionality - as in, if I mark my class as certain type, but without specifying methods it must implement.
It has the benefits of anonymous functions (code locality, capturing local scope, not polluting your class with private methods that aren't really relevant to the rest of the class) with the clarity of named methods (support recursion, unregister from event handlers, not have ugly method blocks in the middle of your method)
anyone here knows how can I make my variables "final" in powershell? (copying them, not the pointer) I tried set-variable -option read only but it doesn't work
For instance, if I have complicated LINQ chains, sometimes I like to extract a complex predicate to a method - instead of items.Where(item => item.IsSomething && item.IsNotSomethingElse && item.Priority > whatever), do var isRelevant = Item item => items.Where(...); items.Where(isRelevant).
This allows the LINQ method chain to be clear and expressive, using a variable to give my relevance-logic a clear name instead of having a giant lambda inside every method call. But it means I define a local Func<Item, bool> variable just before, which is ugly.
And I often don't want to create a private IsRelevant method, because it isn't, umm, relevant to any other method.
This allows me to create a named IsRelevant method, but scope it to the FindRelevantItems method that needs it.
@misha130 I don't think it's terrible, but for several of its common use cases, local function offer a clearer and perhaps more performant alternative.
@SebastianL He links to an old article on MSDN that talks about the implicit allocations generated by anonymous methods. Local functions are implemented as private members on the same type. Anonymous methods create a new anonymous type, instantiate a copy of it, pass it a copy of the Closure object that captures the the local state, and dispose that object when it's done.
No matter how many times I read it, EF's [ForeignKey] and [InversePRoperty] annotations always elude me.
Can I create a navigation property that skips the linking table and goes straight to the linked entity? So I have tables for User, Group and UserGroupMembership, and I want my User to have a navigation property for Groups and my Group to have Users?
(Using EF6, Code-first with data annotations, fluent API if necessary)
Considering 90% of programs/websites/documentation I deal with doesn't have a dark theme, it just puts more strain on my eyes to constantly swap between something light themed and something dark themed.
VS dark theme is one of the better dark themes though. Some people seem to think pure white or pure lime on pure black is a good idea. :P
@misha130 Automapper between what? I need the three tables in any case, and I'd rather have EF automatically build me the mappings, rather than manually load groups for each user and users for each group.
The two reasons I can think of to use #If statements instead of doing a runtime check of a configuration value is a) if there's sensitive information in the debug code that you don't want shipped, or b) if the debug method is called very often in a tight loop, so that constantly checking if hte Debug flag is enabled is costly.
PHP isn't the problem. It's just that you're probably trying to write C# like PHP, meaning you're not using the full set of tools that the C# language and the .NET framework supply you with.
There's more to switching languages than learning new syntax. The main benefit comes when you learn the idiomatic ways of doing things, and the many, many things that the infrastructure can do for you.
Couldn't you just make the client request debug information and then only send it to clients that requested it? This way you can easily attach a debugging client, but other clients work normally. And you don't need multiple builds.
It feels like you'll just accumulate maintenance debt. You're creating a debug information system that is dependent on builds, instead of making one that's more flexible/better structured. Whenever you discover a problem in release, you'll need to rebuild in debug, distribute the debug build to wherever it needs to run, to finally actually debug.
That means that switching in a debug build for a release one has implications.
That means that tying your "output debug information" feature to the Debug build configuration means you can't (easily) have a build that's both optimized, and outputting debug info.
The execution speed between debug and release is huge.
I remember trying to profile a realtime application that wasn't running satisfactory, but the profiler would use release build and the speed wouldn't be an issue anymore. Simply having it as debug was the issue.
Can you give a good argument why you aren't just doing it the right way? Like I just said, your question began with you thinking the if directives were messy.
It's still better to get in the habit of writing good code. But I'm sure you'll find out in the future. Just trying to guide you towards making the better choices. :)
Please read the whole conversation satibel. The whole point was to avoid convoluted code, and the code you just wrote is exactly what the ConditionalAttribute is for.
Well, I'm learning how to write stories as a personal project. Nobody has to read them, I don't expect anything of it, but it's still a bad idea to form bad habits which stand in the way of creating something truly great.
That said, adding a [Conditional("DEBUG")] over a logging method is pretty much the canonical usage of the Conditional attribute. It's not a terrible choice. It's just an inflexible choice that might bite you later on.
@jhmckimm If someone asks what's the best way to do a wrong thing, giving them an answer isn't professional, it's short-sighted. Saying "You can do that like this, but it would be better to do the other thing" attempts to give a better, more thorough answer.
I agree that the stakes here aren't as high as they might seem to be from people's insistence. The worst thing that can happen is a slightly less maintainable application. No big deal. :)
Which is fine for me. I will happily rewrite this project when it nears a "finished" state. And I will cut out all of the crap that I discovered while writing it.
I bet the insistence that comes from us is because we've all taken the shortcut and we've all suffered the consequences of it. At first it feels hard to justify all the additional work involved in doing it properly, you feel like you're wasting time, so you just take the easy way. But in the end you'll find that the time saved will be wasted much more later.
We've all done hobby projects, that only we will have to work on. And we've all ended up having to redo it from scratch because it becomes impossible to maintain.
@WilliamMariager i remember my "first" bigger project for administrating multiple gameserver via rcon :) it was (still is) horrible. All the logic in one form where i hide/show controls/panels ...
I have this hobby project of my own. I think it's been rewritten close to 20 times now. But it's also a history of my development, going from barely knowing programming, all the way to where I am today.
Started out completely unstructured in some weird C/C++ hybrid because I didn't know the distinction, and it's now a proper C# project with all the proper patterns in place.
I personally don't really know too many pattern names, but I sure use them, even if unaware. SOLID and KISS is what I stick to, and patterns naturally emerge.
Another point about patterns is, for me personally, that it can be difficult to see their strengths when looking at them in a vacuum. It's much more organic to have the need for a more elegant solution and then finding a pattern that matches.
@RoelvanUden I feel like I see a post about that like bimonthly on workspace. Someone hired an intern thinking he was great, and it turns out he can't do any work on his own at all.
You have three objectives 1. Making it work. 2. Making it understandable/readable. 3. Making it perform well. If you sacrifice 2. in favor of 3., add comments.
There is no reason, I think, when you can justify a mess.
If you inherit and overwrite a method, it should be doing the same thing as the original, plus extras
It shouldnt completely change the way the original works
that's basically what it says.
Like, if I expect Car and StartEngine should start it, and you pass in a Volvo, StartEngine should still start the goddamn engine and not explode the tires