hmm can I test if "this method has not changed the object's internal state" in a unit test? Without having to update said test each time I might add a new external visible state?
Any one have a good Walkthrough on how to create a git-repository on a shared network drive and then clone it to a local repository? I failed at the ones that i found
and good mornin' sama-sensai-senpai-sensukadaaaaan
I typed: *$ git remote add origin file://\\nacifs2\it\Azubi\MyName\projekt1* result: fatal: 'C:/Program Files/Git/nacifs2itAzubimyNameprojekt1' does not appear to be a git repository fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
MIME Multipart is an extension to the HTTP spec to transmit more than one object as part of the same request or response. Normally, if I access an HTTP resource or a POST data to a website, this data is just one thing - a file I'm downloading, for instance. MIME/Multipart specifies a way of signifying that an HTTP stream contains multiple parts, each with its own headers and content-type.
I have been writing iPhone applications for some time now, sending data to server, receiving data (via HTTP protocol), without thinking too much about it. Mostly I am theoretically familiar with process, but the part I am not so familiar is HTTP multipart request. I know its basic structure, but ...
Urrrrrrggggggg. Nothing quite like dealing with bad input data.
Am now going to replace my simple "Find entity where field X equals Y" with "Find entity where field X is either Y or Y with backslashes replaced with slashes. Or the other way around".
I wonder if I should write a regex for it, or simply create all permutations and search them. It's simple, since there can only be one / or \ in the string (it's a domain\username)
@satibel Nothing really. The main issue with Java, especially for C# developers, is that it's has a very conservative roadmap. For C# users who are used to massive languages changes every couple of years (generics, then linq, then async/await), it feels glacier-slow and ancient.
And if you've only done Java, there's nothing wrong with it. It has the features you need, and does the things you want. It's quite stable and well tested. Alas, if you're a C# developer, it feels stiffing and limited. Like taking a massive leap back in time.
Part of it is that in .NET-land Microsoft constantly innovates and releases new libraries, whereas in Java-land the core remains more conservative, and there's more reliance on a 3rd party ecosystem. You can probably find plenty of Java libs that can do single-line file I/O.
I personally put the full error into the debug log and then show a generic error to the user. At places where I don't expect something ofc, handle everything that you know can happen to provide a good UX
@satibel if it's not too complex and you think the external lib has a bug it's not bad. You just have to include it into the infrastructure of your company so you are the only one who has reinveted that specific solution
Yeah, implementation matters, but these kind of math-with-threads-and-thread-synchronization don't really show real world performance. That is, unless your real world is purely mathematical (which is possible).
in the java case the programmer just asks for a pool of size "core count", in the c# code the programmer goes baout manually building 1 thread at a time (where's the equiv pool?)
also something tells me that the java call out might produce something different if that was put in the c# example too
@RoelvanUden well in the rest example I expose the meta data and build objects dynamically in my js client code ... I rarely talk to endpoints in C# these days but when I do I gen a bunch of classes from the service meta as a one off thing instead of using t4
quite often you want a manually defined entity on the client side so you can hook in extra functions that perhaps gneerate more queries to get more data (eg children of the object)
hard to template that sort of thing
I do see the value in T4 though ... used to use DB first EF
that was all about its T4's for a ton of stuff
Although something about generating an enum from the data you have in your db just shits on my idea of what n enum is (from a code point of view) ... surely thats another entity rather than an enum
that sort of stuff used to annoy me
more so when you had a team and everyone had different data in their db's so the code would break on compiles
the other guy with me spent an hour trying to figure out why his files weren't copying, turns out the path was something like c:\users\gérard, and the program was using the ansi encoding vs ascii for the file name.
the net result is that everything selected in the first grid results in a column being generated in the output at the bottom for that piece of metadata
class Foo
{
public int Id { get;set; }
public string Name { get;set; }
}
that second grid on the query builder had to be completely custom because telerik was too dumb to think that data might need to come from more than 1 place
you prob just need to do what I do
I forced a SSO auth token to be sent to the server on every ajax request from the client
I built a custom SSO server though based on top of ident framework (that was a pain in the ass to setup)
from what I understand with sharepoint it supports the provider model so you could bolt in the same mechanism i'm using