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05:13
Hi anyone here ?
 
2 hours later…
07:31
Anyone struggled with this ..
gist: 69722e707edd5b12e2bd7d25312c184f, 2017-03-19 07:33:08Z
An error occurred while calling method 'ConfigureServices' on startup class 'Startup'. Consider using IDbContextFactory to override the initialization of the DbContext at design-time. Error: This method could not find a user secret ID because the application's entry assembly is not set. Try using the ".AddUserSecrets(string userSecretsId)" or  ".AddUserSecrets<TStartup>()" method instead.
 
2 hours later…
09:12
In C#, does it happen like I use == operator in the code, but when compiled the code uses !(!=) ? If not, why do I need to overload both == and != operator, if I plan to use only one of them? I read stackoverflow.com/q/6916884/3395716 but I only understood that compiler can't predict one operator overload from other. I don't get why the other operator is needed at all.
10:07
Meow (≧▽≦)
I would prefer writing an operator in my custom class/struct.
bool Myclass.Equals(object);
 
2 hours later…
12:36
Hi. I'm working on mvc. I would like to get value from button to a text box. I want to do it dynamically. For instance, I have a model where properties like title, date, etc are there. What I want to do is, I would like to value of title property and set the value of title to the button in view page. Here is the code i have pasted. <input type="button" name="btnSeven" id="btnSeven" [email protected] onclick="setText7(this)"> can anyone help me with this?
dont forget you gotta go to the server in order to set anything on SignatureModel.SignatureTitle
@misha130 How can I achieve that?
send a request to the server
13:20
0
Q: how to pas parameters using Post to page in c#

Ram SinghI have a website from which i have to login to another website.both websites accessing same DB. i know we can do it using DB but client is not accepting that. so we have create one intermediate page to do this. We tried it by sending data in query string. but when we are doing encryption the size...

please help me
hey
Hello Paul
Could you please check my question, if you could help me in any how
I ignore everything to do with networking
Not my cup of tea and no interest in it either.
Sorry
okay thanks
 
7 hours later…
20:21
Hey, is there someone who is willing to help me understand some SignalR code?
i can try
just talk in here
well, i am not sure if it's appropriate to paste everything here
nobody else is talking, it's cool
I am trying to make a simple user counter with SignalR, but for unknown reasons to me I am getting this error in the console. I am very new to signalR and asp.net, but what I have make sense to me, and I don't know why am I getting the error. Can somebody please help me solve this and possibly explain why it is happening?

Here is the code in the Index view.

<div class="row">
Number of online users <strong id="counter"></strong>
<script src="@Url.Content("~/Scripts/jquery-3.1.1.min.js")"></script>
this is from a previous question, i used it
it is what is in the view
and here is the hub
public class CounterHub : Hub
{
static long counter = 0;
public override System.Threading.Tasks.Task OnConnected()
{
counter = counter + 1;
Clients.All.UpdateCount(counter);
return base.OnConnected();
}

public override System.Threading.Tasks.Task OnDisconnected(bool stopCalled)
{
counter = counter - 1;
Clients.All.UpdateCount(counter);
return base.OnDisconnected(stopCalled);
}
}
so, i guess it all starts from the hub, right?
one sec
reading
20:27
ook
let me know when you're done
and thanks btw
i think this counterHub.client.UpdateCount = function (count) {
$("#counter").text(count);
}
needs to be before you start the hub
well, could be
the code actually works
should be
i just don't know how
i wil change this part then
oh really?
i'm still learning signalr too
a book i was reading last week said to put that before you start the hub so it can be registered when you start the hub
but, maybe something changed?
20:29
well, i am kind of new to programming in general, i've been struggling with stuff for the past couple of months
hm, yeah, makes sense
but basically, it's like RPC if you're familiar with that, you create a method in C#, and you can call it from JS and/or create a method in JS and call it from C#
and what actually happens
yes, this part i understand
what would be best form me is some brief linear explenation of the code
do you think you can help with that?
yeah, the js part says, when the page loads, create a new hub from the $.connection object called counter hub, this has to match what the C# hub name is i'm pretty sure
then you start it, and then you register a method that the C# side can call called "UpdateCount"
yes, this part with the updateCount
i am not sure where that thing is coming from
is it something that is just in my code
because i didn't really find it in the documentation
the C# class sets a long counter at 0
everytime a client connects (another browser), you increase the counter by 1 and let all the clients know the new count, via UpdateCount (which is the name of your js function)

When somebody disconnects, you let them know the count via the same method, just decrement count by 1
yep, the updateCount is something you created, it's a method name that you want to call from C#
you could have named it
fuckEverything() if you wanted, you'd just have to update the C# method to call fuckEverything()
20:36
oookay...
and last thing
does that make sense?
yeah, it does
return base.OnConnected();
can you explain this part?
it's calling the base class, the .net class's OnConnected method... because you still want it to behave as expected
it has other stuff it has to do when clients connect
i dont know what that other stuff is
all clear?
20:40
think so.
so
this is the UpdateCount function , i guess, and from here i can change it's name if i want to : counterHub.client.UpdateCount = function (count) {
$("#counter").text(count);
}
yeah
i am such a noob :D
but thanks, this helped
what it "does" is grabs whatever element has the html id of "counter", and then throws the count in it
we're all noobs in some way or another
im a signalr noob too
so don't worry lol
how come from so many people on this site there can be just two in the c# chatroom
it's the weekend
things are a bit more active during the weekdays
 
2 hours later…
23:04
Hey, while working on a question on stackoverflow, I came to wonder... Is there a collection type (or name for it) that has a given ORDER, but no index-based access?
I have basically a "lazy-weaklist" (List<WeakReference<T>>) - which is lazy in that it "ignores" references which are removed when enumerating. But it doesn't actually remove the references until a purge method is called. - Thus when using index-access you can still get those outdated elements. And hence looping over all elements can give different results from looping over the indices.
Which (I think) is counter intuitive and hence I wish to remove index-access altogether.
@paul23 That sounds like something in the same category as the return value of .Where, which I don't have a name for
That's just IEnumerable?
I don't think enumerable implies ordered
indeed, the Dictionary, which is unordered, implements IEnumerable
Although in the vast majority of cases, enumerables are ordered in some sense
@milleniumbug One could make arguments that Dictionary is ordered as well
unordered in theory, ordered in practice, I guess
23:15
it's ordered, as in, you can iterate over it multiple times and it will have the same order. it's unordered, as in, you can't rely on the specific order between program runs and after calling an operation that modifies a collection
Well, in practice you can (and I do) rely on that
it's an implementation detail
@KendallFrey Nope, but that's what .Where returns (linq)
I'd say just implement ICollection<T> or sth
@paul23 I wasn't referring to the return type, just a general category of things which includes the return values of Where calls
I wish to have "insert(index)" - it's just getting an element from an index isn't "logical".
23:17
If getting an element from an index isn't logical, I don't see how inserting at an index can be
Yeah, now that I wrote it out I'm also wondering about that... Actually I can argue for "both ways" now.
I assume that Insert(v, i) followed immediately by Get(i) would always result in v
It seems almost axiomatic
The argument against is: It is illogical. The argument to keep it ([] access, insert/remove) is "well the underlying core is a list anyways, so performancewise it can speed things up while building the structure. (And as long as the garbage collector hasn't run it IS actually a list).
I guess the question you need to answer for yourself is what do you need it to do?
Well basically to give a set of elements which are ordered and I can quickly iterate over. And do things like "InsertBefore(otherElement)".
23:26
InsertBefore throws it in the air again
There could be no way to do that efficiently
even Insert by itself is probably slow
however, InsertBefore doesn't require indexes
True, though I now implemented it using indexof + insert.
which is fine as an implementation
though possibly suboptimal
The crucial part is that indexes are meaningful internally but not externally
Ah that's true, I don't have make the internal "list" have the same interface as the whole class.

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