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mr5
mr5
02:59
o/
posted on May 12, 2017 by Scott Hanselman

Tons of great announcements this week at the BUILD conference. I'll slowly blog my take on some of the cooler features, but for now here's a rollup of the major blog posts for developers: Announcing .NET Core 2.0 Preview 1 Announcing ASP.NET Core 2.0 Preview 1 for .NET Web Developers You can download and get started with .NET Core 2.0 Preview 1 right now, on Windows, Linux and macOS: .NET Co

user7917367
<asp:TemplateField> <EditItemTemplate>
<asp:TextBox ID="txCTFact" runat="server" Text='<%# Eval("CT_Factor") %>' Width="50px" onchange="validateCTfactor(this);" />
</EditItemTemplate>
</asp:TemplateField>
user7917367
function validateCTfactor(val) {
var v = val.id.split('_')[1];
var text = document.getElementById('GridSubMeter_' + v + '_txCTFact').value;
var re = new RegExp("^[0-9]+(\.[0-9]{1,1})?$");
if (re.test(text)) {
return true;
}
else {
alert("Required Field with Only numbers allowed with 1 decimal place in CT Factor");
return false;
}
}
03:42
how am i supposed to use async and await for my code?
is there a simple example a noob like me can use to get started?
mr5
mr5
anyone dare to translate this into LINQ?
Dan
Dan
I have a class, class Foo : ISomething { }, however I need to subclass it as an attribute (for various reasons I can't inherit from Attribute directly on it)
But then I end up multiple class inheritance, or more strictly; I can't do it.
Is there any other strategy for extending a given class into an attribute that isn't prevented by MCI?
Off hand, all I can think of is simple composition; like a decorator/wrapper.
what are you talking about?
mr5
mr5
You don't name a class with a prefix of I
Dan
Dan
Yea, I'm not
mr5
mr5
03:55
it should be used for interfaces only
Dan
Dan
    public class FooSomething : ISomething
    {
        public void DoStuff() { /* implements from ISomething */ }
    }

    public class FooSomethingAttribute : Attribute, ISomething
    {
        public ISomething Something { get; } = new FooSomething();

        public DoStuff() { this.Something.DoStuff(); }
    }
mr5
mr5
o
Dan
Dan
^^ Treating the Attribute version as a wrapper to the encapsulated implementation is all I can come up with.
MCI is forbidden of course, otherwise I'd just FooSomethingAttribute : Attribute, FooSomething { ... }
mr5
mr5
btw, I'm new to C#. Maybe you can use partial classes?
Dan
Dan
No, all that'd do is spread the class definition over multiple ... definitions or files
I think I'd need some IL magic weaving to somehow relate FooSomething to FooSomethingAttribute
mr5
mr5
03:58
I still don't get what you are trying to achieve
Is it like extending the functionality of an implemented function from an interface?
Dan
Dan
I'm trying to achieve a non-attribute implementation of ISomething and an attribute one that is the non-attribute implementation. But I can't because MCI.
So I guess I'm answering my own question because re-reading my last message is a code smell from hell
mr5
mr5
what's MCI?
Dan
Dan
multiple class inheritance
mr5
mr5
oic
you want to do multiple class inheritance?
Dan
Dan
04:04
No, I don't
But I do, lol
mr5
mr5
Does Attribute implements ISomeThing?
Dan
Dan
No
I really wish Attribute was an interface.
why do you want an attribute again?
mr5
mr5
I can't see any MCI from your example
doesent multiple inheritance work great?
Dan
Dan
04:04
@AdanRamirez Separate implementations to expose from the assembly.
@AdanRamirez lol, in languages that support it? Yes.
multiple multiple inheritance?
Dan
Dan
@mr5 The issue is that Attribute is a class, but so is FooSomething. I want a class to inherit both; however you just can't. I don't want to reimplement ISomething for the attribute, so the only choice is to wrap the FooSomething in the attribute version, and dispatch calls to it (as a wrapper/proxy)
I guess there's no harm in that's how to do that.
so multiple multiple inheritance then?
mr5
mr5
which both you are referring here?
you want some parts to have multiple inheritance with a name Ione
and Itwo
Dan
Dan
04:07
No, and no.
you want a class with some of the things in the multiple inheritance?
Dan
Dan
Nevermind; proxied composition is what I'll go with.
mr5
mr5
don't interchange the word inherit from implements although they share the same syntax but does different things
Dan
Dan
@mr5 Is that directed at me?
mr5
mr5
I mean, just to distinguish the interface from a class, you use different words for each. that is why I am confused
Dan
Dan
04:11
Ah, yes. Didn't realize I'd done that.
For the record, anything that extends something to change the behaviour is "implementing" the thing it extends; it doesn't need to be an interface. You're merely providing a new set of "implementations" to satisfy the contract of the supertype
However, it is typically used in the context of an interface or pure-abstract class
mr5
mr5
yeah
I know some of them words
anyway, you might want to try this challenge:
hi guys anyone who is good in sitecore?
mr5
mr5
I only know a good dog
@Dan that's what in my mind when I said that. lol
seriously, how do you merge those set of modified entries from a LINQ result into a single object?
04:36
hello everyone
04:53
hi
i cant seem to get this linq working
 Process[] processlist = Process.GetProcesses();  processlist.Where(x => x.MainWindowTitle == "Applications").Select(x => x.MainWindowHandle)
throws a 'cast' error
cant convert from IE to 'intptr'
mr5
mr5
you should be using string.Equals and not == operator
still throwing an error
made it worse actually
mr5
mr5
var handleList = processlist.Where(x => x.MainWindowTitle?.Equals("Applications")).Select(x => x.MainWindowHandle)
@AdanRamirez how 'bou da'?
'cannot implicitly convert type bool?' to 'bool'
mr5
mr5
you sure MainWindowTitle is a string?
05:06
it's an intptr
mr5
mr5
so why did you compare it into a string literal then?
because i am dumb T_T
what should i do?
mr5
mr5
you should go to school
05:23
@AdanRamirez please maintain chat etiquitte
is your problem resolved?
@AdanRamirez wat ?
I have a problem testing a code.

I have try to implement a "Lock Hierarchies" technique to prevent dead lock. According to be testing method (using Thread.Sleep() ) , it can detect whether the dead lock occur.

Could you please tell me if there is reliable way to test my "Lock Hierarchies" class?
not sure how to handle this flag
what context
05:31
@Webruster yeah
Are you guy, @TGMCians,@Webruster talking to me?
I am not sure whether you are addressing to previous guy
@SunMaungOo im referring to @AdanRamirez , thanks by d way
@AdanRamirez, why are you converting IntPtr to string?

I would advise you to re-think the problem because maybe you are missing the point if you are converting IntPtr to string.

If you are sure that you needed to convert it the IntPtr to string, you could use (Marshal.PtrToStringAuto) [https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ewyktcaa.aspx]
05:49
what am I doing here?
06:02
@SunMaungOo solved it
 var test = yeahStuff.results.Where(x => x.mainWindowTitle == "Applications")
                    .Select(x => x.mainWindowHandle);
had to get processes into a list and add each title and handle onto a class list
 
1 hour later…
07:12
ohayou
Hmm, I have no idea why could this be giving me source null exception:

IObservable<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> searchedStrings = searchText.
            Where(x => !string.IsNullOrEmpty(x)).
            Throttle(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)).
            DistinctUntilChanged().
            Select(SearchForText).
            Switch();
First off, there is a null check
@KamilSolecki Shin Sekai Yori for sure.
@KamilSolecki SearchForText can return null?
Also, good morning.
It cannot. Currently, it is a dummy code that looks like this:

private async Task<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> SearchForText(string searchedText)
        {
            Task<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> task = returnNiceVMs(searchedText);

            return await task;
        }
And what does returnNiceVMs look like?
and ReturnNiceVMs returns an Ienumerable with 10x viewmodels hardcoded inside
private async Task<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> returnNiceVMs(string searchedText)
        {
            List<ReminderBoxViewModel> reminders = new List<ReminderBoxViewModel>();

            for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++)
            {
                reminders.Add(new ReminderBoxViewModel());
            }

            return reminders;
        }
Dummy code again
07:24
That's an async function without await.
Otherwise looks fine.
Yeah it is for now, since I just wanted something to test if its even working.
Though, could that be a problem?
I mean, it just runs synchronously
@RoelvanUden Also, too late :) Im halfway through 5th episode of erased, mainly because it was already sunny outside and I decided its high time to go to sleep.
Alright :3
@KamilSolecki Not sure, it might be. I don't know :/
how do i tell my line of code to wait until above line of code completely finishes?
If it's a Task, await it.
Well, if programming synchronously, it just happens.
07:36
why would i 'await' if i dont know how long it takes for the line of code to finish?
i need it asap
if line takes 1.75 seconds, i cant just do thread.sleep(2000)
... What.
You just await however long it takes.
It's done when it's done.
@AdanRamirez maybe show us your code, so we can see what is actually going on.
Perhaps but a cancellation token on it if you want a timeout.
Process[] processlist = Process.GetProcesses();
if i dont await this the list is not completely filled
... That's synchronous code. That's the entire list.
07:37
Thread.Sleep(2000);
this ensures i dont get an exception
delete this line
You're making no sense at all.
What the actual fuck are you doing.
if i remove thread sleep i get exception because list isnt fully populating
Process[] processlist = Process.GetProcesses();

            Thread.Sleep(2000);

            foreach (Process process in processlist)
            {
                yeahStuff.results.Add(new Items() { mainWindowHandle = process.MainWindowHandle, mainWindowTitle = process.MainWindowTitle });
            }
Ok one more thing
Is it maybe
grab all main window titles, add the title and handle into a list class
07:38
that this all happens in one thread
list<class>
and in the meanwhile another thread tries to work with the list?
> if i remove thread sleep i get exception because list isnt fully populating
 var books = yeahStuff.results.Where(x => x.mainWindowTitle == "Books")
                .Select(x => x.mainWindowHandle).ToList();
This is wrong.
07:39
'books' get's an exception of: 'out of index'
You get the list, AS IT IS AT THAT TIME, and it won't magically get new stuff later.
unless i put thread.sleep(2000)
GOD DAMMIT DO YOU EVEN READ
yea i read and you make sense but i keep getting exception
So don't spew your illogical statements and let's deal with the facts, okay?
Okay, you get an exception, which exception SPECIFICALLY and where
07:41
sec
Because it seriously looks like you're multi-threading without having a clue how that works :P
can i post my entire program? does not use any classes
just a console app
  public class stuff
        {
            public List<Items> results { get; set; }
        }

        public class Items
        {
            public string mainWindowTitle { get; set; }
            public IntPtr mainWindowHandle { get; set; }
        }

        private  void button_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
        {
            stuff yeahStuff = new stuff()
                                  {
                                      results = new List<Items>()
                                  };
sorry T_T
okay the program does: closes mainwindows with certain names first
then once they are all closed, get processes in a list
and add each process' main window title and handle onto another list
List<Items> results
once that's done open up a bunch of programs
and place them in specific spots in my screen
if i remove thread.sleep i get an exception complaining that the process arent found
it seems that 'processlist' did not get enough time to get all processes
Yeah, Process.Start returns before the process is booted. Just .Wait() for each process when starting them up.
07:47
.WaitForExit()?
Try Google'ing that one for yourself. Now you know exactly where the problem is, go from there.
As I thought, it was multithreading :D
process.start is multi-threading?
And from all your earlier statements, nobody could have guessed this. Because you were saying the most absurd shit ever - querying for processes and THEN WAITING so that the query result magically include new processes.
Process.Start is a REQUEST to the OS. It doesn't mean the request is completed at the return of .Start. Thus, you have to wait until the OS dealt with it.
good rageful morning
07:52
Surely is
Hey @ntohl
@RoelvanUden you are my waifu
2
@AdanRamirez Its simple. Imagine you have two things to do. First laundry and then drying.

The method is self explanatory too: When you do Laundry.Start, does that mean you can instantly do dryingup.start?
@RoelvanUden WHAT THE FUK HE SAID
@KamilSolecki why did You do Task<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> task = returnNiceVMs(searchedText);?
Dummy methods
07:54
I.. I'm afraid. Very afraid.
just implement the returnNiceVMs inside the SearchForText
dummy method is something like return Task.FromResult(Enumerable.Range(1, 100));
that would be nice inside SearchForText for dummy
@ntohl Well yeah. Still, it doesnt change the problem one bit.
I did a stacktrace
what does throw?
It nulls out at the source of IEnumerable
Try that without the task for the vm results
It might be just that
08:00
did already
Same error
source on which level? Please clarify which variable
 at System.Reactive.Linq.Observable.Where[TSource](IObservable`1 source, Func`2 predicate)
At this IObservable:

IObservable<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> searchedStrings = searchText.[...]
do You have searchText = new ReactiveProperty<string>(); before?
is searchText null?
mr5
mr5
anyone can translate this LINQ expression into method-based?
    var result = (from e in mapKey
                  from v in e.Value
                  where v.Equals(char.ToUpper(letter))
                  select e.Key)
                  .DefaultIfEmpty(letter)
                  .FirstOrDefault();
I've tried:
            var result = mapKey
                .Where(e => e.Value.Contains(letter))
                .Select(v => v.Key)
                .DefaultIfEmpty(letter);
08:15
@ntohl Thank you, I just always forget to check the most basic solutions.
morning o/
mr5
mr5
but it returns different result
@KamilSolecki >D now write it back to async...
@mr5 there is no SelectMany... 2 from next to each other translates to something with SelectMany
mr5
mr5
@ntohl "2 from" => "SelectMany"? so the query will start will selectmany?
08:22
yes. mapKey.SelectMany(...)
mr5
mr5
like this:
            var r = mapKey
                .SelectMany(e => e.Value)
                .Where(v => v.Equals(letter))
                .DefaultIfEmpty(letter)
                .FirstOrDefault();
?
dunno. Test it. I just give You a hint. Google what 2 from will be translated to
on the first look it doesn't seem right
mr5
mr5
Yes it's not
Trump is funny
"I am not under investigation"
After firing the guy investigating him
he's not (factually) wrong.
08:28
haha
but serious
thats the actual article
omg
you are an ahole @Kieran
Its friday
Its tradition
mr5
mr5
it's hard to Google LINQ
08:31
funny
fix the link
subdomains don't work with it @satibel
mr5
mr5
stackoverfliow?
dammit
mr5
mr5
just two website pops up. damn. I've been haxx
Anyone mind if i shamelessly plug a regex question?
mr5
mr5
08:32
fb then yt. how do you do that?
I borked a regex method yesterday and i can't fix it
mr5
mr5
.i.
@Kieran is it HTML ? Hͯ̂ͫͧͥ̑ͮ̊̆̍̇͡͏̡̮̙̫̮͍͇̼̙̫̬̠̩͉̟͚̼ͅḘ̷̣̼͈̯̪̮̩̪̦̰̠̥̻̰̘̻͉̮̓̃́̋̏̉̓̑̕͘͝͡ ̛̛̰͙͓͕͙̣̪̔̂ͭ̽͛ͦͣ͐̓́̚Ḿ̡͙̼̰̙̝̠̼̫̩̬̠̘͖̪̼̖̀ͮ̆͊̿ͥ͂͘͜͠ͅI̔̂ͭ̀̇̆̔ͩ̉ͨ́͠҉̦͓̭̺͈̲̟͍͓͉̼̩Ḡ̃́‌​̵̶̼̻͓̹̰̎͂̕͡H̴̨̞͚̞̻̪ͨͨͪ͊̃͊͛̒̌ͭ̉̕͟Ţ͚̬̺̼̘̪̓ͫ́̂͢ͅ ̶̵̨̈̎͑̇̇͂͂̃̍̈̿͋̄͋͐ͤ̽͗͒̀҉̲̘̬̭̝C̶̸͓̘̟̖̟̘̤̘̳̮̘̺̫͈͚̬͍͊ͧ̃̇ͯ͢Ǫ̌͆͊̆̉͑͑̚҉̢͇͖͕̬͖̼̲͍̻̠̳͉͜‌​̫̳̪̞̱M̢̨̛̟̳̗͓͉ͪͦ̊ͦ̂͐̏͋ͣ̚̚͝E̶̮͕͎̹̖̭͉̺͕̮͈̭̞̓ͪ͒͐ͤ́ͣͩ͡.
omg
why
speaking of
!!stats
08:34
@Kieran That dude sucks
U FUCKIN WOT
tell him paprika
!!stats
@Proxy You (http://stackoverflow.com/users/2919498/proxy) have 192 reputation, earned 0 rep today, asked 11 questions, gave 7 answers, for a q:a ratio of 11:7.
avg. rep/post: 10.66. Badges: 0g 1s 8b
so rood
!!stats
@Kieran You (http://stackoverflow.com/users/7096052/kieran) have 218 reputation, earned 0 rep today, asked 0 questions, gave 21 answers, for a q:a ratio of H̸̡̪̯ͨ͊̽̅̾̎Ȩ̬̩̾͛ͪ̈́̀́͘ ̶̧̨̱̹̭̯ͧ̾ͬC̷̙̲̝͖ͭ̏ͥͮ͟Oͮ͏̮̪̝͍M̲̖͊̒ͪͩͬ̚̚͜Ȇ̴̟̟͙̞ͩ͌͝S̨̥̫͎̭ͯ̿̔̀ͅ.
avg. rep/post: 10.38. Badges: 0g 1s 11b
08:35
Gotta love that ratio
!!stats
@satibel You (http://stackoverflow.com/users/7007466/satibel) have 217 reputation, earned 0 rep today, asked 1 questions, gave 8 answers, for a q:a ratio of 1:8.
avg. rep/post: 24.11. Badges: 0g 2s 8b
I have one more rep than you @satibel
mwhahaha
08:38
@KamilSolecki You (http://stackoverflow.com/users/2534346/kamil-solecki) have 563 reputation, earned 0 rep today, asked 22 questions, gave 20 answers, for a q:a ratio of 11:10.
avg. rep/post: 13.4. Badges: 0g 5s 24b
if helping on chat gave rep, I would have a bigger epeen than that.
@Kieran you asking abt regex?
@Webruster No, I was doing a friday link disguised as a regex question.
ah my bad !!
is gucci c:
08:43
what dat mean?
its all good
haha
@Webruster it is an Italian luxury brand of fashion and leather goods, part of the Gucci Group, which is owned by the French holding company Kering.
common, i know what is meant by gucci , i'm asking for that symbol
are you mocking me :P
ohhhh
c: = :)
its a smiley face
gotcha
i was expecting some C# question ..
:P
08:46
c:\
is it a happy guy with a beret or a prompt?
why not both
09:04
Omg no
After I closed my app, the popup from it stayed on screen
That means VS restart :(
riperoni
Now, what the hell. Its still here!
System.Windows.DataTemplate is following meh
War
War
09:20
Do you guys know of any decent sources of information on the cost of context switching to a developer
Well there has been pragmatic research that 6 working/coding hours per 8 work hours are productive
That's as far as my knowledge goes on that topic.
@War
@War There are some Google videos about how developers work. They also include a segment about interruptions and context switching
Explained so anyone can understand
War
War
I had a friend point me at these ...
^ both are pretty good
no idea why I didn't click to jeff though
I follow him quite a bit
Well empirically I can see that being the case
 
1 hour later…
10:45
IObservable<IEnumerable<ReminderBoxViewModel>> searchedStrings = searchText.
Where(x => !string.IsNullOrEmpty(x)).
Throttle(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)).
DistinctUntilChanged().
Select(SearchForText).
Switch();

That means SearchForText should NEVER fire, if searchText is unchanged, right?
@ntohl
Not even on init
hey guys
War
War
@KamilSolecki eh ... wtf is that?
can anyone tell me, if you add a column to a datagridview (combobox column) how can you enable the scrolling on it and how can you make sure the same value (example - numbers from 1 to 10) isn't met twice
War
War
Nice fluent API but makes no sense
@AdiMohan yes you can if you construct the grid on the client side with js, most server frameworks aren't dynamic enough to handle this stuff
use something like Kendo grid
oh ok so it's not really that possible to do it on a winforms and a simple dgv
thanks @War

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