Hello everyone, I'm new to c# and would like to ask several (probably stupid) questions
I'm looking for a way to prevent copy operation from shared folder while also giving read access to that folder. I know that if you have read access then you can copy it and I'm looking for a hack/work around this problem. Any suggestion?
This is not exactly a C# language question, but does someone know a really ugly C# open source project, e.g. with bad architecture, many bugs or many violations of clean code rules? Highly opinion based, I know.
Background of my question: I'm have a talk about motivation and I'd like to make a point that the fun of software development is not universal but tied to some conditions. I then want the developers to think what those conditions could be and whether they are met in our company. I'm new here and I think something goes wrong but I can't name it yet.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan: scanning Github for bug count seems doable. Scanning for some clean code violations (too many parameters, deep nesting, too many lines per method) might work as well. I'll see how I can get that data...
some games have a few characters body types (like male and female.), so you just make a model to fit each type and "pin" it to the body. you might (ab)use re-texturing and model reuse with a few tweaks (like removing or adding spikes etc...). for games with choose-your own body, you need to apply transformations to the armor/clothes. A *clever* trick that is sometimes used is to have the character have no body, and make the chest/legs/feet/arms/head be the armor, with anchor points on the hips,neck,shoulders, and ankles.
@RoelvanUden I did, but when I try to render the table it says "There is already an open DataReader associated with this Connection which must be closed first" due to the fact that the calculated property needs to query another table.
@Shoe Calculating something on a per-row basis is going to be VERY expensive, but you can just tell your connection string you're allowed to have multiple connections open.
@RoelvanUden If you refer to a view, then I also can't, because mapping the model to the view (in order to map the computer field to the attribute) doesn't allow updated or new records (views are read only, except for rare exceptions).
@RoelvanUden That seems to work. I was thinking... what about a .Select with a custom record that pairs the original record with this computed property?
@satibel I have many types of receipts and all of them are very customised, I mean the data might be dynamic for each receipt. So was checking out if any NuGet packages are available.
* ContactInfoId -> InvoiceId * DeliveryInfoId -> ShippingId * Tax identification is NOT an INT * You also need countries in invoice, shipping, and Tax added value proof (ip address)
Dates and times of entries. When did the order create etc
OrderItems should include a copy of the price of the product.
product should have a price
companyinfo should be nullable, could be a regular joe
an order should always be tied to a COPY of the invoice address and shipping address, because you're not allowed to edit historic data, ever.
FirstName and LastName? What about a middle name? Also, what if you don't have a middle name, or last name? Which is possible I'm afraid.
Again, these names should be copied onto an order because historic data. Might as well put it into the shipping and invoice address because you also addres a shipped item to someone else, even though I paid for it
@KamilSolecki Price can change later. An order is a piece of historic data. It would be terrible if you can't determine what the price was at the time the person paid for his things.
Everything related to an order should be considered IMMUTABLE. It's a piece of historic data. That includes names, shipping addresses, invoice addresses, tax numbers, prices, weights, everything. Copy everything because you NEED this as proof later.
e.g. someone gets married and changes their last name? Fine, but the order 2 years ago shouldn't reflect that new name.
In essence, an order should be a completely isolated being that doesn't touch any mutable data.
e.g. want to do a tax report in EU? You need multiple pieces of proof of buyer country to use MOSS. Thus, address is NOT GOOD ENOUGH. It needs an IP too. But if that IP is not in the country they SAID they were, DONT ALLOW THE ORDER. Rude, I know, but that's covering your own ass.
Ya, this is the biggest Problem of School in a trainigship. Our teachers (most of them) have never really worked in an IT company and thus have no experience how it really works. This is rally frustrating at some points because they just teach outdated and more often then not fawlty stuff which is just plain wrong.
lol. Well story of school. My teacher for IT-Systems (ow computers work, network stuff ect.) never actually studied IT. She Studied BWL (doing work in an office) and somehow slided in into a teachign job and eventually wounded up in the IT.
She's aswell my class teacher and the head of the IT office at our school^^
Ya, true. But it is a problem if someone asks about how they are all connected or core pricipaly and the answer is like "that is an intresting and exiting question don't you think?"
You usally end up looking it up yourself - which is not a bad thing technically.
@RoelvanUden what do you think? Should db have both net and gross price columns, or should I only include a tax% column and a net price and let the consumer calc gross by himself?
can anyone confirm or infirm this : you can create an sql view from a inner join, place that view on a winforms - datagridview, add more elements in the view (example, new lines, comboboxes, etc) after which, using an adapter, you can write the new information into a new/different sql data table
Hi all. Quick question relating to Microsoft.Office.Interop.Word. I'm currently creating an invoice document within c# using interop, and the entire process probably takes 10-15 seconds. The client is now requesting the ability to do a batch of all accounts at once (about 2000). Not sure what the best way to handle so many requests will be. Obviously having 2000 instances of word open isn't going to work
@Kieran fun stuff. Two weeks ago I picked my car up from the parking lot in another city, and soon I realised that there is a solid 2mm diameter nail (or screw) in the tyre. But it stuck in so well, that no air escaped :)
Yeah. There will always be a RowId of some sort, even though it is not visible to you. That's because the RMDBS needs a way to create a b+tree for an index to speed up queries, but it also needs a way to point at a resource saying 'yeah that's the place to find the actual data at' once it got the results. Normally it would use your PK if it's an int and autoincrementing, so I suggest just exposing that in case you ever need it.
having a PK will help in many problems like how to identify a row if virtually everything have the same value. For example a user with same address, name, etc..
when You don't have timestamp or created_at column of Your table, it can be still used as sorting column
what would be easiest way to add empty value to SelectList? ViewBag.TrainingTypeId = new SelectList(_uow.TrainingTypes.All, "TrainingTypeId", "Title", null);
@satibel i used a nuget package for scanning barcodes, that's why i'm thinking of this option, the package isn't that big (that's what she said) and seems like a good option