My colleagues do not test code, nor used IoC before. One of them's reaction was for Ninject (IoC) was that is an overkill. He clearly sees it's benefits, if there were more than one implementation for an interface. I told them, that structure the code that way, is guarantee that the parts of the code are encapsulated components. What else can I say about defend of IoC?
also my colleague said, that this separation can be achieved with factories, and composition root. And IoC can't handle well when the factory's Create method have an argument to decide what kind of class Create generates
I told them, that IoC doesn't allow mutual dependency, which is a good thing. Factory may have something like A depends on B, B depends on A, and VS resolves. IoC does not. Which is a good thing in my oppinion
@SBM the problem with that justification is that, "the trivial code do not have meaningful possibility to write non trivial test. Writing robust, complex code test will not cover the areas".
they mean by that if the problem is enough complex, You will write a test to check a wrong solution, and having a code un-unit tested will have the same problem
that was the other reasoning of them... They went to some conferences where they heard about testing, and the problems of testing. Like if You have a TON of tests, other companies have problems reducing the number. Running the tests takes too much time.
^ when the code becomes legacy, You even added another level of complexity, if the code was designed bad, or the modification was wrong, and not adhere to the test
I'm still here @KamilSolecki ... just getting some actual work done instead of being trolled for a change
I've been putting a UI on my workflow engine and building some new testing framework tools a bit like unit testing stuff but for end to end tests after we do deploys
I also have a new Hyper-V box coming this week so I'll be setting up a new dev environment which will be fun ... the plan is to have that tear everyhting down and completely rebuild on every deploy
@RoelvanUden always hard at work ... so yeh I suppose that's true to some extent
then the flow talks directly o my OData API so no need for the application to get involved beyond serving up the JS
I'm sure you could pretty much do the same with a connected desktop app
the key difference I guess is that the client is an you build yourself instead of scripting running in the browser but everything else architecturally you could easily share
Yeah, possibly. Also, soon the processing power will be so cheap and the generally provided web fast enough to port most of the desktop apps in web and have them execute on the server and not a local client PC
I predict photoshop to go online in about 2-4 years
That is also an awesome way for companies to prevent piracy
@KamilSolecki They don't have to be 'online'. They can be running on your desktop, or mobile phone -- except they are coded in HTML/JS instead of native bullshit.
What about webassembly? there are gonna be a lot of different languages that will compile to WebAssembly when it becomes more mature. And there are already projects who try to replace HTML with a different presentation layer
Good thought. I believe that WebAssembly will become a potent force, a general purpose intermediate assembly language, and that's absolutely brilliant. The flip side of that, however, is fracturing the extremely large pool of HTML/JS developers into tiny little pieces. It also means that, when you use a library (such as React or Angular) and write code in another language, you have to understand two languages. This is fairly annoying. It is possible we'll go there, but I sure hope not. :P
That's pretty much the same idea as a renderer that replaces the DOM, with say, WebGL-rendered into a canvas. It will fracture everything. Again, I hope that these things do not pick up any kind of momentum so we'll see as little of them as possible.
i'm also not looking forward to websites where you can't just pop open the developer console and peek into the code. i doubt it is gonna be readable when compiled to WebAsm
That too. While I applaud the idea of WebAssembly (tiny download sizes, quick parsing/compilation), I fear the day where you can't peek into the code and where every job offer uses some other form of language to do the same goddamn thing in the front-end.
"We use Python for front-end!" "We use VB for front-end!" "We use PHP for front-end!" "We use Ruby for front-end!" "We use Prolog for front-end!" "We use Haskell for front-end!" "We use C/C++ for front-end!" "We use C# for front-end!" "We use F# for front-end!" Good god.
"How did you solve this problem?" - "Here, look at this code." "That looks like Lisp."
It would not work alternating them upwards because it would end in 1,2,1,2,3,4,4,4 because the 4 has 3 entries.
I dont have any idea how to get that. Alternating upwards wouldnt be that hard. Just looping upwards and getting the next not-equal item to place into the next index.
But that would like I said end up in three 4s in a row.
@ntohl "X says" is not an argument that supports an opinion in any way, it's just an authority fallacy. Especially when the person in question has some decent opinions and some bullshit ones.
@milleniumbug I put it into context. If You know the reasoning X using to elaborate his/her point, it helps understanding the statement. I don't think it's a fallacy to reference someone.
@Nerdintraining don't forget to annotate the VM class
oh.. I wish I could show You that one... Devex GridControl have same data in it with a custom DataTable as ItemsSource. If I scroll the vertical line, some data just disappears, some appears, totally random... I can't believe so much nondeterministic behavior of such a simple binding....
@Nerdintraining or just don't implement INotifyPropertyChanged, and put [ImplementPropertyChanged] above Your class
Anyone here Azure experts? I'm looking for the simplest way to have something like their WebApp instance, but where I can install some custom software on it. In this case Adobe InDesign.
Hi guys, I''m tring to implemnt Depdency injection for aplicationDbContext in Asp.Net mvc5 with Identity Framework, pretty much a template. Looking all around the internet, but I can't find where is it exactly that my controllers get created?
Hello I have a question? If I instantiate a class in C# with 3 int fields does it allocated memory for all of them or it allocates memory only for the fields that are initialized?
Say we have class with 2 fields one is initialized and other is not
Does the one that is not initialized points to memory where default value is located or ?
@kuskmen It wouldn't matter, coming from a C++ background. A pointer is 4 bytes or 8 bytes, depending on architecture, and an integer is 4 bytes. So.. if they would be pointers, you'd be wasting memory, not to mention the additional reads required to get the value. ;-)
To answer the question directly, just like C++, primitives are primitives and will occupy memory in a struct-like manner. Unlike C++, C# does initialize the primitives to avoid weird bullshit like forgetting to clear a memory block in C++ does.
basically , i need all data betwen the tags <strong style='background:yellow'> XXXX </strong> <strong style='background:yellow'> YYY </strong> <strong style='background:yellow'> ZZZ </strong>
@KamilSolecki thats so not true .. even as C# developer you need to be aware of garbage collection , how it happens , when it happens and how to reduce it , and this is not 1-2% performance @RoelvanUden
@kuskmen Sure, but memory initialization is 1-2% ;-) But hey man, if you're so sure you need the absolute performance of C/C++, use C/C++. C# is slower, yes, marginally so. But if you need that performance, you need it. There is no need to gloss over it, just use C/C++!
@kuskmen Should you be aware of garbage collection and be able to optimize it? Maybe, if the need arises. For most people, it never does, and it's never going to be relevant. For others, you will make your own pool of objects and have your own mechanism to clear them out to increase performance. But that's rare. In any case, use C/C++ if you think it's better.
We do not give up using int vs double, because it has limits. So if you only want simple html parsing, use regex instead of bringing down entire htmlagilitypack library
Hi Guys. Is it possible to make UserManager actually throw exceptions on async methods when something goes bad? For example if rightnow write something like await userManager.CreateAsync(new User()) and it will fail for some reason (like no username for example) - there is no way to know it without manually cheking results. This isn't look nice for my point of view