I'm sure you'll all be ecstatic to know I got my ugly-ass Join statements in line, and the whole query now pushes the process memory up to 250Kb, rather than the 18Gb it took up before.
It was a badly written query that had multiple Join statements between three different tables, with a lot of data in them, without properly filtering in advance, causing massive cartesian products.
I have a table of Cases, and a table of CaseStages which are linked to Case with a CaseId column and a timestamp. I first filter the cases by some parameters, resulting in an IQueryable<Case> set, and then filter the CaseStages, looking for the CaseId of all cases where "Stage1" was assigned before "Stage2" and "Stage2" was assigned before "Stage3".
(So, for instance, if a case was in Stage2 first, then Stage1, it's filtered out).
This was done by Joining CaseStages to itself twice - the set of all Stage1 rows, all Stage2 rows and all Stage3 rows. The resulting product was filtered to find Stage1.Timestamp <= Stage2.Timestamp && Stage2.Timestamp <= STage3.Timestamp.
Since I had several tens of thousands of rows of some of the stages, it got huge.
In the new query, I just GroupBy the CaseId, and then run a query on each of the resulting groups (much tinier, since a given case will only have 4-5 stage changes). And also, I filter the CaseStages using the filtered IQueryable<Case> before I start the complicated queries.
So instead of Joining up a table into a multi-million-row product, finding relevant rows and then filtering them, I group a table of tens-of-thousands-rows into a few dozen groups (after filtering) and apply the ugly "if S1 < S2 && S2 < S3" logic to each of those groups.
Yeah. We have a BI screen with widgets showing various aggregated data and KPI status.
Some of those BI queries are... not good.
Not even one person's fault. Combination of unclear specs, changing requirements, developers working off of a set of assumptions that later turned out false,a nd so on.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I am picturing you on an office with dozens of monitors floating around you. some have terminals with different colors printing matrices or logs of some WSs. some monitors with KPIs, graphs, and a monitor with a crosshair ready to launch a nuclear missile at anytime
So, currently facing a issue trying to use .Replace()
I'm getting some unwanted text and, figured I would try doing it via the application so i got this:
if (value.Contains("
")) value.Replace("
", " ");
However, it's not exactly working. Either i've misunderstood how it does work, or it's because it has text directly in front of it interrupting the Replace
Are you trying to replace the actual sequence of characters &, #, x, 0 and D, or replace any of these characters? Or replace the Unicode code point that it's supposed to represent?
On another note, let's say you were using a data migration tool for your app, something that goes over the previous version's data, finds items that will be broken in a newer version, shows you the results, and allows you to fix them and then commit those fixes to the database - how would you like the UI for such a tool to look like?
One option is a Wizard style interface, where you next-next-next through the stages (Analyze -> Report -> Fix -> Commit).
(Incidentally, there are several "modules" for each step, each analyzing a different component in the existing system).
No, it's just like ==, only == does imaginative data coercion before comparing, and === doesn't.
The original JS mindset was "The programmer wrote if(myArray). Now, obviously this isn't a mistake, but instead he meant to check if the array isn't empty, right? Right? Yeah, let's go ahead and assume so".
The === mindset is "Do not make assumptions. People are stupid. We have 20 years of javascript programmers proving the point. Do not make assumptions. An empty array is a empty array - not null, not false and not an empty string"
@mr5 Just value equality.
Data types here are a side effect of actually testing, well, the value.
Not "a value that could reasonably derived from the value"
hi there, isn't there a simple way of comparing 'foo' and 'bar' (both same type) against a singular comparison constant value? e.g., (foo > DateTime.MinValue && bar > DateTime.MinValue), but shorthanded?
@SebastianL hmm, ok, let's try this, but it seems already a bit more expensive than the simple comparison. and I mean, it does not bother me to compare two values, but 5 (which is the atual case) is already pushing it
wasn't there an IComparer of some sort I could use for this?
As far as C# syntax is concerned, each condition stands on its own. You can write various functions to simplify it, but they'll end up looking weird to people coming from outside.
@SebastianL true, but not over spending resources. i'd rather have the two variables taking up a bit more space in the readability, than spending a bit more in the comparison, since it's a very simple flow control
For instance, you can write something like Math.Any(5, 6, 81, 5111) > 5000. This returns an instance ofa class that has overridden the > operator, and checks all of its members.
@SebastianL already accessing two properties and getting the min from the pair, and as far as the comparer is concerned, using DateTime.MinValue would have to be translated into numbers, because previously to this I do something like: DateTime foo = Class.Method(parameter)?.Date ?? DateTime.MinValue, so that's the only reason why I compare against the min value
@satibel true, but it's still like @AvnerShahar-Kashtan said, might (and I know for experience here it will) look weird for the team mates; lets just say they rather have two 500-line methods rather than creating functions for specific parts (even common ones) of the code
any way I thank you all for the time and ideas, I'll see what I'll do, but honestly, after all this time, i'd rather have the code a bit longer than having to justify basic coding principles to people working here longer than I am, just in order to defend simplification of the code
Let's say I have a list of an object which has 30 properties and this list has 100k objects. Would it be faster to traverse that list if I select only 5 properties of each objects and make another list with them and traverse it?
@jason We've had performane and memory problems where the core issue was that someone mistakenly called ToList() on an IQueryable before applying all the relevant filtering.
Selecting just the fields you need will make the communication with the database lighter, which is orders of magnitude slower than in-memory operations
*wham* - hundreds of thousands of records pulled in from the DB to RAM, instantiated as entities and added to a List - just to be discarded a minute later.