So now my python scripts sometimes exit. That's all. They sometimes hang. I have no idea why. It reaches the end of the script, I can see printouts to stdout throughout, but then... nothing.
I'm pretty sure it has to do with the fact that I'm running it via Process.Start with STDOUT redirection enabled. :(
On Unix and Unix-like computer operating systems, a zombie process or defunct process is a process that has completed execution (via the exit system call) but still has an entry in the process table: it is a process in the "Terminated state". This occurs for child processes, where the entry is still needed to allow the parent process to read its child's exit status: once the exit status is read via the wait system call, the zombie's entry is removed from the process table and it is said to be "reaped". A child process always first becomes a zombie before being removed from the resource table. In...
Now I'm checking a lead saying that the output from the python process is larger than the stdout stream buffer, so it hangs waiting for someone to read from it.
Process allows chunked reads with an OutputDataReceived event. Checking it out.
C# is essentially a statically typed language. A variable has a single type - either string or int. dynamic is a feature introduced later to allow it to be less statically typed, but it's a relatively blunt tool - you can't have fine-grained union types. It's either statically defined at compile time, or anything-goes.
@nyconing Well, if you were using dynamic everywhere as a replacement to generics, than yes, it would add up.
Just like reflection is usually said to be slow, and it is, compared to direct method calls/property invocation. But if you only need it for the occasional dynamically-determined execution, you'll be fine. If you replace all standard property access code with reflection, then yes, it will be slow.
user5671675
hello, im using asp net with bootstrap and i have problem with modal which is in partial view with button which open that modals content. If i use that partial view in main page layout, modal window pop up under grayout background
was mostly just curious if there was any sort of Overloading on variables in C# or any other language
I was reading an article on C that mentioned that C didn't support overloaded variables, which made me wonder if there are languages that do support it.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan just a few variables. But taken time everytime when accessing it, causing extreme slow-down. Once the types changed, it can be up to a second on the first access.
@nyconing This table compares dispatch methods. It doesn't compare the cost of finding a character in a string, allocating a new substring and calling int.Parse on it.
Also note that this graph can be misleading. Yes, dynamic dispatch might be 50 times slower than direct dispatch in an isolated dry run, but is the difference between 0.07ms and 3.6ms meaningful? Depends on usage.
Inside a tight loop? Certainly. As a one-time call that happens part of a user's login process, i.e. once every hour? Meaningless.
I'm not saying you weren't justified in replacing dynamic in your code for performance reasons. I'm just saying that an automatic "Don't use dynamic because it's slow" isn't justified either.
nah I think I understand what you're talking about
but it's still bad practice. I normally have interfaces in a different namespace - sometimes even a different library - to the concrete classes implementing them.
@Squiggle Okay. Well the class Class1 or A in the more abstract example never implements the Interface. It just uses classes that have implemented the interface.
Is there a way to get the collection used as DataSource on a ListView? I need the data in a button click handler. listView.DataSource seems to be null in the postback
But I hope you're not using it for anything other than non-essential diagnostic. It's not dependable in production, since the compiler and JIT can inline methods, making any logic dependent on "find the name of the method that called me" unreliable.
what is the point in a one possible implemented interface? Beside reflection needs or framework depends on interface? In both cases You bound Yourself to a framework, but implementation there is ok.
While in theory you shouldn't have an interface just for having-an-interface's sake, Yannis Rizos's answer hints at further complications:
When you're writing unit tests and using mock frameworks such as Moq or FakeItEasy (to name the two most recent ones I've used), you're implicitly creating a...
Do I need a VegetableService? Define my dependency - what do I need my VegetableService to do for me, define that in my IVegetableService contract, and keep coding.
I might not have even coded VegetableService yet. It doesn't matter. When I'm in the scope of the consumer, I just need a contract to code against.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan true dat. I had many little interfaces for Ninject purposes with 1 implementation. And used the interfaces for unit testing. In that case the Interfaces were in a different source file to show that it's a contract. Used differently in testing than in working environment.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I mean Your SO account ofc. On Your profile it shows 10k. but in chat it was not yet 10k. Must be cacheing issue
Disposing doesn't clear memory. Disposing doesn't remove event registrations. Disposing is only a mechanism for calling the Dispose() method, which is a hook for you to add disposal logic.
You can download it from nuget as well. It have much clearer lifecycle of a subscription
basically You will convert Your events or whatevers into observables. Call CountRef() on it, than if there are not any subscribers anymore, than it will be disposed. Finito.
You have to think in observers and observables paralelly. Compose the observable, select scheduler, decide lifetime. Than carefully implement observers having a marble diagram in Your head.
@RoelvanUden unsubscribe events. Not remove
@RoelvanUden I just recommended to remove event handlers >D with the alternative of reactive flow
This is just a brief post that I’m hoping may help some people migrate to use .NET Core 2.0 SDK on Travis. TL;DR: see the end of the post for a sample configuration. Yesterday (August 15th), .NET Core 2.0 was fully released. Wonderfully, Travis already supports it. You just need dotnet: 2.0.0 in your YAML … Continue reading Using .NET Core 2.0 SDK on Travis →
I have a WPF app where the user has to log into a webservice. The webservice has a 15 minute login timeout that refreshes every time there is any communication from the app. The app has a 15 minute timer that pops up a re-login window, but I need a way of resetting it when there's any communication with the webservice.
I have a model, A that has these properties: • B • C • D
I have two objects, one with properties B and C, and the other with property D. What is the best way to *fill* my model, A, using my two objects? Is there any way that doesn't involve writing out each property assignment?