Yeah. That's an update that will pay off over the coming versions.
I wouldn't be surprised if the relatively mild changes in Nougat were due to intensive work on Treble. It seems like a huge refactoring of the core components.
Treble is basically refactoring the android kernel to make it easier for device manufacturers to add their custom kernel code and drivers without having to basically branch the entire source tree.
@mr5 Unlikely. Treble is part of the AOSP, the core Android OS, used by multiple hardware vendors. Ara was a project headed by Motorola Mobility (purchased by Google) to build a specific, low-cost, modular phone.
@Metallkiller having a form that represent a master-details object, the details has so many rows in a grid (thousands) .. I'm serializing it to JSON and saving it in the DB.. I feel that the feature I'm working on for months is going to be my next nightmare :(
i have develop a desktop application in .NETFramework, Version=v4.5 using visual studio and database using SQL sever express 2014. My app is ready. Now I have to install it on client machine. how can i create database there??? which features of SQL express i have to install on client machine?
The client doesn't have a database? You should ask them if they have one. (Although you might ofc skip that step if it's, like, a single person with a pc).
@MohamedAhmed Depends on what your grid holds. Quantities? Int. Money? Decimal. Names/other kind of strings? varchar. Check what your table holds, then put that into your db.
@hassanmirza It would've been great to think about this before finishing the application. You might want to consider switching to an embedded database.
The problem with storing serialized object strings in the DB is that you can't query them or modify them like you could properly normalized data.
Tomorrow you want to retrieve all rows where PropX*=*Y, where PropX is a field in your serialized JSON. But you can't do that easily, because you didn't normalize that data out of the blob.
@Metallkiller also the serializing/deserializing operation doesn't take long time, the problem is when fetching the record with BIG JSON string.. the query takes long time
SELECT Id, FirstName, LastName,
JSON_VALUE(InfoJSON, '$.info.”social security number”') as SSN,
JSON_QUERY(InfoJSON, '$.skills') as Skills
FROM Person AS t
WHERE ISJSON( InfoJSON ) > 0
AND JSON_VALUE(InfoJSON, '$.Type') = 'Student'
Now what i am trying to do is if i am having 0 after first decimal point then i want to take only 1.1 and ignore rest and if i am having 1.11 then i want to take whole 1.11
imagine, you're creating this box and you like its height to be at least 10px. so you typed in "MinimumHeightRequest="10" and voila! it would NOT WORK!
@Nerdintraining And there are a million other bugs for the team to fix, many with a much higher priority. Is this a quick and easy fix? Probably. But you have 3 instances of that bug in this class alone, and maybe more in other classes. You don't want to do a half-assed job, so you want to go over the entire library, making sure it's fixed entirely. That's not a lot of work, but it's not 30 seconds either.
hello boys and girls. i have a question. guess our app stores raw data in DB, in 5 min period this data need to be aggregated and stored in other remote db. what better approach for local DB? local raw db can use stored procedures?
The solution is to architect your code so that you don't have to, as much as possible.
There's no justification for a background thread to access a textbox. A textbox is a UI element, not a data storage mechanism.
Some other mechanism - say, data binding - should automatically store the text that the user types into a property on your object. This property is just that - a string property - so it can be easily accessed by a background thread.
Anyone know why SQL Server import wizard can identify an Access db schema and return data, but if I try to create a linked server with the same information I get errors?