Little Red wearing a red cloak that keeps her from turning into a wolf in riverside of the iridescent river with winds through fairy town that tainted by the wildness of magic.
If I'm initializing a static field of an instance class inside its static constructor, should I be sure that when I use that field, it will always be instantiated and the instantiation process happens only one time during the lifetime of the program?
This is a good write-up of various ways to implement singletons in C#, both good and bad. My favorite is #4, which is simple and safe. #5 adds laziness but also complexity: http://csharpindepth.com/Articles/General/Singleton.aspx#nested-cctor
I've referred to it, and referred people to it, dozens of times over the years.
Basically, it means static constructors are the simplest, safest and clearest way to implement a singleton.
I mean, they're "safe" in the sense that a singleton with a method that just does "return 5" will be safe. Nothing will explode simply because different threads access it.
But there's nothing about singletons that is inherently thread-safe. Singletons and thread safety are unrelated concepts.
Ah, regarding your earlier question - if you meant "thread safety" as in "thread-safe instantiation", meaning that you're guaranteed not to have two instances created if two threads try to access the singleton at once, then yes, it is thread-safe.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan if there's a guarantee that it will not instantiate multiple times, will there be any chance that that the object instance will be null?
public sealed class Singleton
{
private static readonly Singleton instance = new Singleton();
// Explicit static constructor to tell C# compiler
// not to mark type as beforefieldinit
static Singleton()
{
}
private Singleton()
{
}
public static Singleton Instance
{
get
{
return instance;
}
}
}
Usually, with static classes, you either have a set of utility methods grouped together, which is usually fine, but can lead to hard to test scenarios (see libraries like System.IO.Abstractions which wrap static classes like System.IO.File with testable abstractions).
Or you have real singletons containing data and business logic, which can be a pain to manage. Let's say you have a static ConnectionManager class which contains cached connections to web services. Now, you want to be able to run a process under different user credentials, you suddenly can't use the ConnectionManager, because it's the same one used by other threads.
If your ConnectionManager was actually a non-static implementation of IConnectionManager, you could have several of them for different scenarios, at once, without being locked into a single static instance.
If you're using a DI framework, it's easy to implement singletons without static classes, simply by having the DI container manage the lifetime of an object as a singleton, always returning the same instance. Need a non-singleton instance? Let the DI container manage that for you.
@nyconing pubg Player Unknown's Battlegrounds. A battle royale game made by Player Unknown who also created the battle royale mod for arma 3 and H1Z1 (now split to King of the Kill)
The question is how hard you're going to try to unique identify a machine. In other words, are you trying to give an average user a good "we known who you are" experience, or prevent malicious hackers from impersonating a machine.
I worked on a project that did its own HTML mail templates. It was hell, and that's when they only supported Outlook, Gmail and Yahoo. Add mobile and it quadruples your testing surface.
Generally speaking, don't expect dynamic UI elements in email templates. Go for simple static pages that respond well to different sizes, not client-side logic.
@milleniumbug OzCode is a debugger assistant that can help in breaking down complex expressions. (Disclaimer: I work for the company that makes it. I don't work on it)
<interactive>:3:5: error:
• Conflicting definitions for ‘.’
Bound at: <interactive>:3:5-7
<interactive>:3:9-11
<interactive>:3:13-15
<interactive>:3:17-19
<interactive>:3:21-23
• In an equation for ‘.’
@RoelvanUden yes, that's if you use pointers. Collections are all value types and you don't need to use pointers with them: void f(const std::vector<int>& input); /* ... */ f(myVector); // myVector can be empty, can have multiple elements, but can't be null
One thing I'm missing in C# is a way to update the target of a ThisCall delegate so I can use it with virtual function tables in interop. Super obscure but I really miss it.
Having to emit an entire method every time I want to call a different address is a bit annoying.
I am trying to create a chatroom in C# that works like the old days on a LAN. (think old style like counter strike where one person would create the room and the rest can see it without any of them being a full server)
but i am not sure how to make the other people detect the created room
tbh with user-mode driver framework, using .NET for drivers doesn't seem to be completely impossible; it's just the matter of whether MS would provide support for this
I'm curious how did they convince You, that it's Your liability to be done by a given time in a legacy code base with a task. With the risk of working overtime. Why did You put it on Yourself?
Does anyone have any recommendations to get better at code designs (in particular MVC applications)? I've been reading a lot about design patterns and it seems like everyone has a differing opinion.
Everyone has a different opinion. That's a fact of life.
So long as you pick certain ways of separating concerns and remain consistent along the way, thus everyone follows the same kind of logic, there is no good or bad way to fill in the details/style/etc.