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.
I just found out you can't start a solution that has a SQL connection w/o a locally installed SQL database. Even if your SQL server is on another machine.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Just what I mean. Running our core service on a machine without SQL server installed complains that I can't debug it because there is no SQL installed. The SQL server is on another machine in this case. Oh well, guess I'll install SQL here, too.
"Failed to debug this project because no SQL Server has been installed on the local machine. Please set the debug connection string in the project properties page" @AvnerShahar-Kashtan
There are two database projects in the solution. You have to point each of the database projects to the database. Even though the database project is only used for the DACPAC compilation.
@nyconing DAC Short for Digital-To-Analog converter, usually a computer chip that converts digital data into analog signals. A DAC is used in computer devices such as Grapic and Audio Cards, Modems etc.
Hey guys. When using EF, I have an entity with a property of type IUser (interface that has subtypes: User and TournamentUser). But after updating the database, the table does not have the column. Can't you use interfaces for that?
public interface IMyUser
{
string Id { get; set; }
}
I kinda hoped EF would understand it. But I guess it does not then :P
I have a "Match" that should contains two users. Those users can either be real users (asp.net identity) or anonymous users (tournamentuser) that can't login. How should I model this then instead?
@Proxy Iris ID on the Microsoft Lumia 950XL is very fast.
It's still annoying though, I'd like to be able to unlock my phone without having to be staring at it.
@Kob_24, I can vouch for dotPeek as well, works very well. And when I found a piece of code that wouldn't decompile and crashed the program, they fixed it very quickly.
This was back when it was just released though, I'm guessing you won't stumble on many bug like that now.
i still like dnSpy more :P because i can cheat in all .net games, by replacing methods, which would return money or something, with some high value and a couple of nops without changing the signature ^^
Had to make a few detours manually and implement a way to allow FastCall from .NET
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Sadly only few people realize this. It's kinda silly. I see it in both game development but also modding for games like Minecraft.
People deliberately hardcode settings because they think they know best what people like.
I'm playing through the Mass Effect trilogy again, and now, in ME3, I just enabled the console and maxed up my money. Because it's such an irrelevant part of the game anyway. It doesn't do much except give you access to weapon upgrades, and I play in Casual difficulty anyway.
the most awesome thing i did (while REing) was creating a process without a file, by creating a suspended empty process and writing an entrypoint + code in it manually. after resuming it ran perfectly well.
it's dangerous as F, because no AntiVirus will ever notice what it does, the heuristics of 99% of them will scan the file of the process instead its memory
they cant afford to delay a process by multiple seconds ^^ (noone would buy it then)
Was there any downsides to the 64-bit architecture? Or was it just a case of it not being feasible to update everything?
I've only ever read one account of 32-bit being preferred and that was by CCP the people that made EVE Online. Their servers would switch to 32-bit when possible to conserve resources and improve performance.
@WilliamMariager Sure, memory requirements and certain operation speeds.
When every pointer becomes 8 bytes instead of 4 bytes, applications that don't need the 4GB+ RAM are actually using up more memory than strictly necessary. That, plus as you mentioned operations like jmp'ing can be a tad slower, makes for not too much motivation to go to 64-bits when you don't need it.
The reason Visual Studio still runs as a 32bit process, according to MS, is that it will increase memory usage, slow down some operations, and provide little meaningful value for the sort of operations that VS performs.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan yeah i know how that feels. Btw. i was being sarcastic, because even when those two release games, they're buggy as hell even with a day one patch
dunno how it is where you are working, but i had a salesman promise something to a client, which was in alpha stage and he said something like "It should be ready to use in about two weeks or so" ...
without consulting our department or projectmanager at all
@Proxy sadly not much we had to work 10h a day even on the weekend to get it done, in a way which was acceptable for the client, so after 14 days it was 80h
@Html.DropDownListFor(m => m.Department., new SelectList(Model.DepartementInfo, "Value", "Text"), "--Select--") i am getting value but need text how to change?
there is literally one advantage of Java generics over C# ones: all the classes which were written before generics were introduced could be adapted, like Class<T>