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02:35
posted on September 24, 2017 by Scott Hanselman

Everyone has a trick for moving around their computer faster. It might be a favorite shell, a series of aliases or shortcuts. I like using popd and pushd to quickly go deep into a directory structure and return exactly where I was. Another fantastic utility is simply called "Z." There is a shell script for Z at https://github.com/rupa/z that's for *nix, and there's a PowerShell Z command (a fo

 
3 hours later…
05:53
@juanvan new version.
could any one help me wit a Git command:
git config --global http.proxy HOST:PORT

what is the HOST and PORT?
I got this error when pushing to GitHub repo from VS :
fatal: unable to access 'https://github.com/me/myrepo.git/': Unknown SSL protocol error in connection to github.com:443
Good morning.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Good morning
@MohamedAhmed The host and port you have are correct - it's github.com, and 443. The problem is with the SSL connection. It might be that your http proxy doesn't forward HTTPS requests?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan how can I solve it?
Any luck googling the error message?
 
1 hour later…
07:18
I found this command:
git config --global http.proxy HOST:PORT
in a SO answer.
but you stated that there's no problem with my settings
I need your help in naming an attribute in a nuget package.
the package has one method that is used like:
objTarget.ChargeFrom(objSource);
it will set the objTarget to the objSource's value where the properties names and types are the same,
when a property on the target class is attributed with my ConnectAttribute like:
[Connect("ItemId")]
public int Id{get; set;}
it will set this Id's value to the value of ItemId on the sources object..

my question though , I need a good descriptive attribute name instead of Connect.. any help?
07:41
@MohamedAhmed And have you searched for "Unknown SSL protocol error in connection to github.com:443"?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I think that the problem is because on my home internet connection the github.com site doesn't open at all.. may be the git problem is related to that , I will try on different internet connection
08:30
Any help with a good name for the attribute?
A bit hard to say since I don't understand the problem domain. What does "charge" mean here? What types can the source/target be? I don't understand the logical action.
take a look here: https://github.com/mshwf/Charger
(I didn't push the attribute yet)
It's only one class with one method with few lines of code
Any types.
the Charge mean assign the target object values withe the source object values.
it's useful when I need to assign the view model (or any like class) to a model's object,
like AuthorVm from Author
if AuthorVm and Author contains Id , Name properties
authorVm.ChargeFrom(author);
will set the empty authorVm object to the author object coming, for example, from SQL database
08:52
Maybe something like SourcePropertyName.
(Or TargetPropertyName, I'm still not sure I grokked the use case)
It seems strange, though - doesn't this create a strong coupling between teh classes?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan good name, but I hoped to find a name that encapsulate an electrical process (to continue the naming conventions I started with ChargeFrom)
Why? Metaphors are useful when the clarify processes or relationships, but that really doesn't seem to be the case here.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I think I'll pick SourcePropertyName
09:43
Ugh. If I find myself wanting to manually set the Keys of an EF entity whose key is an auto-generated number, I'm doing something wrong, right?
I want to seed my table with several predefined entities with fixed IDs (because they have references to each other). I should give up and simply insert them in reverse order and add a reference, huh?
I'd say so. Either your primary key is externally significant or it isn't
I'd say your seeding should actually use your domain logic, which would have to use that process itself, so...yes?
That way you know your seed data can't accidentally break a constraint that's enforced by your domain
Right now my entity has Id, Name and EscalateTo, which is the id of another entity.
But what I should do is have EscalateTo be the entity it escalates to, so I can add the whole related bunch together.
In a relational database, is there a difference?
If I want the entities to also be serialized and sent to the client, yes.
There can be cycles.
Oh, store the actual entity in the column?
serialized?
Yack.
09:48
It's both an EF entity and a POCO/DTO that's used elsewhere.
We want the core entities to be used everywhere.
So to actually resolve that relationship, you'd have to pull that content out, deserialize it, match its id to another record in the database?
So I want EF to automatically save the ID/reference in the column and automatically load it.
smells like SRP violation to me
But when I send it to the client, where it's serialized as JSON over the wire, I want to avoid possible cyclic loops.
On whose part? It's just an entity - "UserGroup", with an ID, name, and a reference to another group that's this group's manager.
I want to seed the DB with 5 predefined groups.
I meant the part where you said about using the entities in multiple places
09:50
Ah, that.
You prefer having two identical classes, one for DB storage and one as the DTO?
I can see the value, but also the pain of keeping them in sync. There are dozens of them.
Also, not going to be my problem relatively soon. :)
That'd lead me to wonder whether they are really, truly identical. The way that domain (I'll call it 'escalation' since that's the term you used) communicates with other domains is not necessarily the same as the format it persists in
Two different models for different uses - possibly. Separating them gives you that choice
I mean it sounds pretty simple at the moment, so there's possibly not enough space to capture any differences
It's relatively simple. A "case" can be assigned to a group. It can then be escalated - reassigned to a different group, based on this bit of data. The "EscalateTo" field merely indicates the (directional) relationship between groups.
This metadata is stored in the DB, and also sent to the client, where this data is used in the "manage user groups" screen, where you create groups and set their EscalateTo value.
If persisting and unpersisting is simplified by using a 'normal' foreign key relationship then I'd do that - assuming that database itself is only ever seen by this application. If it's a shared resource that's a bit different
This is pretty much everywhere it's used. Read/written from/to this field, usually all records at once, and sent to the client when logging in.
As a DTO I'd probably capture what the client tried to do, instead, and serialize that as it is - whether it's a valid request or not. That means the EscalateTo value is not necessarily a valid ID or entity at all. I suppose that's what you're getting at when you talk about capturing a serialized entity
I guess what I'm thinking of is half-assed event sourcing
It would take more thought than what I'm giving it to do it properly
10:51
The client simply clicked "Escalate". It doesn't care who to. The server loads the currently assigned group, finds the next group, and reassigns.
However, the second use case is the management screen, where user groups are added or managed. There, the client intent is to explicitly set the relation.
Of course you could also have to deal with:
- a bug in your client code
- a malicious client intentionally sending sneaky content
I mean I assume the consequences of that are not great in this case
Yeah.
Also, as I said, soon to be Not My Problem, but I want to leave the code as clean and straightforward as I can.
11:19
hi all, anyone have much experience with .net core? Added a 2.0 project and I dont see an npm folder or a package.json folder.... appreciate some pointers! :)
11:30
hello everyone, i have a decompress method and i want to write based on it, the compres method, could anyone help me please?
 public static byte[] Decompress(byte[] data)
        {
            MemoryStream memoryStream = new MemoryStream();
            memoryStream.Write(data, 0, data.Length);
            memoryStream.Position = 0L;
            GZipStream gZipStream = new GZipStream(memoryStream, CompressionMode.Decompress, true);
            MemoryStream memoryStream2 = new MemoryStream();
            byte[] array = new byte[64];
            for (int i = gZipStream.Read(array, 0, array.Length); i > 0; i = gZipStream.Read(array, 0, array.Length))
11:59
How about writing a better Decompress method and the corresponding Compress?
This one seems to have a superfluous MemoryStream, and might be inefficient because it copies in 64 byte chunks, when 4k would probably be better.
Ah, no, you probably need both streams, but giving them a better name would be good. I'm guessing this is decompiled code?
Or just crappy variable names?
public byte[] Compress(byte[] data)
{
    using (var input = new MemoryStream(data))
    using (var output = new MemoryStream())
    {
        using (var compressed = new GZipStream(output, CompressionMode.Compress))
        {
            input.CopyTo(compressed);
        }
        return output.ToArray();
    }
}
That's the Compression. Decompression should follow suit.
 
2 hours later…
14:02
I have a
class Item
{
public string Name{get; set;}
public string DefText{get; set;}
public bool IsShown{get; set;}
}

is there a way to access a List<Item> via indexer, like listOfItems[defText]?
not via indexer
you can use .Select or .Find to find a value which matches a given property, of course this will be inefficient if you want to do this often and/or on large lists
you could use a SortedSet or Dictionary for frequent lookups, but this assumes that the lookup value for a given Item won't change as long as it's inside the collection
if you want to do this often, then you should make an orderedlist ordered by "DefText" and search in there
or, preferably use a hashmap with a backing br tree
I use this but I'm not satisfied with it:
LstSizeItems.SingleOrDefault(x => x.DefText== "txt_Size38").Name
that's basically a special case of this approach
6 mins ago, by milleniumbug
you can use .Select or .Find to find a value which matches a given property, of course this will be inefficient if you want to do this often and/or on large lists
isnt that method called FindOrDefault?
14:13
there are actually 4 methods like that, with small differences: .First, .Single, .FirstOrDefault, .SingleOrDefault
(also, you assume that the list will contain an entry with a DefText of "txt_Size38" which is not nice)
@milleniumbug i understand the difference between First and FirstOrDefault, but what about single?
Single throws an exception if there is more than one element which matches the criteria
ah
I still think Jaba has a better API :D
and I don't :D what do we do now? :)
objects.any((item) -> item.defText == "txt_Size38").map((item) -> item.name).orElse(null);
14:24
indeed, instead of 4 different functions, you have one function, and all the use cases map to either .get() and .orElse()
?
in C#:
var item = objects.FindOrDefault((item) => item.defText == "txt_Size38");
if (item != null) return item.Name;
else return null;
or return objects.FirstOrDefault((item) => item.defText == "txt_Size38")?.Name;
if you want that in a variable, it becomes even worse:
MyItem item;
var tempItem = objects.FindOrDefault((item) => item.defText == "txt_Size38");
if (tempItem != null) item = tempItem.Name;
else item = null;
@milleniumbug and then use ...?.Name ?? "Default" in case you dont want to return null?
that's one option
I want Jaba and C# to ditch null really :(
14:30
me too :(
and replace it with Jaba's Optional
unfortunately, due to woes of backward compatibility, Java and C# are doomed to have null in one form or another
I don't like it, but I know I have to live with it
Java 2.0 :D
C#++
lets make Jaba&C# great again

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