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1 hour later…
01:17
How should I initialize AutoMapper?
5
Q: Inserting object that should be mapped into different DB table depending on scenario

Euridice01I have an object with properties names that exactly name the field names inside the DB table but I'm not sure how to insert it. The only thing different is the DB table name. So it's an object with a name of different model/mapped table but I want it to be inserted into a table with a different ...

So that I can use the second example post
 
3 hours later…
04:15
There is no better feeling than closing all researched tabs in google chrome after completing task.))
it feels better when you do that in firefox
:P
mr5
mr5
04:29
I feel worried every time I do that
another (c) sentenses
It is sad every time you try to search in google and the result links are all purple, but you didn't find solution to your task yet
))
mr5
mr5
damn. you speak my mind :)
and you go to the next page because you're out of keywords to think
04:50
yeah. agreed. but usually I don't go to second page...
 
2 hours later…
06:40
@MohamedAhmed Someone downvoted my answer to your SSRS problem. Now I wonder why the downvote
I added Microsoft's source backing me up and everything
good morning everyone
06:54
good morning
any guru on TFS/VSTS?
ask away
it's just you and me, and @Proxy stealthily creeping behind the scenes
ok, I want to do some action in server, but not in my local machine
lets say
I want to create database every time in check in, but not in local
what I can do is now in build step create a file and in C# code check if that file is exists\, if so do some action
since it is in server build step it will work perfect
but for only boolean check I dont want to create a file
any beter idea?
wait, why do you want to build a database when you check in your changes
'Chelas zusammen
@Nerdintraining 50 4c 45 41 53 45 20 53 50 45 41 4b 20 49 4e 20 45 4e 47 4c 49 53 48
5
07:02
@HéctorÁlvarez pls translate, to lazy to google a converter^^
@HéctorÁlvarez lets say do some X action on server build
Only thing I want to know in code is this code is running in build server not local
ohayou
@HéctorÁlvarez i just came to the office :P. my pc is always on though
@Nerdintraining Please speak english
@GURU's any idea?
@Jamaxack I didn't quite understand what you meant
07:08
ok, I will try to explain it(English is not my first language)
@HéctorÁlvarez plz tr0nslate
@Nerdintraining I did, read above
@HéctorÁlvarez now i get it^^
nice
@Jamaxack don't worry man, take your time. By the way, I'm spanish, that excuse doesn't really work for me :)
In my C# code I want to some method 'X' based on this code is running in TFS server or my local machine
is it clear little bit?
machineName==Server ? methodX() : methodY()
@HéctorÁlvarez something like this, but I dont want to hardcode machine name, because we may add some build machines or remove, so it should not be dependent on machine name
07:27
Sorry but I still don't understand what you want to do
you want to retrieve your machine's name and use it to set a condition
is that it?
user8397869
Hello Guys,
@W4y morning
user8397869
I need some help: I use Visual Studio Xamarin, now i need to know how i write the time that i read from TimeDate into an existing .csv. The csv has some some fields in it.
is there a specific implementation for CSVs in Xamarin?
can't you just output the datetime parsed as a string?
I mean, it's a CSV, it's a layer of magic on top of a plain text file
user8397869
The datetime i got is here: varModule.List[PidNum]._on = varModule.List[PidNum].onTimeStamp.ToString("HH:mm:ss");
user8397869
07:36
and simply I show the date in a TextVIew of a ListItem
user8397869
so yes i parse it in a string
mr5
mr5
my EYES!
07:54
Hello
o/
Good day everyone o/
I had trouble sleeping last night (honest) because I have a finished program but it uses some public static methods
I thought I would improve my coding using these rather circuling objects aorund constantly, but I got a burn at my latest review right here
0
Q: Dictionary iteration with many loops

MwBakkerI have a dictionary iteration that uses a for-each comparisment in order to find multiple equalities in a string (fileline). // // reads fileLine // public void readLine(string fileline) { //// turn fileline into desired format fileline = fileline.ToLower();...

I am lost at what best practise is, do you guys use publuic static methods often?
- I did fix my public static properties though, no worries there -
08:11
Use statics where appropriate. There's no reason not to use them if they make sense conceptually.

This 'burn' is purely from a performance POV. It's very puristic as an answer, and can be completely neglected if you don't care about performance optimization. Would his approach be better? Absolutely, but does it matter in your case?
No I am not talking about the answer, that one is completely right
I am talking about the comment section in which I get attacked on public static properties (in which they are correct)
@RoelvanUden To be fair, if you rightfully have a lot of statics in your code, C# might not be the correct language for you the project you're doing.
But when I turn these properties into getters, setters then what is the exact difference?
No I used to not have a single static in my code
@MwBakker Only semantic differences.
08:16
I made statics when I read upon better practise using them rather passing around objects from methods to methods
@MwBakker Passing around objects from method to method is pretty much what OO is about.
Statics go directly against that.
For instance having my mainForm using couners (coming from a scan) and a PDF class using these counters as well I made static values instead of setting properties in the PDF class
But now I have to fall back again, and this confuses me
Statics were Java's answer to "and what if my procedure doesn't belong on any object?"
user8397869
The datetime i got is here: varModule.List[PidNum]._on = varModule.List[PidNum].onTimeStamp.ToString("HH:mm:ss");
and simply I show the date in a TextVIew of a ListItem
so yes i parse it in a string
C# copied Java almost verbatim in its early days, and so it too has statics.
Statics are your escape hatch from OO, when something doesn't fit the OO paradigm.
08:18
It's not that C# "may not be the right language" I have written many programs in it. It is since my 'discovery' of statics that I may have gone too much along with them at this specific program
In other I only used the internal Static such as File.Open but never my own created
@MwBakker In languages that are not purely OO, the understanding that free roaming functions are a thing makes it so that statics (and even functions that have no classes attached to them) are considered OK, and part of your abstraction toolkit
But to answer my question in this room, I need to avoid statics as much as possible?
In languages which are pure OO (especially purely classical OO), statics are generally awkward and are considered an outlier to the general architecture of most programs.
They are also frowned upon in most cases
Alright, then I will put myself back on track
The real question here is what is it that you're doing with statics?
08:21
It's not that I used an overload on statics, I used some but I just wanted to know what best practise is since I am a student
What I am doing is having two classes using the same static method
So neither of these classes need to make an instance of a different class just to use this method
Which seemed more efficient to me, it saved the system creating an object and it saved a line of code.
@MwBakker Sounds like you made a utility function
I did
And yesterdaynight I read this is wr000ng somehow
Reading further one says "it's not wrong, but... "
And then they more or less attacked eachother, it goes like this on every forum and I'm lost
If you have a function that has no context (i.e. no explicit or implicit use of this), it should be a static
Think Math.abs()
So it does?
yes
Its what I did
Generally speaking, unless the case for them is obvious, you should avoid creating them.
@MwBakker Then it's fine.
08:26
good morning
The general idea of OO is describing all of the concepts in your system (database, controllers, authentication, etc) and how they interact with each other (call methods on other objects)
So it is not wrong using utility classes after all?
Then what about this?
@MwBakker Yes... it makes code obscure. If you were to static implement Console for example, and used WriteLine to output text to the command line, you'd know what you are doing and would be happy to forget about Console., but the next guy will have to waste time researching why is that happening because it's not obvious at first glance.
496
Q: When to use static classes in C#

pbh101Here's what MSDN has to say under When to Use Static Classes: static class CompanyInfo { public static string GetCompanyName() { return "CompanyName"; } public static string GetCompanyAddress() { return "CompanyAddress"; } //... } Use a static class as a unit of organization...

one thing You should avoid, is static constructor. You don't have control over what happens inside
08:27
@MwBakker A utility class in the long run often ends up as a trash for all the functions you were too lazy to assign an actual object to
Haha but its not about lazy, I transferred these
It took me more time to turn them static
@ntohl How do you have less control over it than other types of functions?
But it made the code seem nicer
At '496 Q: ....' the answer talks about how he used to make utility classes himself but then regretted it
@MadaraUchiha You can't Mock it. You can't swap it up. And it will kill Your application when it starts, so You have no chance to save something from the progress
Now as a student I feel obligated to learn the right practise to make things easier for future devs who need to see my code
08:29
@ntohl Yeah, that's fair.
Only use static when you only need one instance of that object in your whole program. For example, it would make sense to have a Car with a static property bool ThereIsAtLeastOneToyota that sets itself true when there's one Toyota. You don't have this property once for each car, but rather once in your program.
This is what I fought, what you just decsribed
But then I read at 'When to use static classes in C#' that best practise would still be creating instance of an object even just for one method
Im sorry about this long discussion but I need some rest in my head
> When to use static classes in C#
for extension methods, duh
But I am talking about the discussion
Not the actual question
Contextual situations etc
I think if the static function is functional, than it's ok. So if it doesn't have state, just a pure function.
08:35
@MadaraUchiha I think it depends. If your program is conceptually something that operates mostly without objects, I see no reason why you should make everything object-based instead.
@RoelvanUden Then why are you using C# to begin with?
Unless you want, like, mock/di for everything.
Because it's a good language?
Use a language more suited to free-roaming procedures and abstractions of that kind
C# is one of the only decent languages that runs without additional software on windows machines. That alone warrants consideration.
Is a static more like a "oh shit I dont want to flip around referrences that much" kind of like situation?
Also I must say, it seems now like I used these a lot but this is not the case. I just want clarity for the future in what I do
08:39
I have seen, where a programmer wanted to avoid "flip around construction, and handling reference lifetime", so He made all the references in getters. So for example property B created a new instance of class B every time. You could freely A.B, and it would be surely not null.
tho there was a "little" problem with that code
A.B.SomeThing = "aaa"; var foo = A.B.SomeThing; foo != "aaa"
what happened? I asked
are there best articles for standards for designing web api in c#?
Thats an odd but creative way of dealing with such, wouldnt consider such myself the only problem I have is flipping back static to regular OO
But just a few statics, no disaster but my mind become restless and insecure now
@MadaraUchiha we had a static constructor, which connected to a database, to read out the possible languages. It was impossible to create decent unit tests for the program.
@MwBakker I would consider that the static function have state, or no. Is it possible, to have different results for the same inputs.
user8397869
Can someone help me please, I need to know how can I write the DateTime into an exisitng csv?
Alright thank you all very much
Gonna spend some time flipping back some scenario's here
08:56
'morning.
@ntohl Was that true?
@HéctorÁlvarez it was like if (foo == "aaa") { program never went inside }, and I had to debug why.
what the hell...
and what was the root cause exactly?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan o/
A.B was always a new instance. it was like that private B B { get { return new B(); } }. So whenever You referenced A.B, it was a new thing, and forgot every setting.
09:02
I think the problem was an implementation flaw
your getter should be return A.B??new B(params);
I've done this extensively in the past and it worked wonders
mr5
mr5
@HéctorÁlvarez it's the same from ntohl's example
@mr5 erm... he said B was always a new instance, that approach doesn't return a new instance every time
mr5
mr5
that feeling when you close all opened files from visual studio after debugging for 6 hrs
it does though
there's no assignment?
the first time you retrieve B it constructs it, the second time you get the value
class A {
    public B B { get { return _b ?? (_b = new B()); } // that would work
    private _b;
}
09:12
assuming your constructor isn't B B = null
but You can't leave out the _b
and if You have _b, than You can init it in the constructor. Anyway... You are managing the lifetime of _b.
I don't see why you can't, if you do you'll also get the value of B the first time you request it... that code just makes sure you don't break anything
with the code, You already managing the lifetime. With simple private B B { get { return new B(); } }, You don't care about lifetime. That is the implementation flaw.
user8397869
Guys, what I want to do is put the DateTime in 2 specific fields in an existing csv
There are the csv fields: _Id, _Na, _Schl, _wei, Wgin, Srtei, Dar, Vo, Bi, _Adse1, _Adse2, _Sre, _As, _T1, _ot, _Ghleht, _seces, _E, p_Adse1, p_Adse2, p_T1, p_Mil, p_Ml, p_Io, z_Ne, z_Adse1, z_Ase2, z_PZ, z_rt, z_T1, z_Ml, z_al, t_Len, _n2, _n3, _Stat, _Dat, _on, _is, _uer How can I do that?
@ntohl indeed, you are giving the object no lifetime. Garbage-collector-friendly code :)
@W4y oh god, delete that CSV and make a new one with proper names
09:20
half of the column names might be my new login name...
user8397869
@HéctorÁlvarez OK, but it solve not the porblem that I dont know how to write in it
I have this following img[] array on my MainForm
Image[] alerticons = { Image.FromFile("Img\\criticalIcon.png"), Image.FromFile("Img\\errorIcon.png"),
Image.FromFile("Img\\informativeIcon.png"), Image.FromFile("Img\\unknownIcon.png") };
btw ntohl comes from network to host long. But I thought... Heck it sounds like Nihlatak from diablo 2. That will be my new name. I had no problem with "already used" names anywhere with ntohl
But I want my MainForm to be as small as possible
I turned the array static in an ImgUtility class for retrieval on a getter, but since I want to get rid of statics.. Can I use a regular class for this? Wouldnt that be the same reason to avoid static for?
heh, Windows Forms
09:26
@ntohl I killed that guy in Hell yesterday. I wiped several times... ingame too
'heh' ?
out of all the GUI frameworks that .NET ecosystem offers, you've picked the oldest one
My program will only run on dekstop machines running Windows OS
So WinForms is perfectly suitable for this
Unless you have a specific reason not to use it, its fine.
WPF exists. Need more reasons?
UWP exists... although WPF is a simpler transition
it's like programming asmx and rejecting Restful webAPIs
09:35
Im an college intern at a factory plant
The people here do not care for fancy design, but functional design
g'day
It would be bollocks to spent time learning .WPF just for some fancier (but maybe less relevant for the employees) GUI
in WinForms You cannot separate UI and business logic that well as in WPF
Well Windows kidna does this on their own with their designer.cs class
But then again the MainForm.cs is still big which isn't very nice but not a major let down
in Android, Oct 26 at 13:55, by milleniumbug
@TimCastelijns which is why some frameworks introduce something they call a "ViewModel" which interacts between your models and views. Basically: untestable GUI shit (views) <-> testable GUI-independent data observables (viewmodels) <-> rest of your application (models)
09:41
:D hit the spot
as long as You don't do things like that> stackoverflow.com/a/2368290/1859959
You are not separating UI from logic
designer.cs is not separation
user8397869
How can I write in Xamarin.Android the DateTime in an existing csv?
No I am not doing things like that
I would like to seperate my UI, but my program is nearly finished I am not sure if it possible at all to turn it into WPF. Also, I would only do this to seperate the UI with the business logic
I thought so. Just like my previous work place. Thousands of lines of codes, all of them untested, and all of them in code behind
just finish Your program, than start new projects in WPF than
@MwBakker Is this a serious product with a life expectancy of a few more years?
09:46
belay that order. Rewrite it
Then you might want to invest the time/effort so that's it's maintainable in the long haul.
mr5
mr5
@W4y which esoteric language is this?
user8397869
I am a beginner
@mr5 I think german
mr5
mr5
lul
09:47
_Ghleht
ntohl where do you find source to imply I have not tested my program??
sounds german
@W4y You use a CSV library
@MwBakker I mean unit tests
mr5
mr5
@W4y are you a former C programmer?
09:47
@MwBakker and also I mean my former company
"click every button on the form after build" doesn't count as testing
you want it to be 1.) reproducible 2.) automated
Who ever said I work that way ?
user8397869
@mr5 No, I am a beginner
09:49
who said that you do
Sounded like implementation
Which happens too much on Stack. Just because some questions asked does not mean this or that
I am generally curious about WPF because of seperation of UI with business logic, but my college never taght me this and in private time I was working with Xamarin
sorry if I sounded like You did like that. I meant my previous company did not test anything, and that come to my mined after hearing not separating UI from business logic.
anyway... Do You have unit tests?
Yes, all worked so far but some required speed improvements
functionality first
improvements later
It is now fully functional
But I needed to remove statics from utility classes
Which would make my MainForm a little bigger in logics, and I dont like that
Now I hear WPF would do full seperation and I can start all over haha
You can understand this all is making me very nervous, I wont even know how much time I would lose to restart the project in WPF
10:02
Quite a lot.
Xamarin in your private time? They use separation too, bindings etc.
Concept is the same.
You could do binding in WinForms too.
tho WinForms have many bugs related to Bindings, which WPF don't have
how did a unit test look like?
creating a Form, than checking expectations?
No the unit tests considerd divers user inputs and actions, including forcing a non-valid action to see if the program handles this correctly without crashing etc
Well of course it was regular exception checkings as well but I do this dynamically
What I don't get is that most data-binding already happens in MainForm.Designer.cs so in that metter is already is seperated?
10:35
I really dont get why people still use winforms
Gee
legacy reasons and social reasons
You can release wpf on a single exe, no dolls no cpp redistribute no bs
Ui design is 100 times faster
Everything is better
Dlls*
WPF won't run on Linux
You can release WinForms on a single exe too, no cpp, no bs.
UI design is faster for simple things.
Will run on Linux
10:38
How what?
~~Mono~~
What's so bad about mono? It's a really stable toolkit.
It's spelled "fuck" if you don't know
you aren't making it any less obvious that you're using a swear word, except to regexes
10:39
Android is the only Unix version worth while anyway, rest of Linux are just for dev on small lob apps for small companies
Wpf is better for windows
100 times better
It reason winforms still used is cuz people are slow and corporations slower
To change
4 mins ago, by milleniumbug
legacy reasons and social reasons
I see, you have a very narrow perspective and only think in your own terms.
Social reasons
There's no point to holding a discussion with someone like that. :-)
well, we already knew you are a troll
10:41
Sry but when I join on a c sharp room I expect to talk about net and windows related things
Ur mom is a troll
Your expectation is wrong. C# is multi-platform, mobile, Linux, and Mac.
Calling me a troll
Warning: Don't insult people. Thank you.
So why should I care about the 2% of machines that run linux
It's so neglectable
please provide the source for the 2%
10:42
I'm on phone
Did you know that most servers run Linux? ;-)
surely your greatest phone OS is able to google shit
I Linux is not android
Android is unix
> > servers
> > Android
Unfortunately for you, Android was built on top of the Linux kernel.
10:44
Why does every question I have end up in some sort of fight?
Win forms on Linux implies client linux
I am turning my application into WPF as I speak
They are fighting I'm laughing
@MwBakker maybe you have a fight attracting magnet attached to you
Good for you
10:45
@MwBakker if this was a fight you'd see more fight there
I'll show you how I fight trolls.
now there's just one kid flailing around
He was a troll?
you haven't noticed? writing incorrect statements on purpose and so on
Anyway I hope that in the end my Mainform.cs will be smaller with WPF
But im not sure, since I would just as much need to handle click events etc as I did in Winforms
Not reading a fight haha so I didnt notice
Just come here for relevant info
WPF is tricky, one single click and stuff is added, I am not used to this
10:47
Have different opinion - >kicked
here, have another one
it was fun for a while, but meh
get a hint
Guys guys guys. You never let me kick, im always late.
@KamilSolecki I too fall under this lateness
Starts looking like Tumblr with this
I call lobbying.
10:52
I add a control to WPF and it's gone, only the border are visible when selecting the element
How is this better?
The curse of our community right
@MwBakker noooo
Make it stretch
Horizontally has and vertically
use DelegateCommands, and don't handle events in code behind
Preferably on some container like a grid with tles
Roes
10:55
DelegateCommands?
Don't handle events in code behind? Why do tutorials show this then?
Who is at the right end? So confusing..
Nah just click the thunder button on properties
so why was he kicked then?
Cc @MadaraUchiha you might want to adress the troll moderatively
@MwBakker because tutorials don't want to overwhelm You maybe
Why can't I handle click events? In my click event the method handling data is being called
10:57
Not sure i got that one
but use something like that > stackoverflow.com/a/16314968/1859959
1 min ago, by George Sarcasm God
Nah just click the thunder button on properties
Ah yes, I already did something like this
when even being raised, I called for the method doing the handling
Never do I let the event method handle the calculations itself
because in the long run You want to be the code behind empty
WPF is quite elastic actually, you can even write Windows Forms style code in it if you want
10:58
@KamilSolecki could have been referring to the quick actions icon
:40058013
but MVVM works better here
I know its changed to the lightbulb in vs2015
He was referring to the events panel
On control props
So what ntohl suggested is not MVVM?
Because it is right?
Wait wat
what I'm suggesting is MVVM propagating to ViewModel in code behind, is not proper MVVM
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