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01:26
Anyone active in here that could help me out real quick?
WOO! Just have a really noob question that didn't merit a post.
Position testPos = entityManager.AddComponent<Position>(1); <-- I have this code. Creates/assigns a new Position Component and assigns it to that variable.
01:30
The component is added to a dictionary and the command entityManager.RemoveEntity(1); will delete the 1 entity and all components attached to it.
However, I'm still able to assign to/read from testPos.
I want testPos to be destroyed when the component is destroyed.
why
this is c# were talkin bout here?
Aye.
why do u assign it to a variable in the first place?
do u use it anywhere?
01:35
So that I don't have to type out entityManager.GetComponent<Position>(1) everytime I want to change a value.
dont forget c# doesnt need to have its memory managed... it can do that shit itself.
unless theres a specific need of course
i.e. large objects in mem
Yeah, memory isn't the worry. The worry is that since it still lets you make the assignment that that "component" is still active or whatever.
Could lead to some debugging nightmares if someone doesn't realize what's going on.
I would like to be able to use that shorthand but throw an error if an assignment is made to a component that was supposedly removed.
right.. something your doing isnt right... you havnt given me enuff of an idea what that could be tho.
I can post the code real quick if it'd make more sense.
you shouldnt need to explicitly destroy objects in c# O_o
01:38
Yeah, it's something I'm doing wrong. I'm sure of it.
so figuring out how to do that isnt the answer
Shoot, that doesn't post well.
There's no code tag in chat eh?
@Kittoes indent code with 4 spaces or use backticks, just like on the main site.
01:46
entityManager.AddEntity(1);
entityManager.AddComponent<Position>(1);
Position testPos = entityManager.AddComponent<Position>(1);
Oh, ok. Thanks.
... and All my hard work just paid off: Fanatic Badge!
Getting the 30 day one took me a while. I kept forgetting on the weekend.
@Kittoes again... why doe you need to return an object for a call named AddEntity?
sorry
addcomponent
sorry im still not understanding where the problem lies
I do it to Add the component and use it in one call.
call it something else then
01:50
Or in this case add it while assigning it to Position testPos.
oh right
i guess you need to stop worrying when the GC destroys objects :P
Well yeah, again I'm not really worried about this from a GC perspective.
It's just that I can call .RemoveEntity(1) which will destroy the entity and it's list of components.
But then I'm still able to manipulate testPos.
you could always make it an IDisposable object
then u could actually dispose of it when u want
but as far as i know its gonna stick around because the GC hasnt got around to destroying it yet
youve assigned it in code you see
Yeah, I was just thinking there might be another way for me to write it so that I'd eng up with the best of both worlds.
IDisposable
read up about it
it will allow you to explicitly destroy objects
when you want
not when the GC decides
01:58
Yeah, I have. Was hoping not to go that route since I'd rather not explicity destroy the object.
So I'll just have to approach things from a different angle.
then you cant predict when the GC will actually do its job
O_o
o_O
are u not listening
I am.
just because you you've 'removed' the object from memory, it wont necessarily occur at that point in time
Again, it's not the GC that I'm worried about. I don't care about the GC at all. When I remove the component from the entity I don't want to be able to assign to it anymore because the expected behavior is that the component no longer exists. By directly assigning the component to Position testPos I'm causing it to stay around longer than intended.
then dont return it from the method call perhaps?
rethink what your code is doing and what is actually needed for it to do its job
02:03
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I'm approaching it wrong and trying to get too much from one thing. I was hoping to get away with it but you can't win 'em all.
premature optimization is the root of all evil or some such thing
Very very true. And here I was thinking I wasn't committing such a crime since optimization wasn't the goal.
dont be afraid to lay things out logically... even if it leads to what you may think is verbose code.
think of it from the perspective of another coder coming in to read your code
Hello experts
if you think they could understand it no probs youve done a good job
and im not ttalking about comments
 
6 hours later…
08:01
WTF -> "C# is purely OOP"
@David morning bro
morning
from where are you btw?
Bonnie Scotland
u?
morning
@David I think they mean that everything is an object in C#
even primitive types
08:18
Morning Baboon
<- Belgium
@Baboon ah ok because with al the functional programming stuff in c# :p
Belgium != cool
really
got to have prettier girls than Scotland, the Vikings came and stole all of ours
;)
lol :)
well at least the rest of nature is nice in scotland
08:23
aye guess so
whiskey aint bad either
in the nature/landscape department , Belgium = shithole :p
:(
i have the following code which can have 4 scenarios, completed & no errors, completed and errors, canceled & errors, canceled & no errors.

atm i have the following but im wondering if i should have a seperate if for each of those 4 possibilities?
               if (e.CarriedOutToCompletion == true)
                {
                    string logMessage = string.Format("some message here.", dataFile.ReturnNumberOfErrorsFound());
                    UpdateLog(logMessage);
                }
                else
                {
                    UpdateLog("some message here.");
                }


                if (e.CarriedOutToCompletion != true || dataFile.ReturnNumberOfErrorsFound() > 0)
                {
                    DataVerificationUserInputs(true);
@David @Baboon which would u guru's advise?
tbh don't see see any problems with that
cool, thanks
i would do
if (e.CarriedOutToCompletion) { }
but for the rest its clear enough what is happening
08:34
ok
just so you know there is a codereview.stackexchange.com
ahh ok cool
btw very descriptive variables :)
too descriptive?
i got into trouble for shit naming last time
well I usally do Get instead of Return, it's 3 characters less ;)
but it's not too descriptive
08:38
definitely, Get > Return
lol, i will incorp get instead in the next project, its a good idea, thanks.
it's a common naming convention
ok ill see about changing it in this one then.
thanks guys
and you can also diffrentiate with Get...() and Find...()
For example Get always returns something while Find can return a null value
09:11
got one more question. I have my DLL with one class used for DataVerification and one for Uploading the data. Should i be creating my task inside the DLL class or in the form class? atm i have one example of each but the form one seems to look a bit messy
@HansRudel I don't understand your question, can you rephrase it please?
howdy folks!
@Baboon i have a class in my form1.cs. It creates an instance of another class in my .dll. The purpose of the class in the .dll is to verify the datafile.
i have all my task creation code in the .dll
Question: is that where the task creation code should be? i have another example where i create the task in the form1.cs and then get it to run the method in my .dll
does that make sense? If not ill draw a diagram
"the" Task? what task are we talking about?
a TPL task?
Task parentTask = Task.Factory.StartNew(() =>
{
//Call the handling method.
ChildTaskSync(numberOfUploads, loader, db, SourceFilePath, NumberOfColumns, dataTypesValues, columnHeaderNames, DataTableName, BatchSize, tempCancelDataUpload.Token, dataTableRows, ErrorLogFilePath );
});
those tasks
09:20
right
so should the above code be in form1.cs or would you put it in the .dll
maybe in another class in the .DLL
so definately not in form1.cs
tbh I'd be more worried about having a method with so many parameters
that method can't possibly be doing only one thing
calls the datatable loader method, then the uploadDataTable method.
so at least two things
+ catches any aggregate exceptions
shit design?
09:30
can't judge without seeing it all, and no time to see it all ;)
anyway we all have skeletons in some classes
i understand.
in ur oppinion which is better though, creating tasks in form1.cs or in the .dll which contains the methods the task will execute?
or cant comment?
if that method only makes sense for the Form, you can keep it there
if it's reusable as is, put it in the dll
@baboon, only reason i could think of to keep in Form1.cs is so im not allowing someone to create a new thread when they use the .dll
09:55
@HansRudel so call it BlaBlaMethodAsync
so it's obvious enough that it starts a thread
@Baboon ive made a drawing, hold a sec
shit drawing i know
but which is better?
i have it set up as the left atm
I guess my point is: don't overengineer
left looks easy to understand
if you don't need this to be reused elsewhere, don't put it in the DLL
if it's an operation you do a lot,
make it generic, use intefaces and abstract classes etc and put it in a separate DLL
like this method:
public static class DeepMapper
    {
        public static void DeepMapCollections<T>(IList<T> _New, IList<T> _Old, Func<T, string> _GetUniqueIdentifier) where T : IDeepMappable<T>
        {
            if (_GetUniqueIdentifier != null)
            {
                var newAsDic = _New.ToDictionary(n => _GetUniqueIdentifier(n));

                //DELETE
                for (int i = _Old.Count() - 1; i >= 0; i--)
                {
                    var old = _Old[i];
                    if (!newAsDic.ContainsKey(_GetUniqueIdentifier(old)))
have fun, going for lunch
@Baboon thanks for ur help
 
2 hours later…
11:49
3
Q: Advanced LINQ Grouping and Projection Query for Hierarchical Data (EF 4.0 + LINQ + ASP.NET MVC + HighCharts)

Daniel SkowrońskiProblem overview: I have database tables that describe data gathering from multiple devices using web services into centralized database. The table that stores results is deliberately de-normalized for performance: faster querying and grouping by multiple indexes. I am using Entity Framework a...

what a loser
"NeroS thanks for "advice" however I have my design principles that I can't change"
"design principles" as in solve everything with EF, instead of being pragmatic
12:09
@David well, that's precisely the kind of dev who's going to suck pretty much forever :D
just look at his profile-pic :p
Mind of an Engineer:
• Over 5 yrs of software engineering in .NET (WPF 4 / Silverlight 4, ASP.NET MVC 3, WCF 4, IoC, Databases, Design Patterns) with top-notch Polish companies
• MSc in IT
• PM Expert: Agile Scrum, Prince 2
• Microsoft Certified Professional, Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist
shudder
mind of an engineer does sound a bit high and mighty
Well that stuff sells
Selling bullshit instead of selling decent software is always an option
The amount of crappy overdesigned stuff is staggering
lol
i wouldnt know
unfortunately
A lot of "architects" implementing this kind of stuff -> microsoftnlayerapp.codeplex.com
12:15
     System.Windows.Forms.Timer timer = new System.Windows.Forms.Timer();


    CompletionOfUploadEventArgs e)
        {
            Action action = () =>
            {
                //Need to explicitly unsubscribe from event since its a class level variable.
                this.UploadCompleted -= UploadReportNotifier;

                if (uploadReport.CarriedOutToCompletion == true)
                {
                    if (progBarDTProgress.Value <= 100)
                    {
                        progBarDTProgress.Value = 100;
the timer in the middle doesnt seem to be working, do u know why?
@David never heard of N layer n ill give it a miss
this guy has a review about it ayende.com/blog/tags/reviews
@David @Baboon any ideas why the timer aint working? @David, dude seemed to be impressed with it.
which dude?
guess he is one of em Architects ;)
do you the Tick of that timer? :p
ayende.com/blog/search?q=nlayer <- these are the reviews
12:25
bolloxs
in all honesty, a dev in suit is a liar who's going to sell you "cloud computing"
and most businesses just fall for it
which is kinda why i'll never be truly happy until i make my own company
and i will totally do it
never trust a dev in suit
In Belgium we also have the MVP's doing that
Hype all new MS-technology so that you can become an MVP
13:03
@David @KendallFrey still having issues with this stupid timer, could u guys point out what ive screwed up?
private void TimerEventProcessor(Object myObject, EventArgs myEventArgs)
        {
            ...
            stopTimerFlag = true;
        }


        public void UploadReportNotifier(object sender, CompletionOfUploadEventArgs e)
        {
            Action action = () =>
            {
                System.Windows.Forms.Timer timer = new System.Windows.Forms.Timer();

                if (uploadReport.CarriedOutToCompletion == true)
                {
                    timer.Tick += new EventHandler(TimerEventProcessor);
stopTimerFlag = false
so it stops
stopTimerFlag will be set to true in TimerEventProcessor
but that happens after 5 seconds
just set some breakpoints :)
one on stopTimerFlag = true;
and one on timer.Stop();
the timerEventProcessor() code never gets called
i already had the breakpoints in hence why im confused
well yeah it's called after the interval
@David ?? im lost. I thought the timer waited for 5000 (in this case) then raised the event and the code in TimerEventProcessor() was executed. Once thats finished, the class level variable stopTimerFlag = true and the while loop exits
no that all happen in another thread
I think
:p
13:13
ok... but why is it not working then or should it be?
the start method doesn't block the current thread
it just executes further and does the loop but because the 5 seconds haven't passed stopTimerFlag is still false
so yeah the timer.start just creates another thread where that tick method will execute in the specified interval
but the current thread just continues on
i seem to have an infinite loop at the while statement
@David i reset the interval to 1000 and then slowly counted for 10seconds
1000 = 1 sec?
yes
id changed the event from a static method
im guessing thats whats screwed it up?
though dont see how
13:31
well you can always do
         timer.Tick += delegate
            {
               timer.Stop();
               timer.Enabled = false;
               action();
            };
you can dispose the timer on the first tick I guess
but if you want to do something after 5 seconds, there are other options
yeah i was wanting to do something after 5 seconds, reset the progressbars and some labels.
either im a retard or the time class is cr-p.... probably the former
@David That's C# 2.0 right? Couldn't you write that as a lambda expression?
you mean like
 timer.Tick += (_, __) =>
                  {
                     timer.Stop();
                     timer.Enabled = false;
                     action();
                  };
it's some old code that I have lying around
now I do most things with reactive extensions
for the real Linq-Luvahs
13:47
@David the dude from earlier is really retarded...
i tried to vote for close as too localized, but SO wouldn't let me: there's an open bounty
+50 reps
Is Clever Code still Clever when you copy it from SO?
in 10 hours we can close it ;)
first thing tomorrow morning xD
@David AHH!!! My eyes! Why did I click that link! :P
lol :p
maybe it helps :)
@David thanks, ill have a look
13:56
Jeesh... some things can't be unseen. I wonder if I should leave a comment on that guys site that reminds him that just because you can do something a certain way doesn't mean you SHOULD do it that way
he has a DISCLAIMER
Don't care
:)
Just writing it means he thought about using it, even with the disclaimer. Just means he came to his senses
14:10
he states at the end "In case you had any doubts - hopefully this convinces you that C#3.0 Query Expressions are really a very expressive language construct. Of course - this expressiveness is probably best used in more moderation than shown here!" stop hating
I couldn't read through it... just looked at the code and went Oh God! Can you imagine trying to maintain something written like that?
I can imagine ;)
but I wish I couldn't
14:48
Anyone here with EF experience
I am trying to update model from DB but the table is not getting added
what can cause that
using EF
have you read a book about it first ?
I mean EF is not a simple library to use
I have been using it for a while
I must be missing something simple
ok I found it
no primary key defined.. I knew I ran into this issue before
@David Can you recommend a good EF book?
14:54
hi
Only thing I can recommend is, don't use EF
What would you recommend instead?
is there a way to fire the Onclick event programmatically
@David Not an option anymore unless I go hunt for another job
14:56
what is not an option?
is there any equuivalent of the MessageBox of the winforms in the web forms
ah ok, so you have to use it
that is almost as bad as being waterboarded
@techno winforms or WPF?
Winforms
14:59
@onepseudoxy - if you use jquery alert
alert is javascript :p
@techno OnClick of what? a button?
I just said - i you use jquery
@ScottSelby lol, don't say stuff like that in the javascript-room :p
15:01
@ScottSelby i need a function to show confirm popup and recuperate the user response that works in the code behind
@Baboon button
Hi at all :-)
@David What do you think of NHibernate?
@onepseudoxy - if you open to jquery you can use modal pup up and control the form in code behind
15:02
@David - I know javascript is evil - just an option
@TonyHarmon the last 5 years I primarily had work completely rewriting failed projects, failed projects written in nHibernate
@Baboon Can i do it for a Listview control
@TonyHarmon - you know what my boss said today????
Whats LINQ !
Does anyone know how I can receive a list of project names from my project database? I have an LINQ request where I can use "... WHERE Project.NAME = "ThisName" ORDER by Project.Date Select ) but I want to have all different project names. The user should get an combobox to select the project to filter out the datagridview.
@David poorly written or was it nhibernates fault? I'm reading an old SO thread where someone asked about the different ORMs
15:04
@Nasenbaer use Distinct
@onepseudoxy I will google... sounds perfect :-)
@TonyHarmon how can it be the fault of a technology?
Its never the fault of the technology, but by the person who uses it
If you'r project fails because nHibernate was not the correct choice, or if you used it incorrectly then you yourself are at fault
it's like using EF because it's from microsoft so when you'r app sucks it's "Well yeah but microsoft says...."
Users don't give a f#ék
@Baboon I want to programatically click the current selected item in the listview
@techno just post the stuff in the click event in a seperate function and then call that function?
@Nasenbaer do .Distinct().ToList() ?
@David I'm not suggesting that. I don't know shit about any ORM and am just trying to learn and get peoples opinions
15:11
My opinion is that when you use a framework you still have the responsibility of what that framework does, so you need to know what the framework is doing, in the case of NH and EF, you have too much too learn before knowing that
But if you remove the abstraction layer that is responsible for the entity tracking and lazy loading then you can eliminate a whole lot of problems
Bltoolkit is just in essence Dapper with a Linq-provider
So you give up a bit of performance but you don't have to bother with hardcoded sql's in strings
@David But the click event has arguments like the current selected item
It's the most ideal abstraction level to get things done while not getting yourself in trouble with unknown conventions, N + 1 selects or lost contexts
well then make a click function that has a selected item-param
and then get it from the listview
@David THANKS!! works like it should. I forgot the keyworks. Great!
@onepseudoxy same to you :-)
What if you know you will only be doing stored procedure calls?
15:22
Then you only need a mapper
though you can do this -> erraticdev.blogspot.com/2010/11/…
15:38
Thanks. So much to read and I just want to dive into the deep end :)
just dive then, reading is overrated :p
15:52
I don't know what direction to dive... been a DBA so long that the last time I actively coded was COBOL on a mainframe and C/C++ on an AIX box :)
as a DBA, is there an ORM you favor over others?
Never used one or been in a shop that used one. Where I'm at now is currently a mainframe or off-the-shelf shop and wants to move into the server-we-built-it-ourselves world and I'm tasked with finding the best approaches for common problems
It's government if that makes any difference
still the funniest talk to piss of orm-lovers -> vimeo.com/28885655 :)
16:08
Just purchased LINQPad license, couldn't be happier.
So worth it for autocomplete.
16:19
1
A: Best .net open source ntier distributed sample projects or sample applications

David I'm just going to give some BAD examples, like for instance http://microsoftnlayerapp.codeplex.com/ It's a very bad DDD Example, you can see this one and others reviewed on the following site http://ayende.com/blog/19457/review-microsoft-n-layer-app-sample-part-i The thing is most Business Soft...

I don't know why I sometimes take the effort to answer
BS closed as not constructive
Do you gain a trophy when you close a lot of stuff?
I upvoted your answer
lol :p
couldn't they just transfer these things to the appropriate site
if you look at the related questions, there are a lot of them which are similar and not closed
specially this " this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion"
Like if we are a bunch of idiots that can't control ourselves
well I can't but others probably can

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