So I start my windows server 2016 datacenter VM, and on login I immediately get a java malformedURLException. How do I find out what application made that?
I'd sure like to know if there's malware trying to find its daddy
The world still isn't falling apart. If you just adhere to 'Hey this is a HTTP call with GET/POST/PUT/DELETE/PATCH to some URL that returns stuff', people will understand.
EF or dapper-like SQL shells are most common. On a green project, there is no real reason not to pick EF if you're doing SQL. Just use EF when you have the chance.
@Squirrelkiller There is no argument given that corresponds to the required formal parameter 'sourceType' of 'ValueConversionAttribute.ValueConversionAttribute(Type, Type)'
@Koosh It's actually trickier with plain SQL because the dialects of the flavors of SQL can be different, whereas a EF supported provider will handle that for you.
It's the wild west out there bro. Sometimes you see MSSQL with EF, sometmes Oracle with SQLDataReaders, there is some Mongo, some Casandra, some Dynamo, with various access layers in various programming language.
I work in healthcare small non-profit. we have an EHR system (Web Forms) but it has a custom built process, each time we make a change to our tables in SQL server we have to run a codesmith
Wasn't it axiomatic that C# support local functions since lambda expressions made available? Cause the alternative is private methods which is not the same
Either you write lambda as a parameter to say Where method , or pass the function name, if it doesn't exist Visual Studio will resolve it to a private method