According to https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd287208(v=vs.110).aspx ConcurrentQueue.TryDequeue(out T)
> When this method returns, if the operation was successful, result contains the object removed. If no object was available to be removed, the value is unspecified.
does "the value is unspecified" means it is null?
A simple check says it is but I may not be aware that there might be "undefined" value
I'm writing a front-end for our OData service. It will be used by a generic binding service which will construct the odata queries from a DSL and return... objects, which will then be parsed by the binding service again.
loyal SO users don't vote for this answer :( https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49168563/how-to-get-methodinfo-of-contains-method-of-iqueryablet-by-reflection/49168605#49168605
@MarcSantos These are two completely unrelated activities. First, go and learn how to interact with a MySQL database in C#. Then, learn to insert something into a table from C#. Then, learn how to build a GUI in WPF. Then, learn how to use a WPF event to trigger some code inserting your data.
@RoelvanUden Thanks isn't inserting something into the table from C# the same as learning how to interact with a MySQL database in C#? Or is this different as well?
Also where do I find a good reference to inserting values into a table from C#? can't find this stuff anywhere
@MarcSantos Assuming this isn't a learning/hobby project, and your time is valuable, then yes, paying someone to write a simple data entry app will probably be more cost-effective.
nah I wrote a programm once wih loads data form the databse and then user can filter it. The filtering is where userinput matters and is not done in SQL but Linq.
e.g. products.Where(p => p.Name.Contains(userInput));
@MarcSantos Indeed, if you have no intention of learning how to develop on a high level and just need a 'simple' app that does a thing, paying someone to build it for you is the approach that makes the most sense. Assuming you have better things to do.
@Squirrelintraining Impossible to say. Too many factors. I've seen LINQ queries to a SQL DB that were hideously slow until we notied that we were accidentally pulling >100k records to RAM and filtering them there, rather than passing the query to SQL to return the 10-15 records we needed. That was slow.
@Squirrelintraining Yeah, but that's like saying "It's faster to get a beer from my fridge than it is to go get it from the store". Sure it's faster, but you need to have a beer in your fridge for that.
But this is what I'm saying - the task "get a beer from the fridge" is simply a different task than "go buy a beer". Comparing their performance is meaningless.
So yes, iterating over RAM with Linq-to-objects is fast. But if you need to fetch 10k records and then iterating over them in memory (fast!), it will probably be slower than fetching only the records you need from the DB.
In most cases, a huge part of the time spent performing SQL queries is spent doing I/O. Disk reads and network transfers. If you can reduce those (by retrieving only what you need (that includes column, not only rows) and utilizing the DB's highly optimized indexing) you'll be as efficient as possible.
I've seen 50 second queries reduced to 0.5 seconds by simply noticing there was a ToList() call, early in the query.
I've seen a complex (but speedy) query reduced to utter slowness and took a while to udnerstand why - one of the (dynamically applied) filters was by entity age - the user picked a choice (< 1 day old, 1-3 days, 3-7 days, etc) and the code filtered by that. But because this didn't map directly to SQL/LINQ calls, the developer (which might have been me) absent-mindedly simply materialized the query at that point to apply a C# function to filter.
It worked fine in dev, and even in test.
But when we stress-tested with >100k records, it became abysmally slow.
Morning. Got a peculiar problem - an MVC view that sometimes has to render with full URLs for resources (images, CSS etc) and sometimes not. I don't really want to have to make a whole other Layout just to handle this page ... but I can't think of another way round it?
This is a terrible workplace. It's not an unusual one, unfortunately, but terrible. People refuse to commit to anything in writing so they can cover their asses later. This is terrible because when there are no clearly defined goals, there can never be success, only avoiding failure.
It's terrible for morale, terrible for career development, terrible for learning.
@MattThrower I don't really know MVC, but how does this make sense? If the resources are placed relative to the page, use a relative path. If they aren't use an aboluste path.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan here we just get drip-fed features, without any sort of larger picture. A team full of very skilled software engineers, but not really doing much in the way of engineering. Just coding.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Makes sense, but I've not explained the issue very well. Let's put it another way - my site uses a layout that's reused across all the pages. But one page has to have fixed paths to resources, none of the others do. I could use fixed paths everywhere but that seems massive overkill and will cause testing issues
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan No, I mean absolute URLs. The issue is that one page is needs to be displayed in a subframe from another site - that means it needs a fixed path back to our host to get its images, css etc for proper display
@Squiggle I don't actually know exactly what they're doing - it's a worldpay response. All I know is that the response displays our HTML but under their domain
user7538827
Hey I wanted to know your option on one thing, I'm developing a c # Application that communicates with a sql server database, the fact is that I should also develop an app for ios that does the same things of the desktop application on the database, according to you it is better to manage all the calls to the database with a node.js server and then use the HttpWebRequest with jSON in c #?
tumbleweed ... it's an absolute pig of a situation. I could just write this one page with absolute paths, but then that'd have to be changed every time the layout change
@Squiggle Yes. But that's not the requirement, of course. They want it on-brand :)
@riki If you have two client apps that need the same logic, put the logic on the server-side, yes. That's always a better option for accessing server-side resources like DBs. You don't want a mobile app accessing the DB directly (through the internet?)
reimplement the page as static content either way. It's good practice to serve uncomplicated static content when doing these sorts of payment workflows. IME.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan peaceful as in "I'm not doing this in time... oh well, next month maybe", so as long as development is delayed by foreign factors, there's no pressure on me.
@Squiggle Yeah, I might have to go back to them and explain the trade offs. I just didn't know if there was some clever trick I could employ to get round the issue. I mean I've got the base URL as an appSetting, and it's different for the dev, test and live installations, obviously, so I could pull that into the layout and use it. But it seems ... clumsy, at best.
Microsoft about the SSRS Expression Language: "[...]Expressions begin with an equal sign (=) and are written in Microsoft Visual Basic. Expressions can include [...]"
@Breathing you asked like 5 times now. I suggest trying several similar but different google queries to try and find someone who had exactly that problem and got it solved.
It used to be more profitable, but then the supply started to dwindle. The breakpoint mines started to close one after the other. These days it's either mass-produced breakpoints from China, or organic artisanal locally-sourced breakpoints. Hard for a decent, hardworking breakpoint factory to get by in this economy.
somebody force pushed master and removed some commits remote last commit is in "2018-02-12" local master last commit is on "2018-02-16" how can I push this local copy correctly?
How, how do you guys determine when to break data up into separate tables? What's a simple rule of thumb, without getting too in-depth. If you have a multi-step process but it's related data, but there's say 50 fields total, would you stick it all in one table and call it a day or break it up into sizable chucks?