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3:44 AM
posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

In general, cursors suck ass! Ok, that’s a bit extreme, but I have a long and ugly history with cursors. Let me diverge here and tell you a true story. A while ago, a friend of mine recommended me to a company in serious need of senior developers for full-time or contract work. After talking to the dev manager over the phone, he felt my rate was too high, but wanted me to come in anyways. He

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Apparently I’m not the only one to run into this annoying problem. When using the HttpWebRequest to POST form data using HTTP 1.1, it ALWAYS adds the following HTTP header “Expect: 100-Continue”. Fixing the problem has proved to be quite elusive. According to the HTTP 1.1 protocol, when this header is sent, the form data is not sent with the initial request. Instead, this header is sent to th

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Test First Development, the process of writing unit tests to test the code you are about to write, is one of my favorite software practices that has an impact on producing better written code. However, it’s no a panacea. It is true that I use the debugger much less often because of TDD, but there are still occasions where it’s important to manually step through code line by line. Personally,

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

I’m hooked! To both reading blogs (via RSS feeds) as well as writing one. I’m addicted to poking my nose in the comments sections of other people’s blogs. Maybe even where my nose doesn’t belong. Almost certainly where it doesn’t belong. For some odd reason, I love spouting my opinion. I’ll just give it out for free. You didn’t ask for it? Well here it is anyways. It’s not that I think I know

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Now I’ve never been a consultant myself, but I have friends who have been consultants. Namely Kyle. What do you think of these rules? [Via DonXML Demsak’s Grok This] You work for the client, not the consulting firm.  No matter who cuts the payroll check, the client is the one paying for your services.  Do the right thing for the client, not the consulting firm (or anyone else).

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Jonathan de Halleux, aka Peli, never ceases to impress me with his innovations within MbUnit. In case you’re not familiar with MbUnit, it’s a unit testing framework similar to NUnit. The difference is that while NUnit seems to have stagnated, Jonathan is constantly innovating new features, test fixtures, etc… for a complete unit testing solution. In fact, he’s even made it so that you can run

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

One of the holy grails for unit testing is to get 100% code coverage from your tests. However, you can’t sit back and smoke a cigar when you reach that point and assume your code is invulnerable. Code coverage just is not enough. One obvious reason is that Code Coverage cannot help you find errors of omission. That is, even if you had 100% code coverage from your tests, if you forget to imple

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Although I agree in spirit with most of Joel’s discussion of methodologies and rock star programmers, I’m in a bit of disagreement over the quote from Tamir he posts. For instance, in software development, we like to have people unit-test their code. However, a good, experienced developer is about 100 times less likely to write bugs that will be uncovered during unit tests than a beginner.

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Try searching for the following search term in Google… The Answer To Life The Universe and Everything Or just click on this link.

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posted on April 19, 2019 by Phil Haack

Perhaps there is a better term I could be using when I referred to “dynamic SQL” in my last post. To my defense, I did mention using Prepared Statements. The key point to keep in mind while reading the last post is that Dynamic SQL does not necessarily imply Inline SQL. By inline SQL, I mean concatenated sql statements flung all over the code like a first year classic ASP developer. Like an

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8:06 PM
posted on September 07, 2018 by Temani Afif

The post Broken World appeared first on CSS Challenges.

posted on November 20, 2018 by Temani Afif

The post Fading World appeared first on CSS Challenges.

 
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