I have a chocolate twist, but i'm hesitant to put it in my bag because i don't want it to melt in my bag when i walk home, but i have no other way of taking it home
Under what circumstances does an assembly's PublicKeyToken change? Create and use strong-named assemblies says the public key "is generated from an assembly file [...] which contains the names and hashes of all the files that make up the assembly."
From this I would expect the public key to change if a file is added / deleted / renamed / edited, but when I add a new file to my assembly, its PublicKeyToken stays the same. This is surprising to me.
How often do you guys use <qualifyAssembly> in your configs? I see it absolutely everywhere in this legacy project and I'm trying to figure out if it's a common idiomatic design or if my predecessor took cargo culting way too far, or what.
docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/framework/configure-apps/… tells me that you can use it if you want the project to search the GAC for the assembly instead of using a local reference, which seems like the exact opposite of the behavior I want
I suspect the <qualifyAssmbly> was a work around for the problem of referencing assemblies in other projects. It used to be that MyCoolProject and Contoso were in separate solutions. But now that I'm moving Contoso into MyCoolProject's solution, I don't think I need to use the GAC to make Contoso visible to MyCoolProject.
... In theory. Now that I've deleted all the <qualifyAssembly>s in my solution, the solution builds without problem, but it crashes at runtime with Could not load file or assembly 'Contoso' or one of its dependencies. So maybe I'm doing something wrong.
Is it normal to have a namespace with the same name as an assembly? I feel like I keep encountering headaches because I can never tell whether Contoso refers to a dll or a namespace in my code.
For example in the hbm.xm filel of an NHibernate Entity, you might refer to a column's custom type with type="Contoso.WidgetType, Contoso". I'm pretty sure the first Contoso there is the namespace and the second one is the assembly, but if I'm wrong it will be a pain to debug if I ever decide to rename the assembly.
(and in fact I am deciding whether to rename the assembly right now, so this isn't a hypothetical)
Semi-related question. Let's say I want to change my assembly's name to "NewContoso". I have a few LoadAssembly("Contoso") calls in my project and I don't feel like changing them all to LoadAssembly("NewContoso"). Is there something I can put in the config to make LoadAssembly("Contoso") load the NewContoso assembly? Is this what <qualifyAssembly> is for?
@Wietlol because this particular controls have types only specific to it. I'm not sure if it's a good idea to put its enums, and interfaces in a higher level of namespace.
Anyway, I have encountered some issue in VS where the type was confused as namespace name so I remove the extra namespace from the namespace declaration just like there was no enclosing folder.
Paraphrasing from the article I read: "How do older generations deal with awkwardness? They just deal with it like it's a normal thing. New generations tends to avoid awkwardness at all cost"
I love it when a web app lets me use my Google, GitHub, or Facebook account to log in. Chances are, I’m already logged into those sites, so it’s one click to log into a new site. This is a great experience for users. It reduces the friction to registration and loggin in to your site. They’re less likely to clam up.