@Vlad Searching for "public SOAP service" finds you quite a few possibilities, but for a demo, relying on an unsupported 3rd party service is risky for no reason - you can create a minimal SOAP service that runs in-process in your WPF app.
Twitter, AFAIK, only exposes a REST service, as do most modern public web APIs. SOAP exists mostly in legacy or enterprise apps.
@Wietlol XML used to be the de-facto standard for data serialization and interop. Then, relatively overnight, JSON replaced it for a big chunk of its usages (common serialization, APIs).
@Blue You can either switch to .NET Core now, or wait for ".NET 5" and switch then, since it will be the official "next gen" for .NET Framework (even though it will be, effectively, .NET Core)
@Wietlol XML remained popular for many legacy apps and many enterprise apps, either because they're got a lot of traction and little use for switching formats (a good reason) or simply because that's the standard for their line of business, which is also fine.
I was working from memory, so might have skipped some steps. You might need to set an upstream branch before pushing (git branch -u origin <branch name>)
Though I think you can it inline as part of the push command itself.
Ah, yes. Just add -u origin <branch name> to the git push.
(-u is the short form of --set-upstream. If you're writing scripts that should be easier to read but only written once, I'd use the longer form)
Although, an issue TextBlock with property MouseBehaviour.MouseUpCommand="{Binding MouseUpCommand}"></TextBlock> should invoke a method inside Dependency_1.cs
I was working from memory, so might have skipped some steps. You might need to set an upstream branch before pushing (git branch -u origin <branch name>)
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Says Cannot retrieve value using the binding and no valid fallback value exists; using default instead. BindingExpression:Path=MouseUpCommand; DataItem='Dialog_1ViewModel' (HashCode=64636290); target element is 'TextBlock' (Name=''); target property is 'MouseUpCommand' (type 'ICommand')
Seems it can find a binded command for some reason
@V.7 I don't know what your datacontext is for that snippet (and I'm not going to download a full project locally). If MouseUpCommand is part of your window's datacontext (though it seems like a strange name for a command on a VM - it should be something logical), it should bind fine.
MouseUpCommand is in XAML like xmlns:t1="clr-namespace:WPF_5.Resources.Dependencies" where namespace WPF_5.Resources.Dependencies is where MouseUpCommand located
I've tried to set a command like for a Button, but getting System.Windows.Markup.XamlParseException: 'A 'Binding' cannot be set on the 'AddMouseUpHandler' property of type 'TextBlock'. A 'Binding' can only be set on a DependencyProperty of a DependencyObject.'
@CaptainObvious Sorry, that's how lectures and articles told(such structure)
@V.7 To trigger a viewmodel command on MouseUp/MouseDown, do exactly what you were doing - but make sure your viewmodel is actually set as the datacontext.
To handle dragging, you probably don't need to get the viewmodel involved at all, since it's a purely view-only operation. (Unless you have some logic to perform on drag). I've written a drag behavior a couple of times.
What are you trying to drag? Simply drag the window/dialog around? (no viewmodel needed), or handle drag/drop of items in your view?
Because the second one is a bit more of a headache, but still certainly doable.
@CaptainObvious Yeah, it was a pain. I've done a designer-style thing, where you drag controls from a toolbox onto a canvas and have them automatically snap to the placeholders. Was a lot ofwork.
Got System.Windows.Markup.XamlParseException: 'A 'Binding' cannot be set on the 'AddMouseUpHandler' property of type 'TextBlock'. A 'Binding' can only be set on a DependencyProperty of a DependencyObject.'
The point of MVVM is to take a view-specific event (say, a button's Command, or, using a behavior, a MouseUp event) and bind it to the viewmodel's logical command. So, for instance, if you have a btnSave button, you bind it to your vm's SaveCommand. The command on the VM doesn't know or care that it was triggered by a MouseUp or anything - VMs don't know about mouse events, they're a logical layer. The same VM command can be bound to a click event, a keyboard shortcut or whatever.
@V.7 That's because a MouseUp is an event handler, not an MVVM command.
If you want to bind to a MouseUp/MouseDown event (why?), you need to use a behavior, like the one you had earlier, that lives at the View layer of abstraction, listens to the events, and binds to an command.
@V.7 First step - stop thinking in terms of events. Events aren't interesting, MVVM-wise. Events are view-specific behaviors of controls, and have nothing to do with the MVVM architecture.
A Button, for instance, has a Command property that binds the VM's command to the button. When the button is executed (by clicking, by keyboard navigation, whatever), the command is executed. This is the logical binding between the layers.
How does the Button class know that the Command has been triggered? It probably listens to events, such as MouseClick, or KeyPressed, and then triggers teh command. But that's part of the control's implementation, and you probably don't need to mess with it, most of the time.
@V.7 It's possible to set a command for a button. Most controls will have some ICommand property for their binding - for buttons it will be when they're clicked, for other controls it might be something else. But that's their MVVM interface outwards.
Sometimes, you find yourself needing to bind a command to something else. Say, I need a command triggered when I hover over a control, something that doesn't have a built-in Command property to bind to.
In those cases, we can use Behaviors (like the MouseBehavior you had earlier) to create a bridge between an event and a command - same as the internal code that listens to MouseClick or KeyPress and calls the command.
So a behavior (a helper class for the view) might add an event handler for the MouseEnter event, and when it's raised, execute the Command that's bound to it.
Especially because WPF controls are easily skinnable - you can take a <Button> (which gives you the set of behaviors you'd expect from a button, like being clickable) - and make it look like anything you want.
EntityFramework nooby question: I have an upsert method that does a query, and if a matching row isn't found it does an Add(). I do a SaveChanges() at the very end of the program. Unfortunately my query appears to not be returning any of my newly Add() rows. I would like the entire thing to run in a DB transaction and my query to return inserted but not committed results. Is there a way to do this? or am I using EF wrong?
I am doing a bulk data load, I want a giant transaction, not the overhead of lots of little commits. But I still want to be able to read what's been done while the transaction is ongoing.
I think I got the right behavior out of creating a transaction explicitly with BeginTransaction, creating that txn with isolation level Serializable, and aggressively calling SaveChanges after upserting and Add as soon as any records are ready (was running into issues with the autoincrementing primary key... nooby Entity Framework probems). So not sure what along that journey got it working but I'm seeing fatal exceptions unwind the database transaction correctly.