An extended break that some lucky bastards get at the end of the year for christmas
Alternatively, some people tactically use their annual leave which they forgot to use at other times of the year slotted in around christmas to result in over 2 straight weeks of not being in work
> Project 'My.Epic.Project' load finished with warnings: The current .NET SDK does not support targeting .NET Core 2.1. Either target .NET Core 1.1 or lower, or use a version of the .NET SDK that supports .NET Core 2.1. at (112:5)
Now I feel like a Dr. Pepper. But alas, all we have in our office kitchenette are Coke, Coke Zero, Sprite, orange juice, grapefruit juice and club soda. imgflip.com/s/meme/First-World-Problems.jpg
Declaring it in the scope of that method will make it exist as long as the method does, which would probably be a few ms. Declare it in the class and it will exist as long as the class does, which I'm assuming the class is a window, so would exist as long as the window does
Seems to work, thank you. I declared it in the overall class FrmMain:Form. I wonder why it does not work if I declare inside the public static void Main() which is inside the same form class.
Hello Guys , what is the best way to do some stuff inside foreach and don't wait for the result i have a method that do some work then update DB i want the update DB part to be executed without waiting so when it reach to update DB , it fires and goes to next item in foreach
I mean, you send a request for an update to the server, the server receives the request and tells you it will work on it, then you use any technology to refresh the status and continue your process
@Bassem It's always better to abort doing the thing it is you're doing, clean up, and inform the user of the problem. Otherwise the user will end up with unexpected results and nobody is ever going to read the logs; they are only there for troubleshooting later.
@Wietlol because it is a job that must run every 1 min , it is something like when you set your alarm to 07:00 AM , it will be very bad to surprised that it ring @ 07:05 AM (Due to performance issues )
quston, what's the common fix for concurrency issue? I would like to wait for the first invocation of a callback to finish first before proceeding to the next call.
@Bassem All the await operator does is listen for task completion (whether successfully or not), grabs a thread context, unwraps the results, and returns them or throws an exception if it failed. It doesn't manage the task.
@mr5 You should wrap the callback in a Task and use async/await to get clear and coherent code flow across callbacks.
@Bassem Look at your requirements: "do some stuff [..] and don't wait for the result". The await operator, as its name implies, is there to wait for results.
@Wietlol Sure, so do a ToArray() to get it as a Task[].
Now, if you really don't care about the processes, simply don't keep the resulting tasks.
But it makes sense to hang on to them, or at the very least to hang on to a Task.WhenAll(runningProcesses), if you need to know whether they all finished, for instance.
@Bassem Most likely, a call to Task.Run(SaveChanges) will create a new thread, which will block while a synchronous I/O call is performed.
Whereas SaveChangedAsync will run synchronously until the I/O call is made, at which point it will release the thread, wait for the I/O to complete, and then resume.
@mr5 It's unlikely you would have been taught that in any meaningful way. The etiquette for email is different than for written letters, and for IM, and in all of them, all three of yours are fine.
Do you say "hi" or "hello"? You can do both. They have their own nuances and differences in register. None are "right" or "wrong" because there's no universal definition of right or wrong.
@mr5 Nope. Doesn't work that way. Human communication is a lot more variable, nuanced, contextual and ever-changing.
The same phrase "Hi, XXX", could be interpreted differently by different people based on the specific person and their history and local style and custom, but also by the relationship between you two ("Hi is too informal for someone in the organization!") but might be OK in an org that's less formal. All this is condensed into tiny nuances that are, again, interpreted differently in different places.
But in this case the difference between "no line break", "one line break" and "two lines breaks" in your examples is slim, and while I could, if I tried, find nuances between them ("#3 sounds a bit rushed, #2 might make you look a bit formal"), they're extremely slim, and trying to find "the right one", even ignoring the fact that I don't know what effect you're trying to achieve, is pointless. They're almost the same.
Communication isn't finding the correct words, but about effectively and successfully conveying your intention.
Go for "good enough", not for "just the right name that correctly and fully captures the essence", because chances are there isn't one.
Same as for human communications. There's no "right way" to say something. There are many ways that convey many things, both intentional and unintentional, both as part of the grammar, the word choice and the pragmatic context surrounding it.
Question lads ... I got 20 procedures to execute from .net to oracle, now I made connection object, I open it once and close it at the end ... now I am thinking for oracleCommand object, should I make only one and keep changing command text ... or it's fine to go with using block within foreach
and always keep creating and disposing oracleCommand object
Don't optimize based on guesswork (and based on random advice from fake internet strangers). If you're worried about performance, check both options and see if there's a difference.
(My guess? No difference whatsoever. The OracleCommand object is simply a wrapper around a call to the DB. 99% of the execution time is in the DB, not in the call)
Of course, Oracle being Oracle and the ODP.NET being ODP.NET, you might find that the OracleCommand constructor does way too much work for no good reason. *shrug*.