Hi, stuck in a situation and help needed. I am using a pdf generation library within our website which has memory leakage. We cannot replace it right now. We are in a talk with the library providers and they are working on it. What we are thinking is to execute the pdf generation in a separate process, so once it completed all the memory get released. Is there any way to achieve it without using a console or windows service app?
@nyconing I have run dotMemory and there are memory leaks in the Aspose library, we are in discussion with the Aspose dev team but it will take some time
A QA engineer walks into a bar, and orders a beer. Then he orders 0 beers. Then he orders 999999999999 beers. Then he orders an aardvark. Then he orders nothing. Then he orders -1 beers. Then he orders NULL beers. Then he orders asnwikfjsdf.
instead you let different whole domain objects be. These are fully immutable structures, so if you want to change a bit on it, you have a whole new domain object
I mean the immutable structure doesn't have to think about what is an atomic change. If you can only change Prop1 and Prop2 at the same time, or you fail an invariant, that's "async stuff". Without immutability, you can reach there by 2 async changes on the structure
I have a json file, this json file gives me a list of files I have to download. In this JSON I have a base URL as example like this www.google.com okay and there is another property like baseURL named template. In this template property I have values like this slide_{0:D4}.jpg or this asdGG{0:D4} the {0:D4} part is contant in this templated and I have to replace them with numbers and then combine base URL with template
@Wietlol that's just buzzword repetition, and self explanation. Buzzword 1: Immutability. Buzzword 2: Unnecessary mutation. Buzz 1 is good because you avoid Buzz 2. We still can't see, why is it good...
@Wietlol Because something is nice for a certain situation doesn't mean it's automatically linked to it. Immutability is great without going for concurrency or parallelization
@nyconing Optimistic lock? Pessimistic lock? What's inside a transaction? Is it possible to fail an invariant with 2 async perfectly valid transactions?
for example there is an invariant, that the account can't go below 0. Each transaction's inner checks for < 0. Still. 2 async transactions come in to decrease the account by 1 and the account was 1. Both apply, and sees that the < 0 is true
if it's on the method (checking < 0), than it's transactional locking. If it's lock(Account) {...}, than it's still possible to do the wrong thing (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-checked_locking) . There is only one true remedy. Avoid synchronization quadrant
if it's a matter of milliseconds, not that big of a deal if it turns out that person can't pay within the second of adding the money
@ntohl I don't follow
the second check (and ultimately the one that matters) is under lock and covers those rare moments where an account's balance has changed since the first check and is no longer enough
> In software engineering, double-checked locking (also known as "double-checked locking optimization"[1]) is a software design pattern used to reduce the overhead of acquiring a lock by testing the locking criterion (the "lock hint") before acquiring the lock. Locking occurs only if the locking criterion check indicates that locking is required.
The pattern, when implemented in some language/hardware combinations, can be unsafe. At times, it can be considered an anti-pattern.
In software engineering, double-checked locking (also known as "double-checked locking optimization") is a software design pattern used to reduce the overhead of acquiring a lock by testing the locking criterion (the "lock hint") before acquiring the lock. Locking occurs only if the locking criterion check indicates that locking is required.
The pattern, when implemented in some language/hardware combinations, can be unsafe. At times, it can be considered an anti-pattern.It is typically used to reduce locking overhead when implementing "lazy initialization" in a multi-threaded environment,...
> Thread A notices that the value is not initialized, so it obtains the lock and begins to initialize the value. Due to the semantics of some programming languages, the code generated by the compiler is allowed to update the shared variable to point to a partially constructed object before A has finished performing the initialization. For example, in Java if a call to a constructor has been inlined then the shared variable may immediately be updated once the storage has been allocated but before the inlined constructor initializes the object.[6]
I can't fucking write Tests because some dto down low has a static constructor manually pulling something from the DI container, which I now have to mock.
@Wietlol Yeah, it takes more code to write a class that is immutable which can produce new objects with changed properties. That's a lot of code, actually.
@Wietlol Writing it is not difficult, I often think it's a lot of overhead when you're changing the way the immutable is defined. Adding some properties, for example, needs more work done to also change the builders and so forth. Nothing unbearable, but kind of annoying imo
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.badimageformatexception?view=netframework-4.8 > The exception that is thrown when the file image of a dynamic link library (DLL) or an executable program is invalid.
public Person Copy(
String name = null,
String alias = null,
DateTime? birthDay = null,
String type = null,
Boolean? isMajestic = null) =>
new Person(
name ?? Name,
alias ?? Alias,
birthDay ?? BirthDay,
type ?? Type,
isMajestic ?? IsMajestic
);
@Data annotation produces the getters (and setters for non-final fields), a full args constructor and a least-args constructor with only the final fields
withName comes from the @Wither annotation
Lombok is a quite good preprocessor to reduce duplication of effort
on the other hand, Kotlin's approach is baked into the language
in Kotlin, a "data" class (similar to record classes in C#) contains a few useful features
like equals, hashcode, meaningful toString, etc
and... a copy function
major difference between Java's @Wither and C#/Kotlin copy function is that Java doesnt support named arguments, so it needs separate functions for each attribute
but other than that, it works mostly the same
I once looked into attribute processing in C# to achieve something similar (auto-generate constructors, copy methods, tostring/hashcode/equals, etc) but it all went down to "ye, write an IDE plugin to generate it for you"