This is a link which is shortened above: https://www.google.com/search?newwindow=1&tbs=simg:CAESpwIJFWSBjy72d1wamwILELCMpwgaYgpgCAMSKLocrRHeHMcc2BzIHM8c3xbwC-oWxySxLbIttC2wLbMtxiTEJLctuS0aMDZmRBnarJy3j_18-wi7c88mN0PN7KxPZR-KjvZS2a6fHKCSihRJ0Dnir9qQdPoW38SAEDAsQjq7-CBoKCggIARIE_17QS2wwLEJ3twQkakwEKGQoGcG9zdGVy2qWI9gMLCgkvbS8wMW41anEKHwoLYWN0aW9uIGZpbG3apYj2AwwKCi9tLzAya2R2NWwKGAoGaG9ycm9y2qWI9gMKCggvbS8wM25wbgoYCgVmbGFtZdqliPYDCwoJL20vMDFmNDE1CiEKDXBob3RvIGNhcHRpb27apYj2AwwKCi9tLzBiNzV3ZzQM&sxsrf=ALeKk01OilRJUI95DFq-0RhCLdsxeQibzA:1585551107440&q=core+2020+prerelease+code&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2…
i already merged the two dictionaries i just want to merge the results that are alike
var buffers = await _bufferRepository.GetAsync(plant);
var m1Buffers = await _database.GetBuffers(false);
foreach (var buffer in buffers.ToList())
{
foreach (var m1Buffer in m1Buffers)
{
if (buffers.ContainsKey(m1Buffer.Key))
{
foreach (var line in m1Buffer.Value.Lines)
{
if (!buffers[m1Buffer.Key].Lines.ContainsKey(line.Key))
Yo I need some help with my Azure security. Same problem for a whole week now: Have Azure SQL DB on Azure SQL Server. Have Azure App Service. App Service shall access DB. Current solution: DB Server is open to internet and Azure Resources. App Service has connection string with URL to DB. Azure tells me weekly to tighten my security.
How do I tighten my security? How do I access the db from the App Service without making the DB open to the internet?
So I'm trying to wrap my head around the factory pattern, which is what I think I need. The factory pattern is what I use if I don't want consumers to be directly aware of a handful of constructors, I just want them to be able to construct an object, right?
@Sidney Consumer basically has a factory, which could also be injected. When the consumer needs an object it goes this.myFactory.BuildMyObject(true, whateverDataObject, 3);
@Squirrelkiller So if I have a handful of classes, each class defines it's own way to build itself, injects that way to build itself into the factory, and than consumers call the factory for the specific object?
@mr5 no i merged them to display them for example if lets say buffer car has 1 cars but can store 10 and the other dictionary has the same buffer but in the that buffer has 5 cars. i would want it to display the buffer with the value of 6 cars
Currently I've created a checkbox like control (stageCheckBox) that has a panel as the checkbox and a label for text, the mouse enter, leave, down and up events work fine and these have been added at the user control level. Once I Insert this stageCheckBox into another user control that holds many stageCheckBox I though I could assign the onclick event for each stageCheckBox and it would fire in the main form but it does not. Is there a trick to get these to work?
@Squirrelkiller Ok, so in my use case, generic objects are actually defined by the consumer (but they inherit from some base class that provides a whole lot of functionality, the consumer defines like 4 properties and the base class uses those to do a whole lot more). The factory wouldn't know what's implemented ahead of time, so I think having the consumer also define how to instantiate the objects would be proper, and the factory could call that?
Well ok I toook the easy route: Put my App Service in a vnet (which required an upgrade from 11€/month to 50€/month) and allowed only that vnet onto the SQL Server...
// Is this something similar to what you have in mind?
var newData = request.Content;
notificationService.NotifyClients(...); // fire n forget
var result = await service.LongRunningProcess();
@mr5 no, just waiting for the response to come back from potentially long running process....well anyway I think I know the answer I can use SignalR or one of (web sockets, long polling etc) between my web client and orchestrator service