Hi all, I want to handle network calls exceptions, is there a way to know the exception reason (ex: "no such host is known", "No connection could be made", "not found".. etc) they are all request exceptions
@mr5 yest but they all have the same type: HttpRequestException
I want to know wheather the exception is due to unknown host, wrong port, not found resource, the only way to differentiate between them is by the ex.message
@mshwf for "no such host is known", you could make a specialized service here, like implement a DNS check before proceeding with the request. For "no connection could be made", you could make a general handler for it by using some timeout calls for both read & write to the network stream. For "not found", this looks like a specific HTTP status codes, and thus should be done after header request has been responded.
Or maybe you're just not that interested in the business side of things, which is complicated when talking to people outside the dev team but generally ok too
Just gotta find a good fit where there is somebody else who does the business communication part, like your colleague
hmm, I think that's easy for me if the question is asked in written, and answer needed to be in written as well, but doing it impromptu is very different for me.
how about intelligently asking questions? most of my questions goes something like: if you need design like that, should we position it like this or like that? in my head, I'm going full facepalm.
We could have refined the tickets more if I just ask those important questions. It always ends up being on hold because the important questions will pop out itself after I'm already doing it.
Do you think I'm doing very poorly in terms of the issues I'm describing here?
on the other stories, I've made some ridiculous MRs
I submitted an MR and merged it, but with our branching strategy, it's going to be problematic so I reverted it. But the issues have been fixed, so I need to revert the revert again.
@mr5 Nah seems good. For the record, I like doing stuff in the backend and other ppl doing the frontend stuff, I never think about where something has to go until I'm there and then I'm like "wait so do I just send the other stuff down or do I put it to the right or what"
@Squirrelkiller man, thanks for reassurance that I'm not alone on this. I guess I'm just always doing it but knowing you do it sometimes too, it's less worrisome now ^^
Is this possible using HttpWebRequest and HttpWebResponse?
You could have your web server simply catch and write the exception text into the body of the response, then set status code to 500. Now the client would throw an exception when it encounters a 500 error but you could read the respon...
meanwhile me: "ooh, time to try out this feature from C#9" C#9: "ye... we didn't actually think it through yet, so it will probably be introduced in C#15 or something"