when I log stuff, I want to know where the log comes from, which includes whose logger it is
so, I wrap the logger with a proxy, that includes the class name of the owning object
public class Foo
{
private ILogger Logger { get; }
public Foo(ILogger logger)
{
Logger = logger.WrapLogger<Foo>();
}
}
like this
however, when it is a static class that owns the logger, this is a problem because I cant do
public static class Foo
{
public static void Bar(ILogger logger)
{
var ownedLogger = logger.WrapLogger<Foo>();
}
}
generally speaking, the class is not required to be static, so it is an easy fix
but considering that the only thing that WrapLogger does with its generic type is typeof(T).Name, it should be possible to just pass static classes to it
Hiii Can you please help me .? when I excute my Code And Just click on screen When Application is open then Like this My screen is pause White Background activity working like TIme.
At first I'd try this: Start in debug, then click so it freezes, then in VS (or whatever IDE you are using) press pause. With a little luck it will show you exactly where your code is hanging right now.
Yeah in slack screen share you can draw on the shared screen with your mouse. Way easier than "center left. bit more to the left. no now you're too far. yeah right below your cursor"
And whatever you draw just fades away within like 5 seconds as soon as you stop drawing.
[Captain Obvious] Which from my experience if there's tons of stuff happening that the debugger is interested in (exceptions etc) then it slows right down
@mr5 Trying to transform a value to another type depending on what I select in a dropdown and put the new value into the json structure
Basically I built a small tool to 1) Load a json object from a link you provide 2) Edit that json object 3) Send the edited json object to a link you provide
@Squirrelkiller something like if you put any of these in the text field, "string value", 0.0, false, it will be converted to the actual JSON representation of it?
@mr5 Yes. If you put "0.0" into a text input and change the dropdown to number, it will use tryparse to see if it should put anything in the resulting number input
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@Botler Pfffhahahaha. In our company it's even stupider in some cases - some screens that should be simple and used often are overloaded with controls. And others that should handle a lot of data input have really simple and quite dumb controls on them that are barely adequate to handle the data.
And the whole fucking point of the application is the data input.