@Hector just put these things into tasks. I don't know if this is the way to go yet, but I recently built a very similar construct for reading socket input:
By storing the cts in a tuple together with its task, afterwards I can just access the tuple and cancel like binDaLooper.Token.Cancel
Edited the image so it shows the "token" is actually a cts here lol
Same thing works on a slightly bigger scale with multiple tasks:
Hopefully still not too convoluted here. Main point is I have an async task method I pass a token to and store both the token source and the returned task in a tuple, in this case in a list of tuples.
For blazor it will host a WASM module ocntaining the mono runtime and a few dll files to load into the browser, and a bootstrapping js file that starts the WASm module
Because the user is supposed to feel like they're in an actual application. Switch pages, interact with things.
logic-less doesn't do interaction
You'd have to put the interactive part back to the server again, invalidating the whole idea of client side rendering
If you press a button to calculate something and depending on the results you want to switch two different pages - how does that work with something like mustache?
Probably gotta control that from the server, because the frontend doesn't have actual logic, right?
the logic would come from the API requesting the data. This template library would just use that template to merge the data and UI together. There is still logic
1. index.html contains navigation bar, content is dynamic
2. js/index.js requests for the dynamic content by requesting template.html and data.json (generated from DB of course)
3. js/index.js will merge template.html (or some file ext. from the framework/library) and the data.json
4. user clicks some button from the dynamic content -> same procedure (template2.html + data2.json)
@Squirrelkiller mustache in this case would just render something it doesn't care about. html will do its thing and something from js/index.js will handle the parsing of dynamic content
now for mobile, this adds the benefit of returning something native from it, like XML for Android, and nib/storyboard for iOS
oh, well the "navigation" covers the whole page excluding nav bar. if there is some specific like that, I would say the logic will be placed on the `js/index.js`.
// failed 1. user logs in 2. sends data.json to server 2. server returned failure with message 3. js/index.js shows the message
// success 1. user logs in 2. sends data.json to server 2. server returned success with page to redirect or maybe it's in the URL already 3. redirect by js/index.js
well, in our actual use case, I plan to implement/suggest this only in the main content. They implemented the login pages completely different so that's another thing to think about.
also, we're using websockets so requesting data appears to be faster
[Hector] @Squirrelkiller I literally started a new project yesterday to undo whatever fuckup happened after i rebooted... and today when I booted up it was fucked up again
[Captain Obvious] doing anything whilke VS isa in a fucked up state always ends in tears
[Hector] IDK but it could be a broken installation
Possibly you are not passing JSON to DeserializeObject.
It looks like from File.WriteAllText(tmpfile,... that type of tmpfile is string that contain path to a file. JsonConvert.DeserializeObject takes JSON value, not file path - so it fails trying to convert something like @"c:\temp\fooo" - whic...
[Captain Obvious] In particular I had this quite snarky comment: The Comma Separated Values export wizard doesn't Separate Values by Comma, and there isn't an option to.
[Captain Obvious] It gets even more confusing because the monthly presentation at this company seems to switch at random between the units depending on which team wrote the slides
[Captain Obvious] I don't know why both Android and iOS make it so difficult to present a user friendly name for the device the user is using
[Captain Obvious] Especially Apple, because you can't just map the identifiers to a marketing name, because APPLE LOCALISE (parts of) THE MARKETING NAME
I want to convince the team as well to switch to something more standard, but since I suck at communicating, I just let go of them if my one time persuasion did not convince them.
More seriously now: You can probably deploy an issue tracking system by yourself. Bugzilla or something. Or even get a Trello account and use it for free. Then after a while show it to the team. The idea is to have some real data in there. You can show how many bugs were added, how many were resolved, etc. Some light statistics.
The point is to show why such a system is valuable.
Try to track stuff that's hard to track on a spreadsheet.
public class User
{
public string Name { get; }
public string EmailAddress { get; }
public DateTime BirthDate { get; }
public User(string name, string emailAddress, DateTime birthDate)
{
Name = name;
EmailAddress = emailAddress;
BirthDate = birthDate;
}
}
public class Model
{
public IDictionary<string, string> Fields { get; }
public Model(IDictionary<string, string> fields)
{
Fields = fields;
}
public User ToUser()
{
something like this
ToUser will only throw one exception based on which field is the first one that would be missing
how would you neatly gather all the missing fields in an aggregate exception?
var exceptions = new List<Exception>();
//rinse and repeat this block
try{
// do somethign risky
}catch(Exception e){
exceptions.Add(e);
}
throw new AggregateException(exceptions);