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19:04
Question 2 seems to work:
<CustomControls:DoubleBox Margin="6" Value="{Binding Path=Value, Mode=TwoWay, UpdateSourceTrigger=PropertyChanged}" Text="{Binding RelativeSource={RelativeSource Self}, Path=Value, Mode=TwoWay}" />
Gonna add validation and converter to the binding
hi.. i have a problem with wpf that i dont understand:
I have a shell, which registers the PreviewMouseDown event on the main grid
@Roel Shoot
in a popup control (in a prism region in this shell, but i dont think that matters), the command binding does not work
so:
<PopUp>
Oh the irony.. A wiki for c# made on php...
<Button Content="Logout" Command="{Binding ShutdownCommand}"/>
</PopUp>
this command does not fire as long as i have the PreviewMouseDown event declared on the shell
what's up with that? I dont understand this, I though the PreviewXXX events were specifically for the reason to do something before the actual event fires. Why does it have an influence on my Command Binding?
19:12
Just a shot in the dark: Could it be that the popup needs to have a listener for PreviewMouseDown?
ok nevermind, by typing the question I figured it out
:-)
the previewmousedown gets aggregated and closes the popup
so it never even reaches the button because it has dissapeared
but that doesnt solve the problem
I'm not gonna be able to help, my skill is pretty close to 113
Spread out over the entire C# language + some VBA
Well, I think i figured it out
thanks anyway :-)
19:29
I don't know much about this ISO thing, but what about "PT" + 55 + "H"?
@KendallFrey I could absolutely do that. I was hoping for a generic C# class that could be used
so I don't have to rewrite this for different types of timespans, maintain my own timespan enums, that sort of thing
ISO 8601 Data elements and interchange formats – Information interchange – Representation of dates and times is an international standard covering the exchange of date and time-related data. It was issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and was first published in 1988. The purpose of this standard is to provide an unambiguous and well-defined method of representing dates and times, so as to avoid misinterpretation of numeric representations of dates and times, particularly when data is transferred between countries with different conventions for writing numeric ...
@JohanLarsson yes, I read the Wikipedia article, and I understand the format :) I'm just trying to be lazy and let MS do the work
thank you though
DateTime.ToString("o");
will give you ISO 8601
string.format might do?
19:33
yeah, that'll do the same
just specify the format, I do this in C#, JS(client) and node.js to keep things nice and smooth in SDB
oh, my coworker just found it
TimeSpan start = new TimeSpan(int.Parse(txtStartHours.Text), 0, 0);
durationNode.Element("StartTime").Value = XmlConvert.ToString(start);
clever... lol
TimeSpan.FromHours(int.Parse(txtStartHours.Text));
@karbon sure, but it needs to become an ISO8601 timespan string
@Bryan your logo is live on the wiki now
I have returned!
19:40
If I have a DependencyProperty returning an instance, should the instance be of type DependencyObject?
@KyleTrauberman SO MANY INSIDE JOKES :P
yep, xml convert is used for those from timespans, so System.Xml.XmlConvert.ToString(TimeSpan.FromHours(55));
awesome tho
20:09
posted on September 24, 2012 by Scott Hanselman

There were lots of reactions to my blog post Everything's broken and nobody's upset. Some folks immediately got the Louis CK "Everything's Amazing and Nobody's Happy" reference. Some folks thought it was a poorly worded rant. Some folks (from various companies) thought I was throwing developers under the bus, accusing them of not caring. Others saw a meta-goal and started a larger dis

Hello again
"September 24, 2012 7:59 PM" SCOTT HANSELMAN IS A TIMELORD
There is only one Time Lord!
And lol
The Doctor must have lent him is TARDIS :)
@LewsTherin You're forgetting "The Master."
mmn..
He died
20:15
Also, the rest of the Time Lords.
The whole planet of them.
@KyleTrauberman Hello, need your help.
Hasn't he died twice so far since the other Timelords died?
@SpencerCole They are out of the picture.
@Billdr I think so. Can't remember.. long time.
@KyleTrauberman Does a socket descriptor point to an actual file?
They still exist. They're still on Gallifrey, which is still there, just in a separate dimension so they can't continue the Time War.
Led by Time Lord Timothy Dalton.
20:17
Yeah, but still out of the picture.
But they still exist.
There is only one Time Lord is therefor wrong.
As long as they are sealed they might as well not.
They're going to be back. Everyone knows that, you'd be a fool to not.
@LewsTherin i'm not sure
They planted a seed to get themselves back once by manipulating the Master.
20:18
@SpencerCole Oh, they will be back. Eventually.. but until then there is just one Time Lord.
@SpencerCole Yeah in the sound of drums.
I haven't used sockets before
That was a fantastic episode.
@KyleTrauberman Oh what do you use?
So you're saying there is only one Time Lord, but there is many Time Lords eventually?
for what?
Networking
20:20
http requests mostly
in my code
its mostly asp.net stuff
there's a book on sockets ^^
it might help
I've read loads on sockets but never help :(
It gets easier to understand the concept though
@SpencerCole Yeah.
A caged Time Lord is no Time Lord.
based on my reading, it sounds like a socket descriptor just describes the socket to open on the server, not an actual file
So... While you are in captivity, you cease being a Time Lord. What do they become?
20:22
Time Prisoners!
Plotting Gallfreians
@Pheonixblade9 Precisely
I vote we agree to disagree.
@KyleTrauberman Yeah.. I am thinking a socket may actually represent IP Addr + Port
yeah, that's all a socket is
Isn't a socket just a server side poll anyway?
20:24
^
@SpencerCole I get what you mean. But also remember The Doctor always says "I'm the last of my kind" or some sort like that.
A network socket is an endpoint of an inter-process communication flow across a computer network. Today, most communication between computers is based on the Internet Protocol; therefore most network sockets are Internet sockets. A socket API is an application programming interface (API), usually provided by the operating system, that allows application programs to control and use network sockets. Internet socket APIs are usually based on the Berkeley sockets standard. A socket address is the combination of an IP address and a port number, much like one end of a telephone connection is t...
@TravisJ A what?
> A socket address is the combination of an IP address and a port number
> A network socket is an endpoint of an inter-process communication flow across a computer network.
Ah, yep!
20:25
Ok, so you are saying that my computer is a socket because I have an IP address and a port number, 80, open?
@LewsTherin Because that's easier than saying "I locked my entire race plus another race in time out because they couldn't stop fighting."
> A socket API is an application programming interface (API), usually provided by the operating system, that allows application programs to control and use network sockets
@TravisJ your computer has a socket for port 80 and ip address 127.0.0.1
Yes, the "endpoint of an inter-process communication flow" (polling).
it has another socket for port 80 on ip address 192.168.1.1 (or what ever your computers ip is)
Isn't polling like a queue?
20:27
From the way I understand it, a socket is an item in an array held by a program behind your ip and port. I.e. a 127.0.0.1:8000 runs my program which takes all users and holds them in the array sockets
yeah yeah, that is an actual socket but the context was not the transport layer version
did I misunderstand then?
@SpencerCole sort of time-out. I think the idea was that they'd never be able to come out and Gallifrey would be locked in its own pocket universe irrevocably until its entropy runs up.
@KyleTrauberman How is that possible? IP addresses can't share port numbers?
I might have. My point was implementing a web socket is usually done with server side polling.
IP addresses can have multiple port numbers
20:28
@LewsTherin your computer can respond on port 80 locally, while ignoring traffic on port 80 externally
@TomW Well, they proved there was ways around that. They proved that when they pulled themselves out via the Master.
Well yes. But the intent was that it would be permanent - and the Doctor thought that it was impossible to undo, even in principle
@KyleTrauberman Right...
@LewsTherin your computer can respond to multiple ip addresses
@SpencerCole @TomW @LewsTherin Must you have extended Doctor Who conversations here?
20:29
@KendallFrey Why not?
I'm enjoying it..
so a socket is just telling your computer to respond on port X for ip Y
@KendallFrey some people are never happy. We can go back to NSFW if you'd prefer
I'm fine with the occasional off-topic conversation.
Dr. Who is fun, especially for a monday that I called in sick to work on.
20:30
@KyleTrauberman Yes but you can't use port X for ip Z
@LewsTherin why not?
But really, that's becoming too common.
if I understand sockets correctly (and its possible that I don't)
@KyleTrauberman Oh maybe I got it wrong. You can't use Ip Z for port 80 and ip Z for 81
If you want to continue the discussion, I would really appreciate it if you took it to another room.
20:31
your computer can respond on port X for IP Y for one thing and completely differently on port X for IP Z
IIS configuration seems to support this
you can configure a website to only respond to a certain ip address or host name on a port
@LewsTherin Why couldn't you?
UGH, ie is slowly choking me out
and you can have multiple websites on the same ports using different ips or host names
@SpencerCole I have gotten an exception from something I tried. I just can't remember which..
@KyleTrauberman You can also have the same ip run different websites on different ports.
20:33
Ok if you run ASP server on port 8732
@KyleTrauberman lol, that's exactly what I'm working on right now. Just popped into chat to see what was going on and you're talking about the exact thing I'm working with, lol
@SpencerCole yep
You can't run Apache on 8732
@LewsTherin Right.
@LewsTherin thats right
20:33
We're running 3 webservers at home, each on a different port. I have 4 running on this computer at work with different ports
@PhillipSchmidt lol, small world
@LewsTherin but you can have apache and iis on port 8732 at the same time, each responding to a different ip address
Ok I'm confused.
Here at work, I'm running IIS on port 80, IIS Express on 52384, Apache on 33080, and Node.js on 8000
Why can't I have Apache and ASP Server on the same port?
because they're conflicting.
you have the same IP for both, and the same port.
20:35
you can't because thats a confict if they are listening to the same ip address
Why can't you drive your car on a bike path?
And Apache and IIS on the same port isn't?
how do you know which you are talking to?
if they are listening to different ip addresses, then that's fine
Ok that's right.
So
20:36
You'll need 2 different IP's, (network connections)
Oh.. wait. facepalm
you'll need a second network adapter to get a second ip though
Thats where custom ports come in...
so think of ip address as a nic
20:37
Socket{IP + Port} has to be unique on the same machine.
Somewhere in that fuzzy head of mine I confused myself.
most computers only have one ip address
so most of the time the only differing element is the port number
which is where the confusion is coming from, i think
Also fun fact: running Skype will screw with webservers.
Cause skype needs port 80, apparently.
Especially Apache
20:38
^^^ I learned that the hard way.
@SpencerCole Doesn't need.
I had to uninstall it and found another way..
Can't remember how I did it though..
@KendallFrey It doesn't need it, but it nEeEeEeEeds it.
Like the way a kid needs a new toy every time you go to the store.
@KyleTrauberman respond on port 80 locally, while ignoring traffic on port 80 externally... can you clarify external and local?
Skype > Tools > Options > Advanced > Connection > Deselect "Use port 80 and 443 as alternatives for incoming connections"
@LewsTherin localhost is just 127.0.0.1
and your external network is 192.168.1.1 or something similar
so respond locally by using port 80 on 127.0.0.1
20:40
@KendallFrey I'll just keep skype uninstalled on my web server at home.
and don't use port 80 on 192.168.1.1
@KyleTrauberman Oh I see, but 192.168.1.1 is the address of my router ;)
@SpencerCole What if you run them on the same machine, like me?
then 192.168.1.100
or something similar
basically local == localhost
I don't have people I want to talk to with it, so I'm cool. I have my mac with it if I really need to use it.
20:41
external == internet
@SpencerCole foreveralone.jpg
@KyleTrauberman If I use port 80 on external ip what will that do?
You mean forever awesome. I talk to people I like face to face.
it will open port 80 for the network (lan, internet, etc)
assuming what ever firewalls you have (i.e. your router) allow traffic on that port
More networking lessons?
20:43
@KyleTrauberman Meaning everyone has access to my files?
No, just your server.
meaning some process is listening on port 80
usuall iis or apache or some other webserver
for other ports, something else may be listening
like FTP on 23 (?)
ie they can open http.my.ip.here in a browser.
if the process exposes your files, then they will be exposed (think file sharing, ftp, etc)
20:45
So what is the problem here.. using port 80 or using the external IP?
the problem for what?
Or using port 80 + external IP
12
Q: Apache and IIS side by side (both listening to port 80) on windows2003

thedeenoWhat are some good ways to do this? Is it even possible to do cleanly? Ideally I'd like to use packet headers to decide which server should handle requests. However, if there is an easier/better way let me know.

There's a few options there if you have 1 IP address
If my server is listening on socket{ext IP:80} what's wrong with that? I don't see what is! :(
there is nothing wrong with that
its very common
20:47
The problem is if the server responds to requests on that port by exposing private information.
yeah, but thats a problem with the process, not the socket
"and don't use port 80 on 192.168.1.1" :S
If it is very common why that warning?
where did you see that quote?
did I say that?
20:49
I used to have my home server listen on Port's in the 60,000-62,000 range because Telus didn't do any network bandwidth monitoring on those ports. 5mb/s torrents. ohhh yea
oh, that wasn't a warning
8 mins ago, by Kyle Trauberman
and don't use port 80 on 192.168.1.1
It was an explanation of what he meant by ignoring external traffic.
read the 3 lines that I said above that
it was broken up from my other explanation
I am deploying a WCF Service as a Web Service for sending emails. I get the same error as stackoverflow.com/questions/447071/…, but I don't understand the posted answer. Do I just make a wrapper class for MailMessage? I want the consumers to be able to just pass in a MailMessage...is this possible?
20:51
@RyanTernier Were those opened up on purpose?
This?: localhost is just 127.0.0.1
and your external network is 192.168.1.1 or something similar
so respond locally by using port 80 on 127.0.0.1
@KendallFrey Open on Telus' side? No idea. WHen they went on strike a few of their employee's told me that they're not being monitored because they were reserved. So a few friends and I setup our home servers to transfer torrents on that port. was amazingly fast.
@KyleTrauberman How does it ignore external traffic?
LEWS Y U SO ALMIGHTY POWERFUL YET ALMIGHTY DUMB DUMB?
I think I may have to change my alias..
@Lindsay It essentially means to create a custom class with the same properties as MailMessage, so that you can send the class through WCF and recreate it manually at the other end.
@LewsTherin I think it would check the client address, and simply not respond if it isn't 127.0.0.1.
@LewsTherin 127.0.0.1 will always point to your own machine
This is so you can do  : 127.0.0.1 to hit your own server, or localhost
20:55
Yep..
@KendallFrey No Linked IN profile!?
For example, localhost on my machine will open up my website, which is served with XAMPP.
@RyanTernier No, why?
@KendallFrey When you say the other end, do you mean the service end? Or would the users have to use my custom MailMessage class?
@LewsTherin the OS handles sockets, so it deals with ignoring the traffic from the external ip
It's odd to find an IT Professional that doesn't have one
20:56
in your app, you register a socket for your local ip and port
@Lindsay Both, if I understand it correctly.
the os handles the rest
Ah, I guess there's no way to just use the MailMessage class? :(
@KyleTrauberman From what I understand the external IP is what clients will use to talk to my server.. why will the OS ignore traffic ?
@LewsTherin it wont' ignore it if you have the socket registerd for it
think of sockets as a phone book
20:58
@Lindsay I don't know, but not according to that answer.
traffic comes in on ip X for port Y
the os looks up that combo and routes it to the correct process
if a socket isn't found, it will just drop the traffic
when your app creates a socket, its essentially placing an entry in that phone book

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