I can see the use case. I once spent nearly a week debugging an issue in a whole slew of bitwise operations, where the problem was a shift that was off by 1
by a similar argument, everything else should be stack based. At any rate, everything is imperative on some level. A functional language provides abstractions above that level.
Plus, it's bound to go wrong. IT's easy to get a specific change, but not in all cases. E.g. some specific cases would make the process generate things badly.
DataTable myDataTable = new DataTable(); DataColumn myDataColumn; DataRow myDataRow;
//MIN/MAX Values used to frame the working size of the Excel data to be imported. int minCellRow = Int32.MaxValue; int maxCellRow = Int32.MinValue; int minCellColumn = Int32.MaxValue; int maxCellColumn = Int32.MinValue;
Infragistics.Excel.Workbook internalWorkBook = Infragistics.Excel.Workbook.Load(strFileLoc); foreach (Infragistics.Excel.WorksheetRow row in internalWorkBook.Worksheets[0].Rows) {
foreach (Infragistics.Excel.WorksheetCell cell in row.Cells)
Guys, I hope some of you will be amused by an error that I encountered in our product today
turns out there's a windows setting that causes our app to crash if it tries to load or save any files
this windows setting is intended to stop applications from using cryptographic providers that aren't certified safe by FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standard)
when the FIPS verification setting is enabled, the .NET crypto API wrappers throw
Turns out it's quite pervasive - NONE of the managed crypto algorithms are certified, nor are many products, including MS ones. Sharepoint can't be installed on those systems, for example - and MS' response is "switch the setting off, or go away"
another stupid question. these are the things that keep me up at night. I have a "connect" button and once connected there should be a "disconnect" button. Ok cool. Now I have an option, hide/disable the Connect button and show/enable the Disconnect or just toggle the same buttons functionality and change it's text.
one button OR two buttons with toggling visibility.
follow up question: [connect] [diconnect] (both visible always with enabled toggled) or [connect/disconnect] (one visible at once, visibility is toggled depending on state)
i usually goto UX room but they are kinda ghost town atm
@rlemon I'm not sure I agree with these guys. If you code your implementation in a way that makes it clear that what the button is expressing is "go from the current state to the other state", I can see the case for a single button.
If you abstract the viewmodel away to being a generalisation of any bistable system (i.e. supports 'go from state A to state B') then a single button makes perfect sense
@JohanLarsson I grew up as a death metal fan. then got really into alternative rock. rap and hip hop interest started with my interest in girls and wanting to be able to dance
I've just written an abstract Builder that's actually a generic Composite and takes IFactory as a dependency. And worst of all, when I read the code it all makes sense
@KendallFrey I disagree, of course you can not and should not try to test everything up front. Bu try to test the normal path and some edge cases is good
I do find that writing unit-testable code does tend to make me end up with factories coming out of my ears - so I wondered, can I abstract the jobs these factories do? That way madness lies. Just install Autofac and be done with it
@JohanLarsson true, but it depends on your meaning of 'better'. I prefer having factories everywhere to doing work in the constructor, but it does get a little tedious