There are no differences as the BeginInvoke method calls a private LegacyBeginInvokeImpl method which itslef calls the private method InvokeAsyncImpl (the method used by InvokeAsync). So it's basically the same thing. It seems like it's a simple refactoring, however it's strange the BeginInvoke m...
i answered this question this morning
I was not aware of the new methods
but it seems to me that using InvokeAsync is just the new way to do things
I did spend a couple of hours trying to get it to work, can not do it now because I am stupid and accepted an invitation to a party. Monster-fail, I want to write code and write about CODE
Almost every week, the IT guys tell us that one specific server (always the same) is running out of disk space and they're bringing the problem like it's something new and ask us what they should do
I have this weird case where I can connect to a local (intranet) SQL Server DB via Management Studio, but when I try to connect in code (verified the connection string), it times out. How the heck do I start debugging this?
yesterday my boss got tired of it and replied "What about I go to Best Buy and buy a 1 TB drive? Because we're already compressing and that comes up every couple of days, maybe we just need a new drive here."
How fast you can send it is going to depend on the connection and/or your servers, how fast it renders is going to be different per device, so all you can do is keep it tiny
@Bracketworks That's the trouble with new libs/frameworks. At first you think i will help fast. Then you almost ready to drop it and do things usual way, when suddenly things go better and you decide to spend just a little bit more time on it
I have a dropdown list that needs to be filled ajax from a webmethod - right now I have the items being put into a Dictionary<string, string> and sent back to client
I did parse dictionary , it really be cool if I could get it to work like that , instead of createing an object with 2 properities , "value" and "text" then making my json { "property : "..." , "text : "..." }
In fact I've used that method, the return type of the WebMethod is string[] isn't it? So you just add each entry as an array element that would contain a separator (I use ;#)
I'm no expert in javascript but doesn't it come back as an object? You could try 'for x in json' as I believe javascript treats all arrays as objects anyway?
I'm sure I've taken a few years off my life growling at the screen red in the face from that exact same problem... "FOR GOD'S SAKE!! WHY AREN'T YOU WORKING?!?!?!" 'Cos you've done it wrong, numpty...'
@Sean "On two occasions I have been asked, "Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?" I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question."
the file is so complicated though, that transforming it coherently is difficult
oh, and sometimes elements get moved because the GUI looked dumb, which xslt doesn't cope with very well
oh, and it stores fragments of itself as escaped text which is serialised and deserialised by the application, and also needs to be in a compliant format
I've got <script> embedded in the stylesheet for that
@Pheonixblade9 there is a very complicated mapping between source format and destination format, with some logic that I really wouldn't attempt to express in XSLT
that and the moving around of elements means that almost every node has to have a verbose template to keep all its elements in the right order
in my new job I'm going to be doing loads of this stuff
@KendallFrey sorry, race condition in my brain. No, I don't have snarky advice for your lead, I am sick to fucking death of lead developers who don't have a clue.
Oh yeah, you did software engineering as a degree? Did you happen to LEARN any software engineering while you were there? Any of that not by accident?