the code is hard to be understood but I try my best
the hardest part is
if(dir.x != 0) { p = new Vector3 { x = 0, y = b, z = c }; } else if(dir.y != 0) { p = new Vector3 { x = b, y = 0, z = c }; } else { p = new Vector3 { x = c, y = b, z = 0 }; }
> In general, this system is underdetermined, but a particular solution can be found by setting z0 to 0 (assuming the z-component of a is not 0; or another analogous condition otherwise) and solving.
@HerpDerpington Usually (I think) it is prefixed with a length when a binary protocol is used. Remember to check the length before you allocate a byte buffer for the data so you don't allocate "negative" lengths or gigabytes of arrays
@HerpDerpington Although, if you are writing a client that talks to other services, you need to consult the documentation there, but I guess you would know that :)
@MartinhoFernandes Haha, indeed. I have an entire smorgasbord of options allowing you to set which triggers cause them to appear. So if they're annoying, it's the user's fault. =)
And always use exclamation marks as well "You removed the item!!" making the user scared to do it again. *You should train your user to use the application the way you designed it, even if you enable features that should not be used* :P
I'm using a System.Threading.Tasks.Task in a DispatcherObject and ContinueWith System.Threading.Tasks.TaskScheduler.FromCurrentSynchronizationContext() is not executing on the Dispatcher thread. Any suggestions for me?
@HackToHell but pls tell me: why would one want to impress friends with such nerdy things as mastery of a programming language? It seems to me that there are two options:
1. your friends are relatively normal ppl and will just think you're the average geek and will henceforth call you in the middle of the night to troubleshoot there PC problems 2. your friends are nerds as well and will be rather unimpressed by C# and demand you learn *[insert favorite esoteric programming language here]*
@yas4891 weird how I've been doing wcf stuff this similar to you. I haven't done much with callbacks yet, but I was trying out some broadcast-type stuff like this recently
I don't know how much control you have over configuring timeouts, etc. on callback interfaces, but I think you should treat them as much as possible like client proxies
e.g. be prepared for them to time out and fault the channel, call them asynchronously if you need to stay responsive, etc.
If you set a breakpoint in the else (callback is not open) does it get there? And if so, are you making sure you Invoke or BeginInvoke all UI operations in Form1.AddText?
(side note: I'm not sure that checking Open is a reliable way to check if a client is still connected. You might only find out when you try to call it, which makes me think you should restructure to catch CommunicationExceptions and Timeouts, then remove the client if any errors happen)
(another side note: it looks that way already, but you probably want to enumerate over a copy of your list of callbacks, so you're not removing them from a list that's being enumerated)
(and yet another side note: you might need to lock your collection when you remove clients, as it's potentially being accessed by multiple threads :) )
it would definitely explain why you're not seeing any exceptions for this; would expect CommunicationException and nothing else if the client just vanished :P
so does any communicationexception hang the app?
have you tried sticking a try/catch (communicationexception) around your callback yet? I know you plan to, but not sure if you have yet or if it makes a difference in this odd situation
UI thread kicks off parallel loop, which uses the UI thread to call Invoke, which sends a message to the UI thread, and waits for the UI thread to return from processing it :)
you need to use BeginInvoke, not Invoke
that will send a message to the UI thread without waiting for it to process it
@yas4891 as a matter of interest, switch back to either architecture and enable first-chance CLR exceptions from that same exception dialogue; see if you get anything
doesn't seem to be consistent from those links: some people get it only when compiling for AnyCPU, you get it only when you're not, and only for WCF. very odd. do you have all relevant updates?
very odd. time to try some experiments at work :) though we're using x86 version of VS on x64 systems, it sounds like it's an OS thing rather than tools
be good to hear how your wcf project is going from time to time; I'm a bit bogged down trying to diagnose performance problems in a service written by my predecessor. interesting to tackle new stuff after hours :)