well, string interning consumes ram in a particularly dangerous way: it's not garbage collected.
The advantage is that comparing two interned strings is very fast (pointer comparison only required)
and it can save memory if you end up getting lots of copies of the same string from different sources.
typicial example could be something like html parsing - there's only a limited number of html tag names, so if you intern all the tag names, they can each share a copy of the name., whereas if you just keep the substring from the parse, you've got tons of copies of identical tag names.
Hi, does anyone know if its possible to have following file structure Root/Sources/Main.cs Root/Projects/HelloWorld.csproj (any .proj actually, i use vs only for managing files and intellisense)
i dont know how to add references to source files so that they wont be only link (then i cant rename them)
I have a code table:
public class Code
{
[Key]
public int CodeID { get; set; }
[Required]
[StringLength(30)]
public string Title { get; set; }
[Required]
[StringLength(150)]
public string Description { get; set; }
public DateTime DateAdded { get; set; }
...
@SteffenWinkler indeed, they're not. But you can explicitly intern them anyhow - which I'd recommend not doing unless you're well aware of all the consequences (and even then only if you need to). Memory leaks are nasty.
@EamonNerbonne yeah, when I read the article first, I thought that every string got interned. I'm still not that happy about how it is but at least it's not as bad as I thought it was
@SteffenWinkler Well, what's the problem with the status quo? In practice, few people ever explicitly intern, so it should never cause problems - it's mostly used internally, for e.g. compile-time string constants.
Hey, I'm experimenting with an in-C# technique for quickly making small html fragments. But it's a bit of a matter of taste as to the right API. What do people think of this?
this is something else - it doesn't emit a string, it emits a compiler checked type. So, e.g. if you forget to nest correctly, you'd get a compiler error, not a runtime error (or worse, no error at all)
behind the scenes it uses generics to keep track of the nesting level
unmatched tag openings or endings aren't possible.
sorry for interrupt :S I asked a question about wcf about a hour ago. but no one answered! my question is in the following link Thanks :) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14583936/wcf-upload-stream-the-remote-server-returned-an-unexpected-response-400-bad#comment20356216_14583936
im just saying release your lib as is on github, explaining what you used it for, and what it does. someone will fork it and build a view engine out of it.
if all you want to do is write out slightly templated html, then thats a fine use case. you could slurp your razor files into resource strings if you wanted to.
i don't know how much of the tooling you'd get that way though.
but the problem is lots of library calls assume that whatever the dev wrote fits into a paramater - a string, an XElement, an html fragment - something.
and razor doesn't play nice with that
it renders tag soup - which is fine if your output isn't processed further, but not so fine if some other dev wants to append something in some generic format and re-escapes the tag-soup or forgets to escape his new addition
so e.g. the current application has a bit of generalized security processing that actually inspects the html tree and ensures no scripts or other dangerous tags are in it.
that would be very hard to do with razor since there's no intermediate tree.
people don't want to work with a dom in html.. even though it is. i think the js api for the dom left a lot of bad taste with people.
I can understand that to a degree. I want full control over my markup. I had too many issues with first webforms, and even now HtmlHelpers suck in a lot of ways.
there are a lot of abstractions for that kind of stuff that do not give you enough control over the html generated.
Hey all any tips on binding WPF to a list of dynamic objects - binding works fine for exisiting objects but when I try to add a new item I get "Property path is not valid on ExpandoObject+MetaExpando"
@ChadRuppert yeah - I want that control too. But I don't need control over the syntax. Let me make "invalid" html or use attributes the system doesn't know of; but let the system handle the well-standardized stuff like serialization.
Oh, and finally there's one more (big) reason I'm not willing to invest in razor
@ChadRuppert So the last webapp I wrote ended up using razor exclusively to embed Json in the html. That's it! The rest was pure Knockout (lovely lib, btw). And hence this whole saga of html generation - because razor was mostly in the way there, not actually useful; and it doesnt' even address the small bits of html-wrapped in json that might end up being more common.
@EamonNerbonne yeah, i agree. if you are going the SPA route, razor is not needed. most of the MVC stuff isn't needed. other than as a host for webapi or whatever you are building the services in.
When you're writing extension methods for string, do you think the most expected results of a null being passed in would be to: Pass null back out? Pass string.Empty out? Or throw an exception? (If exception, NullRef or ArgNull?)
NullRef or ArgNull would both be fine by me (or really any exception you want), and depending on the context perhaps some placeholder - almost certainly not string.Empty, however.
@KendallFrey Well, it sort of is a null reference, just not one the compiler detects. I don't think it really matter, it wouldn't make debugging any harder, nor maintainability, so while ArgNull may be a little more conventional, if a coworker used NullRef I wouldn't bother to mention it.
Hey! I have a question can you help me about it? the question is in the following link http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14583936/wcf-upload-stream-the-remote-server-returned-an-unexpected-response-400-bad
@KendallFrey I see your point, and ArgNull is fine, but normally I like my API's to be consistent - so if I'm emulating an instance method, I'd want instance method behavior
put it this way: if you implement an interface that normally throws NonsensicalException when .BlargyFloop() is called, it's easiest to do the same in your implementation even if it's not ideal for your particular case. It's more important to integrate with the calling code that it is to have the api work the way you want.
If I define an extension method such as this:
static public String ToTitleCase(this string instance, CultureInfo culture)
{
if (instance == null)
throw new NullReferenceException();
if (culture == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("culture");
return culture.Text...
For example if you pass a car into a sub that makes use of a car who should be checking for null references?
Should I even bother wrapping this code in the below if statement? It seems quite redundant, obviously I could have given a better example because I can't catch the exception and handle i...
@EamonNerbonne Just discussion that NRE is not suitable (framework reservations aside) because while syntactically it's sugared to look like an instance call, its still actually a static call with a null argument: NAE. (I've switched sides here, I would've defended against this point a minute ago)
@Bracketworks but that's a really terrible argument
what you're saying is that even though you're pretending to be an instance method, the caller still needs to be aware of the implementation details when it comes to behavior
Let me put it this way: if I implemented the interface IList and the method Add actually prepended elements, that would be Very Surprising - and possibly break generic algorithms written for IList.
if you pass null, you should always be prepared for NRE.
the implementer happened to implement that method using an extension method rather than an instance method, but that's transparent to the caller - because you cannot tell an instance from an extension method at the call point.
All I have to say is, NullReferenceException is thrown when code tries to access a member of a null reference. It should never be thrown in any other case.
you're in undocumented territory anyway by passing an argument that's not supported nor documented.
By convention it's friendly to check the argument, but that's not always done - sometimes for good reasons.
and if you cause undefined behavior, you've got no right to much of any expectations (as you say), but nevertheless some behaviors are more surprising that others.
Labelled: (A) If it throws ANE, it's a good API. (B) If it doesn't check, and as a result causes a NRE, it's a bad API. (C) If it throws a NRE manually, it's an evil API.
@KendallFrey so you acknowledge that the exact stack depth cannot be relied upon, then what difference do you think there is from the consumers point of view between a VM NRE and a manual NRE?
And of course, there is no stack depth difference.
Thus: whether an NRE is VM generated or user generated is not observable, and thus not relevant.
You've got this principle that NRE's should never be thrown, and there's nothing particularly wrong with that idea - it's just not necessary.