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Hi
Maybe checkout Domain Driven Design (DDD) and some O/RM like Entity framework or NHibernate. There are some more lightweight persistence frameworks if these are too much (Dapper for example).
Common to these frameworks is an attempt to consolidate core business logic into a domain model. That way you can concentrate on the interesting code and make it testable. Perhaps some Test Driven Design (TDD)?
//Jonathan
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Thanks Jonathan. My research so far is leading me to Entity Framework - Code First. EF 5 now includes data binding and automatic migrations (db Updates) both of which were needed. Code First seems to be the preferred method and best supported. Linq to Entity or Linq to SQL both look good for the queries.
I have been reading about Test Driven Design and like the concept. Writing code to fail and then fixing it seems a bit odd at first but I understand why it could work.
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All the questions you have asked are hard to answer without business requirements.
My personal opinion is use whatever technology you understand best and is best for the job. The important gotcha with this is you also need to spend time learning new technology all the time (but really? is that not required anyway?).
Also, the biggest suggestion of technology and pattern practice I can give anyone is Inversion of Control or Dependency Injection. It is absolutely amazing what you can do with it and it is really simple to implement. It also promotes decoupling and good design/seperation of classes. Makes the lives of Dev and Test a million times easier hands down.
The best way to accelerate a Macintosh is at 9.8m/sec² - Marcus Dolengo
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I am looking for a formal requirements software tool that is based on Microsoft TFS and does not have its own database (I don't want to manage two database and application servers). I have found few tools like IBM Doors and Borland Caliber but they both have their own database. I think it would be best to have only one application server and one database server - ie Team Foundation Server. Any ideas?
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Patricia.Jones0123 wrote: I think it would be best to have only one application server and one database server
I think that is hardly relevant. What value would it add?
Patricia.Jones0123 wrote: I have found few tools like IBM Doors and Borland Caliber but they both have their own database.
Choose the best based on your needs, not based on their architecture. There's little chance you'd be working on the architecture of the product anyway. Further, it really limits your choices enormously - there aren't that many formal requirement tools, and exotic wishes usually mean an expensive in-house implementation traject.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Quite a while ago Microsoft published a book "The Microsoft Windows User Interface Guidelines for Software Design." Later on there is a document that applies to guidelines for Windows Vista/7 guidelines for UX.
Now that Metro is out, is there any such document from M$ that spells out guidelines for UI/UX design conventions with WPF/Silverlight?
Sincerely Yours,
Brian Hart
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You can find out quite a bit from this[^] page.
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I have three tables, ClaimEvent, Event, and EventScope. The actual ClaimEvent can be relevant to an entire claim, or a single property within a claim. Every property has a claimId.
As such, I have designed my tables like this:
Event
id | Int Identity AI
name | varchar
scopeId | int
EventScope
id | Int Identity AI
name | varchar
ClaimEvent
id | Int Identity AI
eventId | Int FK to Event
targetId | Int
date | DateTime
My idea is to use the targetId field in the ClaimEvent table to refer either to the Claim ID (if the event is relevant to the entire claim), or the Property ID (if the event is relevant only to the current property). If I want all events relevant to the selected claim, including properties within that claim, I can just match the targetId field with the id field in the property table when the scope is "property wide". Alternatively, I would have to design the table like this:
ClaimEvent
id | Int Identity AI
eventId | Int
claimId | Int
propertyId | Int?
date | DateTime
With the propertyId field frequently being null. However, I would be able to force FK constraints to the Claim and Property tables, which I can't do otherwise. The data is all going to be entered through a data entry form, with drop downs and very little possibility of FK violations, but it is always possible.
What do you guys think? I am always a fan of minimizing fields that will often be null, especially when I can repurpose another field, but it feels a little hackish.
Cheers, --EA
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eddieangel wrote: What do you guys think? I am always a fan of minimizing fields that will often be null, Then move the propertyId to it's own table, and only insert a record when it's not null. Link back using the ClaimEventId to which the propertyId belongs.
eddieangel wrote: especially when I can repurpose another field, but it feels a little hackish. ..repurposing a field sounds hackish indeed
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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I like the idea of having the two distinct fields, for claim and property.
As you said, you can apply constraints cleanly to the Claim and property tables which is a definite plus, but also the null value property does have a meaning - it refers to all the properties of the claim and not just the claim itself.
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done.
Drink. Get drunk. Fall over - P O'H
OK, I will win to day or my name isn't Ethel Crudacre! - DD Ethel Crudacre
I cannot live by bread alone. Bacon and ketchup are needed as well. - Trollslayer
Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb - they're often *students*, for heaven's sake - Terry Pratchett
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I prefer the second approach. There's nothing wrong with a field often being null if it actually is often 'null', i.e. no specific property, which is true in this case.
A lookup which goes into one of two tables is weird and should only be done if there's a very good reason to. I have had to do it in a real application so I won't say 'never', but that was a bit uncomfortable. I don't see that this is a case where that's true.
The only other sane way would be if claims and properties made a tree structure in one table, and you could just use an ID into that table. But I doubt that that is the case, because claims and properties are different things.
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There is a parent - child relationship between claim and property. Every property does have a claimId already. So in theory when looking to get all claim information (with properties) I could write:
SELECT * FROM ClaimEvent
WHERE targetId = @ClaimId
OR targetId in (SELECT id FROM Property WHERE claimId = @ClaimId)
That would get all of the event dates that I need, I just don't like to have to use the IN query if I could avoid it. In actuallity this is going to be accessed through LinqToEF so it is going look more like:
var propertyIds = _db.Properties.Where(p => p.claimId == _claim.id).Select(p => p.id);
ObservableCollection<Property> claimEvents =
new ObservableCollection<ClaimEvent>(_db.ClaimEvents
.Where(c => propertyIds
.Contains(p.claimId) || c.claimId == _claim.id));
If the table had claimId and propertyId it would look like this:
ObservableCollection<ClaimEvent> claims = _db.ClaimEvents.Where(c => c.claimId == _claimId);
I don't really think I like the additional overhead of the subquery (In this case the addition of var propertyIds due to L2EF limitations). Anyways, thanks everyone for your input, I am going to go ahead and add the propertyId field to the ClaimEvent table. I suppose I could go so far as to have ClaimEvent for Claim specific events and PropertyEvent for property specific events, and I might end up doing that, though it irks me to add yet another table.
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eddieangel wrote: In actuallity this is going to be accessed through LinqToEF so it is going look
more like:...
You don't design a database based on how many characters a query takes so what is your point?
eddieangel wrote: I don't really think I like the additional overhead of the subquery
Because the tables will have hundreds of millions of rows? Or because you will be doing these queries hundreds of times a second?
In either case you then design the database based on performance/volume needs - specifically.
And if not then there is no measurable much less significant overhead so it doesn't matter.
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I think I might have only gotten a partial view of your post because while I see the criticism I don't see anything helpful.
Was it only a partial post?
If not, thank you for your input. --EA
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eddieangel wrote: I don't see anything helpful.
In either case you then design the database based on performance/volume needs - specifically.
And if not then there is no measurable much less significant overhead so it doesn't matter.
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Oh there it is, buried beneath condescension. Thank you for your input.
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eddieangel wrote: Oh there it is
Yep. Based on decades of experience with database including profiling them and designing them along with working on a number of ones with large volumes.
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Don't get me wrong, I don't doubt the validity of the information you provided or your decades of information. Rather, I just wanted to check the size of the boot it was delivered on. If you can't find a way to be nice when someone asks a question, after decades of working in the field, maybe you should consider a better way to spend the next couple of decades.
I might have only been at this for ten years but I have figured out that someone asking a question probably just wants an answer to that question, they don't need to pay the price of a brow beating or sarcasm because of my experiences.
And that piece of knowledge comes from decades of being a decent human being. Consider it a fair trade for your piece of information and don't feel obligated to answer any of my questions going forward.
That is my two cents, feel free to ignore it as I am sure I am just misinterpreting your tone on account of the internet being in between us.
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eddieangel wrote: Don't get me wrong, I don't doubt the validity of the information you provided
or your decades of information. Rather, I just wanted to check the size of the
boot it was delivered on. If you can't find a way to be nice when someone asks a
question, after decades of working in the field, maybe you should consider a
better way to spend the next couple of decades.
Or perhaps you imposed your own emotional interpretation onto what I said?
eddieangel wrote: I might have only been at this for ten years but I have figured out that someone
asking a question probably just wants an answer to that question
Having probably posted upwards of 100,000 replies on forums my experience is that people do often want the answer that they expect but they often (to some degree) do not know that alternatives exist.
eddieangel wrote: And that piece of knowledge comes from decades of being a decent human being
Mine comes from answering many, many questions.
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No emotional response, just basic manners. Be nice to people if you want them to be nice to you kind of stuff. I see you have a stellar reputation here and I am sure no one else has any problems. That is why I simply invited you to ignore my posts outright from here on out, there are 99,999 more posts that are less likely to provoke.
Again, I have no problem with the quality of the answer of your question, I am sure you are very knowledegable in your field.
Best of luck in your next 100,000 replies.
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eddieangel wrote: Be nice to people if you want them to be nice to you kind of stuff
My response was not intended to be nice nor not nice. Your assumption is that my response was not nice. That it in some way was intended to be not nice. That is you inferring something that isn't there.
eddieangel wrote: nd I am sure no one else has any problems.
Other people have had various types of problems with my responses. Most are with the correctness of the technical advice that I gave.
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Well, thank you again for the additional correction. Good luck to you.
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All,
I am writing a library that provides communication like .NET remoting or SOAP but is far more flexible in terms of supported languages and platforms. Part of the program involves transmitting exceptions across the boundary between the connected programs. Because it runs on several languages, there isn't really a standard set of exceptions. What exceptions do you think are important? I am curious what the general community thinks.
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All of them, that's why they're called exceptions. In C++ you can throw objects that do not inherit from Exception , how would the other side react to that if it were implemented in C#?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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