Posted by Phil in JavaScript
on Oct 24th, 2011 | 1 comment
A couple of weeks ago I posted about C# like Properties in JavaScript. I wanted to explore how properties could possibly be added into JavaScript, and hopefully offer some insight into how some frameworks might work.
Another feature that JavaScript doesn’t explicitly support is events. Though using some of the same techniques I used for events also work very well for building events.
Most implementations of events in JavaScript use optional arguments in order to provide two overrides to an “event” function, one for adding a listener and the other for raising the event, like this:
//...
Posted by Phil in .NET
on Sep 22nd, 2011 | 2 comments
On a project that I’ve been working on recently, I was having some trouble combining SQL scripts that where in a couple of different formats.
While there’s no easy way to detect all of the possible encodings, by checking the byte order mark (BOM) there is a pretty straight forward way to detect the following encodings:
UTF-16
UTF-16BE
UTF-32
UTF-32BE
UTF-8
public static Encoding GetFileEncoding(string path)
{
if (path == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("path");
var encodings = Encoding.GetEncodings()
.Select(e => e.GetEncoding())
.Select(e => new { Encoding =
Posted by Phil in JavaScript
on Sep 14th, 2011 | Comments Off on Properties in JavaScript
JavaScript doesn’t inherently support properties in the same way that .net languages do, which is a shame since the syntax really helps simplify access internalized data in a structured way.
There’s a common solution to this in JavaScript, that exploits the fact that JavaScript function arguments are optional. A property function will have a single argument. If the argument is undefined then the current call is a ‘get’, otherwise it’s a ‘set’. jQuery has many good examples of this, for example the val() method:
var value = $('input').val(); //...
Posted by Phil in .NET
on Sep 7th, 2011 | 8 comments
I’ve been writing a lot of Node.js recently, and I’ve really love how the asynchronous database access works, and thought to myself “I wonder if I can do that with Entity Framework?”
While I couldn’t find anywhere in EF the inherently support any form of async calls, I did find that you can with the underlying SqlConnection (assuming you’re using MSSQL.)
So with a little bit of Async CTP magic mixed in, I created an extension method to read the data asynchronously.
Unfortunately I couldn’t find an obvious way to open the connection or write data...
Posted by Phil in Node.js
on Sep 1st, 2011 | Comments Off on Find That Robot on GitHub
For better or worse Find That Robot‘s source code is now on GitHub.
Comments and questions are welcome.
Phil