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You're first-part and second-party is your client (or target audience).
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I'm the first-party; the tools/framework/platform I choose to work on are second-party; any tools that help work with those tools are third-party.
Any clients or potential customers would be the zeroth party.
modified 9-Oct-15 11:48am.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: Nope; second-party. Third party. Second party. Who cares? Working with .Net is a party!!!! Yoohooo!!!
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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If it was a party, there would be girls here!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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AddUsersToRole(women, partyGoers)
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Oh boy.
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I fully agree
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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You're thinking of the after-hours party.
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That is a great tune. Thanks for sharing. Amazing singer and an amazing song.
No one else like her.
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Its seen 80 million times, and has 1,6 million downvotes, and 600 thousand upvotes
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Those numbers only prove that the song is True Art.
Everyone loves pop music, which we all know isn't art.
But, this has been viewed 80 million times. That forces it to the top of True Art.
Everyone else is just a poser & hopeful copier of this great artist.
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It's almost as good as a vid of a cat chasing string. Who is this Art guy?
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Someone gorge my eyes out
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Good points. Good you point these out. We just want the functionality the library provides not all the overhead.
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"plus, libraries shouldn't log"
I don't think this is a realistic assumption. Libraries can have bugs too. In case a bug happens, they would want to know what led to it -> thus, logging.
And more to the point, when an error happens in your application - libraries can have huge APIs, complex usage scenarios - in such a case, you + the lib's authors would probably want to know: is there an error in the lib, in your code, both? Without logging, this would be much more complicated.
Best,
John
-- LogWizard - Log viewing can be a joy!
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That's what Exceptions are for. Logging should be done only at the highest levels of an application. Would you want each library to log to a different place? And then have to read them all and try to figure what order they happended in? I wouldn't.
Additionally, logging itself can be error-prone. If a disk fills up, and a library tries to log that, but can't because the disk is full -- that's a very bad situation.
The application may log to a different disk, or a database, or a Web Service, or send messages across a socket to a monitoring system.
With an Exception, the calling routine can add detail and context to the Exception's Data collection, or possibly wrap the Exception in a more meaningful Exception.
The library developer also doesn't know what format the application developer wants to use. I like XML, not everyone does.
Libraries should only raise Exceptions, never try to log -- you don't know what the application developer wants to do with it.
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Let me reiterate - what if the library has some bugs?
You do logging in order to catch possible bugs, especially when the app is run somewhere else. From the library's standpoint - that will always be the case (it will be run somewhere else).
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That makes no sense. If it has bugs, how will it know to log them?
If it wants to allow the caller to review the internal state, it can have appropriate methods, or perhaps events, to do that. It should not log.
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The idea is - when a bug happens, to look at the log, and see if you can infer enough information to reproduce/fix the issue.
Apparently, we're talking two different languages. So lets just agree to disagree.
Best,
John
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Quote: Do I have to include log4net just because I need to use your library? Do as the spec says.
Wonde Tadesse
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Oh wait, but .NET was supposed to end DLL hell.
Jeremy Falcon
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/tutor/2003-October/025932.html
Nothing is really private in python. No class or class instance can
keep you away from all what's inside (this makes introspection
possible and powerful). Python trusts you. It says "hey, if you want
to go poking around in dark places, I'm gonna trust that you've got
a good reason and you're not making trouble."
After all, we're all consenting adults here.
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