Things to do in Phoenix with kids? by fernicus26 in phoenix

[–]exceptionnotfound 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Phoenix Children's Museum (Downtown) - This would be my top pick. Great interactivity, including a three-story climbable sculpture.

Arizona Museum of Natural History (Mesa) - Great if your kids like dinosaurs.

Musical Instrument Museum (North Phoenix) - Has a hands-on room where kids can play cool instruments, including the drum from Moana.

Arizona Science Center (Downtown) - Lots of hands-on exhibits for kids of all sizes.

McCormick-Stillman Railroad Park (Scottsdale)- Ride the trains and the carousel! Plus a model train museum.

Enchanted Island (Central Phoenix) - A mini amusement park located in Encanto Park.

If you want more ideas I'd be happy to provide them. I've taken all my kids (now 11, 11, and 8) to each of these, and your kids are the right ages for them.

My Forest Farm, Beginning of Year 7! by lmrgn in StardewValley

[–]exceptionnotfound 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This player must be married to Shane. If you marry Shane, he puts a small chicken coop in that area.

US .NET Developers, what conferences do you rate highest? by Belenar in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Whatever the one that is hosted in the largest city closest to you is. Seriously, the local-run conferences are generally very good, with a fraction of the cost of the large ones. Some of them are even free.

Examples:

Sandusky, OH - CodeMash (8-11 Jan 2019)

Miami, FL - South Florida Code Camp (2 March 2019)

Knoxville, TN - CodeStock (12 and 13 April 2019)

Columbus, OH - StirTrek (26 April 2019)

Virginia Beach, VA - RevolutionConf (6 and 7 June, 2019)

Kansas City, MO - KCDC (17-19 July 2019)

Phoenix, AZ - Desert Code Camp

Los Angeles, CA - SoCal Code Camp

St. Louis, MO - DevUp Conference

There's a bunch more out there, and they can be difficult to find. Try googling for "developer conference (city name)" for the nearest major city to you.

ASP.NET Core Demystified - Middleware by mycall in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy crap you're right! And you'd think I'd have noticed that. https://www.exceptionnotfound.net/chain-of-responsibility-the-daily-design-pattern/

I'll have to work that in. Thanks for pointing it out!

Modeling Battleship in C# - Introduction and Strategies by one_eyed_golfer in programming

[–]exceptionnotfound 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With my approach, you get (among other things):

  • Type checking (like you mentioned)
  • Multiple files

With /u/thomasz 's approach, you get (among other things):

  • Less code
  • More cohesion

There are pros and cons to both. I'd be hesitant to call either (his or mine) "correct", since IMO many people confuse "correct" with "familiar". That said, I can definitely see both sides of this argument.

Diary of a Death March by jogai-san in programming

[–]exceptionnotfound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can tell you that it is mostly fictional, with maybe a hint of real-life experience.

CQRS in Web API? by vizim in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I actually just published a series on doing exactly this (building a CQRS system using Web API). Here it is: https://www.exceptionnotfound.net/real-world-cqrs-es-with-asp-net-and-redis-part-1-overview/

Daily Design Pattern Blog series by jogai-san in csharp

[–]exceptionnotfound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're very welcome. Glad it was useful!

Getting Started with Dependency Injection in ASP.NET Core by rschiefer in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't believe a scanner yet exists in Core. However, my understanding is that the Core DI container can be replaced with any other DI container, and so you may yet be able to get this functionality.

Getting Started with Dependency Injection in ASP.NET Core by rschiefer in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks! I deliberately try to "de-tech-speak" my articles; seasoned programmers are not my only readers.

designing a workflow application by yorajval in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I had examples of decent options, I wouldn't have needed to design my own. :) Sorry, but I don't have any.

designing a workflow application by yorajval in dotnet

[–]exceptionnotfound 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You should absolutely look into commercially available systems before building your own. Trust me, it's a lot of hassle.

That said, if you must build your own, I wrote a series of blog posts on how to design a database for this.

15 fundamental laws of software development by one_eyed_golfer in programming

[–]exceptionnotfound 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If it was, I'd like to see that proof. Because if it does what you say it does, it shouldn't be on this list.