I hope NDC Conferences could upload 1080p or higher. Codes are hard to read in situations like 40:03. Great talk and indeed, something wrong with the sound.
Please...just...don't If you want to get real real world, look into impedance mismatch and practical solutions. Automapper? Seriously? Just write your own mapping logic, it's much easier to maintain and understand. And one less dependency you have to maintain. ORM's are not your friend, and by the time you need solutions like this, you are just trying to break out the box that EF put you in in the first place. All the best to the author, and it is interesting to know how EF and AutoMapper work, but I would be very careful implementing overly complex solutions like those offered here in the real world.
this is one of the most useful videos that i ve seen recently. thank you for this talk Spencer
The sound is terrible.
I hope NDC Conferences could upload 1080p or higher. Codes are hard to read in situations like 40:03. Great talk and indeed, something wrong with the sound.
how to implement C = >c.Employee.Name ?
34:00 "predicatable"? To be able to turn into a predicate?
Interesting and useful, thanks!
A shame about the audio quality, though. It's tough to listen to, probably due to excessive compression.
so true
Great talk, interesting topic, terrible sound.
Great content, to bad for the microphone being meh
Here's the same talk with better quality sound
th-cam.com/video/Ptnxc6tVIPE/w-d-xo.html
Please...just...don't If you want to get real real world, look into impedance mismatch and practical solutions. Automapper? Seriously? Just write your own mapping logic, it's much easier to maintain and understand. And one less dependency you have to maintain. ORM's are not your friend, and by the time you need solutions like this, you are just trying to break out the box that EF put you in in the first place. All the best to the author, and it is interesting to know how EF and AutoMapper work, but I would be very careful implementing overly complex solutions like those offered here in the real world.
Stupid talk, details is blurred so no one can understand it. I bet the presenter has no practical knowledge.
He literally spends half the talk about how they use it in a practical setting.