Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Web Slices: you need to use Alternative Display Source or javascript will not work

If your WebSlices use the Basic Web Slice model, javascript will not work (this file is WebSlice.html):

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title></title>
</head>
<body>

<div class="hslice" id="SliceID">
     <span class="entry-title">Title of the web slice</span>
     <div class="entry-content">Preview of the <a href="#" onclick="document.getElementById('Message').innerHTML='Hello'; return false;">web</a> slice
       <div id="Message"></div>
     </div>
     <p>
     Hola Rebanadas Web!
     </p>
  </div>

</body>
</html>

you have to use Alternative Display Source to make javascript work (this file is WebSlice.html):

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title></title>
</head>
<body>

<div class="hslice" id="SliceID">
      <span class="entry-title">Title of the web slice</span>
      <a rel="entry-content" href="AlternativeDisplay.html" style="display:none;">Alternative Display Source</a>
      <p>
      Hola Rebanadas Web!
      </p>
   </div></body>
</html>

 

and in the file AlternativeDisplay.html you put the code that use to be in WebSlice.html (and that needs to use javascript):

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title></title>
</head>
<body>
     <div class="entry-content">Preview of the <a href="#" onclick="document.getElementById('Message').innerHTML='Hello'; return false;">web</a> slice
        <div id="Message"></div>
      </div>

</body>
</html>

Monday, August 02, 2010

How to migrate your local user profile to the domain

Apparently, there is no easy way (this or this do NOT work), there use to be a tool to do this (Moveuser.exe), but it stopped working with Windows Vista.

The way to do it now is to write a VBScript that uses WMI, happily, I have found someone that has already done it here.

It basically seems to be using the ChangeOwner Method of the Win32_UserProfile Class, one problem I have found so far is that if the profile to be “moved” in to the domain is heavy (many Gbytes of weight) the ChangeOwner method can take a really long time to do its job. A possible solution then is to move the files outside of the profile dir, run the migration process, and copy the files back (you might need to change the permission information of those files to be able to copy them back)

Friday, July 16, 2010

How to move C:\Users to D:\Users

There is no user friendly way to move your C:\Users folder to D:\ but the user unfriendly way to do it is not too hard (it was a little hard to discover, I learned how to do this when I decided that I wanted to have C:\Winnt\Profiles dir at a different location, after I lost most of my data when my main disk failed, back when Windows NT 4.0 was the latest and greatest OS from Microsoft)

Basically, after you installed Windows (this instructions are for Windows 7 but the general approach is valid since Windows NT 4.0)  you have to:

  1. Login with “WhatEverIsYourUserName” account.
  2. Run the Command Prompt (cmd.exe) as an Administrator
  3. image
  4. Copy the C:\Users\ folder to D:\Users using Robocopy
    robocopy C:\Users D:\Users /E /COPYALL /R:0 /Z /XJ



  5. Open regedit and modify the ProfileList entry so that it looks like this:



image




  1. Create a new (Administrator) Windows account that you will use to test the configuration change


     image


  2. Restart


  3. Login with the “Test” Windows account


  4. Delete C:\Users


  5. See that the  Start menu still works (if you made a mistake, your Start menu is now empty)


  6. Delete the registry Key for your “WhatEverIsYourUserName” account (if you still want to use it). (The registry Key is the yellow folder with the S-1-5… name that contains the value ProfileImagePath that points your now obsolete C:\ folder, remember,  you have to delete the whole folder/key, not just the ProfileImagePath value):


     [image[23].png]


  7. Log out


  8. Now log in with your “WhatEverIsYourUserName” account


  9. If you take a look at the registry now, it will look like this (The value in ProfileImagePath now starts with “D:\” instead of “C:\”):

     image


  10. Now you can delete the test account.



And that is it, now the users accounts live in D:\Users\

Thursday, July 08, 2010

Recover sa account

Today, a friend from the office locked himself out of SqlServer 2008 R2 Express, somehow he managed to remove the windows Administrator account form the list of sysadmin accounts in the SqlServer express installed in a development server.

I thought there was no way to recover from a mistake a like that, but another friend found the way and gave us a link with the solution.

Basically, we need to stop the SqlService, and restart it in "single user mode" and "minimal config mode"

sqlservr.exe -m -r -s SQLEXPRESS

And the open another command window and run this commands:

osql -E -S .\SQLEXPRESS 
exec sp_password @new='changeme', @loginame='sa' 
go 
alter login sa enable 
go 
exit 

And that was it. Remember, without the special "-m -r" options, the osql commands will fail.

NOTE: In case your SQL Server is not configured to use Mixed Mode for authentication, you may also need to make some modification to the registry settings.

Basically you need to find the registry entry for the instance:

Default instance:
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\MSSqlserver\MSSqlServer\LoginMode

Named instance:
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\Instance Name\MSSQLServer\LoginMode

And  change the value of LoginMode to 2.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Formulating Expressions a Step at a Time: Lazy Evaluation

I am reading this book, and I found the section with the title “Formulating Expressions a Step at a Time” particularly interesting:

First, the book shows you this the query for the sentence "Get pairs of supplier numbers such that the suppliers concerned are collocated (i.e., are in the same city)" written in Tutorial D:

( ( ( S RENAME ( SNO AS SA ) ) { SA , CITY } JOIN
( S RENAME ( SNO AS SB ) ) { SB , CITY } )
WHERE SA < SB ) { SA , SB }

And then it proceeds to show you how to write this query in a more readable (step by step) way:

WITH ( S RENAME ( SNO AS SA ) ) { SA , CITY } AS R1 ,
( S RENAME ( SNO AS SB ) ) { SB , CITY } AS R2 ,
R1 JOIN R2 AS R3 ,
R3 WHERE SA < SB AS R4 :
R4 { SA, SB }

Finally, it shows you how to write this query in SQL:

WITH T1 AS ( SELECT SNO AS SA , CITY
FROM S ) ,
T2 AS ( SELECT SNO AS SB , CITY
FROM S ) ,
T3 AS ( SELECT *
FROM T1 NATURAL JOIN T2 ) ,
T4 AS ( SELECT *
FROM T3
WHERE SA < SB )
SELECT SA , SB
FROM T4

Thanks to the “with” keyword, both in SQL and in Tutorial D, it is possible to deal with this query in a “step by step” way, instead of having to deal with it a single hard to write and hard to read expression (note that this is not a recursive query, so the with keyword is not being used for that in this examples)

Sadly, so far I have been unable to find a equivalent for this syntax in Dataphor… While it is possible to write something like (I am not 100% confident the syntax is right, but I think it should give you the general idea):

var R1 := S {SNO SA}
var R2 := S {SNO SB}
var R3 := R2 JOIN R3
var R4 := R3 WHERE SA < SB
select R4 {SA, SB}

In Dataphor, the variables (R1, R2, etc) are not lazily evaluated, and therefore the performance is not as good, as in, for example, the SQL case (I ran a similar example in SqlServer, and the expressions were evaluated lazily, at the end, instead of one by one, resulting in far better performance). Maybe I am doing something wrong?

I wonder how hard would it be to make Dataphor generate SQL using the WITH keyword with those databases that support it (so far the latest versions of SQLServer (2008) and Oracle (10 & 11) seem to support this syntax)… I guess it is time to ask the Dataphor authors…

Thursday, March 04, 2010

Null versus None

None means Nothing, Nothing is a concept that describes the absence of anything at all. Nothing is sometimes confused with Null, but they are very different concepts because Nothing means absence of anything, while Null means unknown (you do not know if there is a thing or not).

For Nothing, the normal Two valued logic applies (Nothing=Nothing : true, Nothing = Something : false), for Null, Three valued logic is necessary(Null=Null:unknown, Null=Something:unknown). Unfortunately, this 2 concepts have been used interchangeably without much thought, to point where the most common use for Null in relational databases is to mean Nothing (even when Null was designed to represent unknown by Codd). This confusion is aggravated by the fact that many mainstream application languages (Java, C#, C, etc) use the null keyword to mean uninitialized variable which easily maps to the interpretation that null means the variable is pointing to "nothing" (no object).

But for databases, Null was not invented to represent nothingness, was invented to represent that the value of something was not known (maybe be something, maybe nothing, we just do not know).

Now that Chris Date wants Null to be removed from Relational Databases, so that the incongruence and confusion brought in by Three valued logic is eliminated, the developers, accustomed to use Null to represent Nothing, resist to the idea asking: How am I going to represent the fact that a Person is not married? I use to do that by marking the Marriage Date? as a nullable Date. Now what? I need to split the table into 2 tables just to represent the fact that the Marriage Date? is not mandatory? That of course seems like the obvious, elegant (if extremely cumbersome answer). But the practical developer refuses to get into that trouble, it is just too much effort, it is simple easier to continue using Null. But... what about Nothing? why not just simply add "Nothing" as a possible value for to the Date domain? That way it is possible to say that the Person has no Marriage Date?, and still stay inside the realm of two valued logic.

Is this solution, in any way in conflict with The Third Manifesto? I really would like to know… I wonder what will be the opinion of the community in the  C2 Wiki

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Find me a circle

A circle is a simple shape of Euclidean geometry consisting of those points in a plane which are equidistant from a given point called the center. The common distance of the points of a circle from its center is called its radius.

But Circles can not, and do not exist in reality, anything that seems to be a Circle is actually a polygon with a very high number of sides... the closest to a Circle that we can get is to have each side of the polygon the size of quantum distance.

Just try and draw a Circle in The Gimp (or in Paint.NET).

image

Now zoom 600% in to it. You will see it is actually a polygon, composed of thousands of little pixels, the same is true for "circles" in reality, they are composed of thousands of little quantum pixels.

image

So, Circles do not exist, they are just a math abstraction. And that is why we end up needing unattainable numbers like Pi to deal with the area inside of a circle... because there is no such thing as the area inside of a circle (because there are no circles).

The area inside of anything in reality, that looks like a circle, can be calculated by dividing it in "quantum pixel areas", and the adding those areas to get the total area inside of the supposed circle. Now, that would require a lot of effort, that is the reason we believe in circles, because they are a very useful abstraction (even if it is an abstraction that fails and produces Pi as a result of its failure)

Among Archimedes mathematical accomplishments is the computation of pi, he used the method of exhaustion as a way to compute the area inside a circle by filling the circle with a polygon of a greater and greater number of sides. The quotient formed by the area of this polygon divided by the square of the circle radius can be made arbitrarily close to Pi as the number of polygon sides becomes large, proving that the area inside the circle of radius r is Pi * (r*r),Pi being defined as the ratio of the circumference to the diameter.

When a circle's diameter is 1 unit, its circumference is Pi units. Why Pi is such simple concept but such a strange "number"? because Circles do not exist, Pi is an example of a Mathematics (Geometry?) abstraction leak.

As we increase the number of sides, we approximate more, and more to the circle, but we can never really have a circle.

image

This is why we can never know the complete value of Pi, because there is now way to have a circle in a discrete quantum based reality, "circles" are a good model for this things with too many sides to count easily, but circles are just a model, not a reality

That is something, that as software developers we should always keep in mind: The Map (the Model) is not The Territory (the Reality)

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Pagination in Dataphor

First I created this operator:

create operator GetNext(var AID :Integer) : System.Integer 
begin
AID:= AID+1;
result:=AID;
end ;


and then I used it:



var id := 0; 
select SomeTable add {GetNext(id) rowid};


It is nice, but it would be better if there were a way to do this without having to create an operator myself (it should already include one that does this)

Now If I want to do pagination, all I have to do is write:



var id := 0; 
select SomeTable add {GetNext(id) rowid} where rowid between 2 and 5;


That will return rows between 2 and 5 from the “SomeTable” table.



Now one of the most interesting feaures about Dataphor, are relvars (relational variables), that make it possible to do this:



var SomeComplexQuery := SomeTable where …...
var id := 0;
select SomeComplexQuery add {GetNext(id) rowid} where rowid between 2 and 5;


That way, pagination can be added to a query of arbitrary complexity with minimum effort.

Requirements Analysis: Negative Space

A while ago, I was part of a team working on a crucial project. We were confident, relying heavily on our detailed plans and clear-cut requi...