The Day I Cancelled Pluralsight
Back in early 2012 I watched an online course on Pluralsight - Data Layer Validation with Entity Framework 4.1+ by Julie Lerman.
It was the first of a great many courses I’ve watched since then and I’ve learned a lot.
But in recent years I’ve found that I’ve spent more time watching other high quality courses elsewhere.
Previously there wasn’t anything like Pluralsight - sure, there was YouTube but the quality just wasn’t there. You could find some useful content but it fell short of the quality of the courses on Pluralsight.
Read moreAdding Clustering to MAUI Maps on Android
Over the years I’ve developed a number of mobile applications that require the ability to display a number or locations on a map.
The challenge comes when there are a large number of locations to display because the map very quickly becomes overwhelmed with marker pins - but only really on Android because Apple Maps provides a degree of clustering out of the box.
The above images show the difference between the standard Android and iOS maps with 500 markers randomly dropped onto them and as you can see, Android isn’t really cutting it as the UK landmass is pretty much totally obscured by the marker pins. While it could be argued that the iOS version is the lesser of the two implementations because there is clearly data missing, zooming in will cause more marker pins to be revealed.
In this post I’ll show you how to extend the functionality of the regular Android mapping implementation provided by the
Read moreMicrosoft.Maui.Controls.Maps
package to include Marker Pin Clustering which, in my opinion, will improve the UX no end.Developing a Jekyll Website with Docker
Yesterday I spun up Jetbrains Rider, loaded up the Jekyll folder for this very website and prepared to get a blog post out of my head and online … but this is not that blog post!
No, that post had to go on hold while I battled with error after error as I tried to get the site built and the Jekyll service up and running. Before I knew it, the evening was drawing to a close and I still didn’t have the site running locally.
The problem was clear though - dependency issues with Ruby and its Bundler that are core to Jekyll’s operation. Something had updated on my MacBook Pro and it had really upset the apple cart.
So how was I going to get around that?
Read moreSave Blushes with Git Hooks
We’ve all done it - we’ve committed a file, pushed it to the repository and it’s broken the build …. I know, shock, horror huh!?
Now I’m not suggesting that experienced developers are committing code that doesn’t even build - I mean, we all check that much right ….. right? But do we always remember to run the unit tests?
No, we don’t, and what happens next - we have to run the tests locally, find the issue, fix it and then go through the cycle again. While you make be able to squash these ‘fixing build’ commits out of the history but that build failure will always be there (unless you’re the DevOps admin of course).
But what if there was a way that you could avoid having to remember to do these simple, but easily forgotten, tasks. Well, that’s where git hooks come in.
Read moreSpurious Sockets Exception reported by Sentry
While finishing off the migration of my Smite Scoreboard app to MAUI and having completed the bulk of the work I turned my attention to replacing the soon-to-be retired App Center for a suitable alternative capable of capturing exceptions and providing enough information to investigate them effectively.
After reviewing a number of alternatives I opted for Sentry, mainly because of the presence of a decent free tier that offered the basic features I require with decent data retention policy.
After configuring a project on my shiny new Sentry account, adding the required initialisation code to the MAUI project and replacing all the AppCenter references it was time to try it out …. and that’s where the trouble started.
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