Archive for the ‘C#’ Category

iTunes Persistent Id Cloner – Sync one iPhone / iPod with many computers

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

I frequently have trouble trying to copy music onto my iPod due to iTunes’s draconian binding and synchronising rules. These rules exist to ensure that only “authorised” files can be copied onto any given device. Apple implement this by binding your device to a specific instance of iTunes using a randomly generated Persistent Id that’s registered on your computer and on your device.

I have 3 computers that I use regularly, and I regularly rip CDs in different places and want to put that music on my iPod for travelling imminently. By default, iTunes restricts me from being able to do this.

Tonight I hacked together a little command line app to clone your persistent Id’s across multiple machines.

In order to use it, you need a copy of iTunes bound to your device installed on a machine. Once you have that, you run the program in –extract mode, which will show you the persistent Id for that machine. You can then use the program on other computers to patch any installed iTunes libraries to believe that they have the same persistent Id as the “master” machine. It’s a pretty trivial process.

If it breaks anything, don’t come crying, but “works on my machines”. Happy listening.

Source code / detailed instructions: https://github.com/davidwhitney/itunes-persistent-id-cloner
Executable: https://github.com/downloads/davidwhitney/itunes-persistent-id-cloner/4f7dd551998d515108d937d5b39f28a7b2a058ff.zip

The iTunes Persistent Id Cloner!

Small command line app to:

1) Extract the persistent Id from an iTunes library (this is the thing that your device is bound to)
2) Patch up an iTunes library with a persistent Id you supply (I bet you can see where this is going).

Usage:

Compile.

1) Quit iTunes on machine that you want to be considered your "master" persistent Id.
    I'd suggest the one you've already got your iPod / iPhone registered on.

2) Run itunes-persistent-id-cloner.exe -extract
    Write down the Persistent Id it gives you.

3) Install a fresh copy of iTunes on another machine
    Run it once, and quit iTunes.

3) Run itunes-persistent-id-cloner.exe -patch on another machine
    When prompted, enter the persistent Id supplied by the other Id.
    Ensure iTunes isn't running.
    Hit enter.

No friendly error messages or error handling at the moment.
Don't make typos, things might crash. Worse case, you can run / patch a second time.

CouchDb using C# in 15 minutes

Monday, March 14th, 2011

I’ve spent quite a lot of time experimenting with document databases at the moment, almost exclusively RavenDb of late.  We’re currently looking at sweeping architecture changes at work, and unfortunately it doesn’t look like Raven is going to be suitable (nothing to do with the product, which is excellent, just a target audience with a specific ambivalence to Windows server exclusive products).  Knowing that a lot of Ravens design decisions were based around using CouchDb, and knowing that CouchDb might be a better fit for the scenario I have in mind, I set out to see how easy Couch is to use on Windows.

Short answer? Very very easy, so here’s a few quick steps for someone that wants to get up and running quickly.

First, go grab a copy of your platform-specific installer from CouchBase and install it. This is a 2-3 click process, and as the installer exits your browser pops up into “Futon” the Couch web UI.

Then go to https://github.com/foretagsplatsen/Divan , clone / download the Divan source code and build it. Divan is a handy open source project aimed at wrapping the Couch API (which is RESTful, so if you want to roll your own client library feel free). Divan is quite bare to the metal and relies on Json.Net for de/serializing documents.

Launch Visual Studio and new up a project of your choice. I’ve chucked together a few utility classes while experimenting to deal with persistence in order to get a syntax that looks like this:

   1: const string host = "localhost";

   2: const int port = 5984;

   3: var server = new CouchServer(host, port);

   4: var db = server.GetDatabase("myfirstdatabase");

   5:  

   6: var document = new SomeRandomAggregateRoot

   7:                    {This = "Is cool!", Subclass = new SomeRandomClass {IsAwesome = "hell yeah!"}};

   8:  

   9: using (var couchRepo = new CouchRepository<SomeRandomAggregateRoot>(db))

  10: {

  11:     var id = couchRepo.Save(document);

  12:     var returnedCouchDoc = couchRepo.Retrieve(id);

  13:     ViewData["Message"] = returnedCouchDoc._id;

  14: }

  15:  

  16: return View();

Which I’m pretty happy with as it seems very usable and maps pretty simply from the underlying Json documents.

I have a base class and an interface at the bottom of the object graph that look like this

   1:  

   2:     public class CouchAggregateRoot : ICouchAggregateRoot

   3:     {

   4:         public string _id { get; set; }

   5:         public string _rev { get; set; }

   6:     }

   7:  

   8:     public interface ICouchAggregateRoot

   9:     {

  10:         string _id { get; set; }

  11:         string _rev { get; set; }

  12:     }

and two little repository classes that look like this:

   1: public class CouchRepository<T> : CouchRepository where T : CouchAggregateRoot

   2: {

   3:     public CouchRepository(ICouchDatabase couchDatabase):base(couchDatabase)

   4:     {

   5:     }

   6:  

   7:     public T Retrieve(string id)

   8:     {

   9:         return Retrieve<T>(id);

  10:     }

  11:  

  12:     public string Save(T @object)

  13:     {

  14:         return Save<T>(@object);

  15:     }

  16: }

  17:  

  18: public class CouchRepository: IDisposable

  19: {

  20:     protected readonly ICouchDatabase CouchDatabase;

  21:  

  22:     public CouchRepository(ICouchDatabase couchDatabase)

  23:     {

  24:         CouchDatabase = couchDatabase;

  25:     }

  26:  

  27:     public string Save<T>(T @object) where T : CouchAggregateRoot

  28:     {

  29:         var couchDocument = new CouchDocumentWrapper<T>(@object);

  30:         CouchDatabase.SaveDocument(couchDocument);

  31:         return couchDocument.Id;

  32:     }

  33:  

  34:     public T Retrieve<T>(string id) where T : CouchAggregateRoot

  35:     {

  36:         var rawDocument = CouchDatabase.GetDocument(id);

  37:         var @object = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(rawDocument.ToString());

  38:         @object._id = rawDocument.Id;

  39:         @object._rev = rawDocument.Rev;

  40:         return @object;

  41:     }

  42:  

  43:     public void Dispose()

  44:     {

  45:         // Should probably get round to implementing this...

  46:     }

  47: }

They’re obviously not entirely fleshed out, and the Divan project obviously encapsulates more of Couches functionality than those two methods alone.

When you execute the code snippet above (which for the sake of this example was just in a random ASP.NET MVC Controller’s Get method) you’ll see a new database called “myfirstdatabase” created in Futon with your newly created document inside it.

This is obviously just scratching at the surface, but I’ve been exceptionally pleased at how easy it is to get a File –> New Project up and running using readily available tools.

Code in full on GitHub for posterity

Pluralization (Pluralisation!) in C#

Monday, November 15th, 2010

So today at work we were spitting some league table-ish (shh! unreleased feature!) data onto a screen and I realised I was going to have to manually pluralise “0 donations”, “1 donation”, “2 donations” depending on the number of donations having been made. I felt a little bit of the crazy eye coming on, because I’ve solved this problem a hundred times before.

By “solved” I mean, “I’ve written a shitty if(..) statement to solve this problem a hundred times before”, which totally sucks.  And I exclaimed “but surely this is a problem everybody that has ever displayed text has faced, it can’t possibly be that we all solve this every day”.

Turns out, that this has pretty much been the case until recently. Rails has Pluralize methods, and most ORMs clearly have this functionality to some extent but I’d never happened across a general purpose .NET library to do the job.  After sitting and expressing my utter disbelieve that this isn’t (at least in it’s simplest form) a solved problem, I actually used some GoogleFu to discover that it was.

So, in .NET4, it looks like Microsoft actually got round to implementing this in the framework, I’d not happened across it before, but it’s pretty freaking cool.

So let me introduce, if I may, the System.Data.Entity.Design.PluralizationServices namespace!

The more observant of you might notice that it appears to be in a namespace with “Entity” in the title. I suspect it was cooked up as part of EF (boo! hiss!) but luckily, you don’t need to actually reference the main System.Data.Entity assembly as it’s been separated out into a satellite assembly.  It also looks like localization is hiding behind one giant NotImplementedException(); currently, but the usage is pretty simple and calmed me down in no time.

var _pluralizationService = PluralizationService.CreateService(Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture);
var plural = _pluralizationService.Pluralize(singular);

and that’s it!

Almost too good to be true, but it actually works, managing “donation”=>”donations”, “sheep”=>”sheep” and as esoterically pointed out on twitter, even “cardex”=>”cardecies”. Which is really pretty cool.

We took it a little further and added support to it in our suite of extension methods for the ASP.NET MVC HtmlHelper class, so in our MVC views we can do this:

<%@ Import Namespace="Extensions" %>
<%=Html.Language().CorrectTenseForQuantity(Model.Quantity, "word") %>

Which I thought was pretty tasty (and at the very least, gives us the same thing the Rails guys have, just with slightly more explicit syntax (my personal preference).

I’ve put our extension implementation up as a Gist on GitHub here if anyone wants to see the full implementation.

Pretty cool.

Serving different views for mobile devices in ASP.NET MVC

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

As browsing becomes more commonplace on phones, sub-notebooks and (within the next year or so) Tablet PCs, there’s an increased appetite to tailor your user experience for people using these “non-desktop” devices.  You can leverage your existing application infrastructure without having to create costly or outsource applications for specific (*cough* iPhone) platforms that have lots of market share, to the exclusion of others (*cough* iPhone).

There are some excellent examples of this in the wild, Facebook and the BBC do a great job of this already.

So what about us ASP.NET MVC types?  Well thankfully, there’s a lot of stuff built in to the framework to allow us to do this with relative ease.  First you’re going to need a few things..

1) Go grab the latest Mobile Device Browser File from http://mdbf.codeplex.com.  If you’re familiar with the old “Browser Caps”, it’s the same sort of thing.  A regularly updated collection of device data.  It’s pretty interesting on it’s own, breaking down incoming devices by user agent / headers and offering you various stats (touch enabled, screen resolution etc).  You’ll probably want to keep this up to date periodically.

2) A new ViewEngine!  Thankfully, ASP.NET MVC has a pretty flexible pipeline when it comes to slotting in new ViewEngines.  The most transparent way to switch out which view you’re serving for any given request is to override some of the logic in the default ViewEngine to look elsewhere when a View is requested by the MVC framework.

3) A way to test this stuff.  I normally break out the “User Agent Switcher” FireFox plugin which you can grab here: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/59

 

The View Engine

In order to keep this as close to vanilla MVC as possible, I’m going to extend the regular WebFormsViewEngine to add mobile device detection and view overriding.  What I’m going to do is check for a mobile browser when a request reaches the view engine, and if one is found, add some extra paths to look for the view files in at the top of the list of locations searched.  By doing this, we can prioritise the mobile edition of a website if the user is visiting from a phone, while degrading gracefully, allowing the regular version of the website to be served if a mobile version of a given page isn’t available.  This actually allows us to support mobile views piece by piece rather than forcing us to support the entire site out of the box.

Unfortunately, a few of the methods surrounding view resolution are marked as private in the WebFormsViewEngine and as such are inaccessible.  I’ve had to reflect in and copy a couple of methods to get around this.  Ideally the access modifier on these could be changed in later versions of the framework.

The key method we have to work with is

public override ViewEngineResult FindView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, string masterName, bool useCache)
{ … }

What we’re going to do is add a few extra locations based on the browser type.  With the mobile device browser file installed, this is really simple:

public override ViewEngineResult FindView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, string masterName, bool useCache)
{
    if (controllerContext == null)
    {
        throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext");
    }
    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewName))
    {
        throw new ArgumentException("viewName");
    }

    List<string> viewLocationsSearched;
    List<string> masterLocationsSearched;

    string[] viewLocationsToSearch = ViewLocationFormats;
    string[] masterLocationsToSearch = MasterLocationFormats;

    viewLocationsToSearch = AddMobileViewLocations(controllerContext, viewLocationsToSearch, MobileViewLocationFormats);
    masterLocationsToSearch = AddMobileViewLocations(controllerContext, masterLocationsToSearch, MobileMasterLocationFormats);

    string controllerName = controllerContext.RouteData.GetRequiredString("controller");
    string viewPath = GetPath(controllerContext, viewLocationsToSearch, viewName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixView, useCache, out viewLocationsSearched);
    string masterPath = GetPath(controllerContext, masterLocationsToSearch, masterName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixMaster, useCache, out masterLocationsSearched);

    if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewPath)
        || (String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterPath)
        && !String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterName)))
    {
        return new ViewEngineResult(viewLocationsSearched.Union(masterLocationsSearched));
    }

    return new ViewEngineResult(CreateView(controllerContext, viewPath, masterPath), this);
}

You’ll notice there’s a few methods that get called in there.  The most important of which is “AddMobileViewLocations”.  This really is where all the legwork is done, and looks like this

public class SwitchingViewEngine : WebFormViewEngine
{
    private const string CacheKeyFormat = ":ViewCacheEntry:{0}:{1}:{2}:{3}:";
    private const string CacheKeyPrefixMaster = "Master";
    private const string CacheKeyPrefixView = "View";
    private static readonly List<string> EmptyLocations = new List<string>();

    protected string[] MobileViewLocationFormats { get; private set; }
    protected string[] MobileMasterLocationFormats { get; private set; }

    public SwitchingViewEngine()
    {
        ViewLocationFormats = new[]
                                  {
                                      "~/Views/{1}/{0}.aspx", "~/Views/{1}/{0}.ascx", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.aspx",
                                      "~/Views/Shared/{0}.ascx"
                                  };

        MobileViewLocationFormats = new[]
               &
#160;                        {
                                            "~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.aspx", "~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.ascx",
                                            "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.aspx",
                                            "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.ascx"
                                        };

        MasterLocationFormats = new[] {"~/Views/{1}/{0}.master", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.master"};
        MobileMasterLocationFormats = new[] {"~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.master", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.master"};
    }

    public override ViewEngineResult FindView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, string masterName, bool useCache)
    {   …    }

    private static string[] AddMobileViewLocations(ControllerContext controllerContext,
                                                   string[] viewLocationsToSearch,
                                                   IEnumerable<string> mobileViewLocations)
    {
        if (controllerContext == null
            || controllerContext.HttpContext == null
            || controllerContext.HttpContext.Request == null
            || controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.Browser == null
            || viewLocationsToSearch == null
            || viewLocationsToSearch.Length == 0
            || mobileViewLocations == null
            || mobileViewLocations.ToList().Count == 0
            || !controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.Browser.IsMobileDevice)
        {
            return viewLocationsToSearch;
        }

        var mobileViews = viewLocationsToSearch.ToList();
        foreach (var view in mobileViewLocations.Reverse())
        {
            mobileViews.Insert(0, view);
        }

        viewLocationsToSearch = mobileViews.ToArray();

        return viewLocationsToSearch;
    }

This method takes the current ViewLocations that are defined at the top of the class, does a bunch of guard checks (to prevent mobile switching crashing your request.. call me paranoid), then verifies that controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.Browser.IsMobileDevice is true.  This check makes use of the browser device file.  If all the checks pass, it inserts the new “mobile view paths” at the very top of the list of paths to be searched when resolving the location of a view file.  The calling method then subsequently calls the method “GetPath” (which is one of the private methods I’ve had to reflect out of the framework source code).  GetPath searches the supplied list of potential view locations, and returns as soon as it finds a match.  In our case, if the browser is mobile, and a view file with the extension mobile.aspx is found, this will be the first view resolved and returned.

The full code listing for the view engine (don’t worry, there’s a link at the bottom to grab all of this in one archive):

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Globalization;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web.Mvc;

namespace MultipleViewMvcExample.DemoCode
{
    public class SwitchingViewEngine : WebFormViewEngine
    {
        private const string CacheKeyFormat = ":ViewCacheEntry:{0}:{1}:{2}:{3}:";
        private const string CacheKeyPrefixMaster = "Master";
        private const string CacheKeyPrefixView = "View";
        private static readonly List<string> EmptyLocations = new List<string>();

        protected string[] MobileViewLocationFormats { get; private set; }
        protected string[] MobileMasterLocationFormats { get; private set; }

        public SwitchingViewEngine()
        {
            ViewLocationFormats = new[]
                                      {
                                          "~/Views/{1}/{0}.aspx", "~/Views/{1}/{0}.ascx", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.aspx",
                                          "~/Views/Shared/{0}.ascx"
              
60;                       };

            MobileViewLocationFormats = new[]
                                            {
                                                "~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.aspx", "~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.ascx",
                                                "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.aspx",
                                                "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.ascx"
                                            };

            MasterLocationFormats = new[] {"~/Views/{1}/{0}.master", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.master"};
            MobileMasterLocationFormats = new[] {"~/Views/{1}/{0}.mobile.master", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.mobile.master"};
        }

        public override ViewEngineResult FindView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, string masterName, bool useCache)
        {
            if (controllerContext == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext");
            }
            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewName))
            {
                throw new ArgumentException("viewName");
            }

            List<string> viewLocationsSearched;
            List<string> masterLocationsSearched;

            string[] viewLocationsToSearch = ViewLocationFormats;
            string[] masterLocationsToSearch = MasterLocationFormats;

            viewLocationsToSearch = AddMobileViewLocations(controllerContext, viewLocationsToSearch, MobileViewLocationFormats);
            masterLocationsToSearch = AddMobileViewLocations(controllerContext, masterLocationsToSearch, MobileMasterLocationFormats);

            string controllerName = controllerContext.RouteData.GetRequiredString("controller");
            string viewPath = GetPath(controllerContext, viewLocationsToSearch, viewName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixView, useCache, out viewLocationsSearched);
            string masterPath = GetPath(controllerContext, masterLocationsToSearch, masterName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixMaster, useCache, out masterLocationsSearched);

            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewPath)
                || (String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterPath)
                && !String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterName)))
            {
                return new ViewEngineResult(viewLocationsSearched.Union(masterLocationsSearched));
            }

            return new ViewEngineResult(CreateView(controllerContext, viewPath, masterPath), this);
        }

        private static string[] AddMobileViewLocations(ControllerContext controllerContext,
                                                       string[] viewLocationsToSearch,
                                                       IEnumerable<string> mobileViewLocations)
        {
            if (controllerContext == null
                || controllerContext.HttpContext == null
                || controllerContext.HttpContext.Request == null
                || controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.Browser == null
                || viewLocationsToSearch == null
                || viewLocationsToSearch.Length == 0
                || mobileViewLocations == null
                || mobileViewLocations.ToList().Count == 0
                || !controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.Browser.IsMobileDevice)
        &#
160;   {
                return viewLocationsToSearch;
            }

            var mobileViews = viewLocationsToSearch.ToList();
            foreach (var view in mobileViewLocations.Reverse())
            {
                mobileViews.Insert(0, view);
            }

            viewLocationsToSearch = mobileViews.ToArray();

            return viewLocationsToSearch;
        }

        private string GetPath(ControllerContext controllerContext, string[] locations, string name,
                               string controllerName, string cacheKeyPrefix, bool useCache,
                               out List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            searchedLocations = EmptyLocations;
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(name))
            {
                return string.Empty;
            }
            if ((locations == null) || (locations.Length == 0))
            {
                throw new InvalidOperationException("Property cannot be null or empty.");
            }
            bool flag = IsSpecificPath(name);
            string key = CreateCacheKey(cacheKeyPrefix, name, flag ? string.Empty : controllerName);
            if (useCache)
            {
                string viewLocation = ViewLocationCache.GetViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, key);
                if (viewLocation != null)
                {
                    return viewLocation;
                }
            }
            if (!flag)
            {
                return GetPathFromGeneralName(controllerContext, locations, name, controllerName, key,ref searchedLocations);
            }
            return GetPathFromSpecificName(controllerContext, name, key, ref searchedLocations);
        }
        private static bool IsSpecificPath(string name)
        {
            char ch = name[0];
            if (ch != ‘~’)
            {
                return (ch == ‘/’);
            }
            return true;
        }

        private string GetPathFromSpecificName(ControllerContext controllerContext, string name, string cacheKey,
                                               ref List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            string virtualPath = name;
            if (!FileExists(controllerContext, name))
            {
                virtualPath = string.Empty;
                searchedLocations = new List<string> {name};
            }
            ViewLocationCache.InsertViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey, virtualPath);
            return virtualPath;
        }

        private string GetPathFromGeneralName(ControllerContext controllerContext, string[] locations, string name,
                                              string controllerName, string cacheKey, ref List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            string virtualPath = string.Empty;
            searchedLocations = new List<string>();
            for (int i = 0; i < locations.Length; i++)
            {
                string str2 = string.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, locations[i],
       
                                     new object[] {name, controllerName});
                if (FileExists(controllerContext, str2))
                {
                    searchedLocations = EmptyLocations;
                    virtualPath = str2;
                    ViewLocationCache.InsertViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey, virtualPath);
                    return virtualPath;
                }
                searchedLocations[i] = str2;
            }
            return virtualPath;
        }

        private string CreateCacheKey(string prefix, string name, string controllerName)
        {
            return String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, CacheKeyFormat,
                                 GetType().AssemblyQualifiedName, prefix, name, controllerName);
        }
    }
}

 

The Wiring

Now you have your view engine, you need to register it as the default view engine in your MVC application.  Easy!  Open up your Global.aspx.cs file and add the following to ApplicationStart

ViewEngines.Engines.Clear();
ViewEngines.Engines.Add(new SwitchingViewEngine());

Done!

Now you need to actually add the browser detection file to your application.  Presuming you downloaded the latest archive from the codeplex url at the top of this article, all you need to do is copy the supplied mobile.browser file to App_Browsers/Device/* in your MVC application.

That’s all the wiring you need to get everything up and running.

If you’ve done it right, a default “New MVC Template” project with these additions might look something like this:

image

For the sake of this demo, I put the view engine in a “DemoCode” sub-namespace. You don’t want to do that, put it somewhere sensible!

The more astute reader might now notice that my Views/Home directory in the above screenshot has an extra file, not supplied by the template, called “Index.mobile.aspx”.  Likewise, my /Views/Shared directory has Site.mobile.Master.  These are files I want the view engine to resolve if a user hits the http://localhost/Home default route from a mobile device.

Index.mobile.aspx looks like this:

<%@ Page Language="C#" MasterPageFile="~/Views/Shared/Site.mobile.Master" Inherits="System.Web.Mvc.ViewPage" %>

<asp:Content ID="indexTitle" ContentPlaceHolderID="TitleContent" runat="server">
    Mobile Home Page
</asp:Content>

<asp:Content ID="indexContent" ContentPlaceHolderID="MainContent" runat="server">
    <h2><%= Html.Encode(ViewData["Message"]) %></h2>
    This is my mobile index page.
</asp:Content>

and Site.mobile.Master looks like this:

<%@ Master Language="C#" Inherits="System.Web.Mvc.ViewMasterPage" %>

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title><asp:ContentPlaceHolder ID="TitleContent" runat="server" /></title>
</head>

<body>
    <div class="page">

        <div id="header">
            <div id="title">
                <h1>My MVC Application – mobile master page</h1>
            </div>
            <div id="logindisplay">
                <% Html.RenderPartial("LogOnUserControl"); %>
            </div>
            <div id="menucontainer">
                <ul id="menu">             
                    <li><%= Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")%></li>
                    <li><%= Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")%></li>
                </ul>
            </div>
        </div>

        <div id="main">
            <asp:ContentPlaceHolder ID="MainContent" runat="server" />

            <div id="footer">
            </div>
        </div>
   
</div>
</body>
</html>

Nothing especially revolutionary.

 

Testing

First, install that FireFox plugin I mentioned at the top of the article, create a new MVC project (just use the template), and wire up the view engine and browser file.  Add some extra views with the .mobile.aspx prefix.  Or download the sample attached to the bottom of this post!

Start the site up in Cassini (Visual Studios default web server) and hit /Home.  You should see this:

image

Now, lets use the new FireFox plugin…

image

Select iPhone 3.0 from that menu and refresh the page…

image

Bang!  The more eagle eye reader might have notice that all I did in my “mobile” master page, was delete the CSS reference from the default MVC template, thus the above screenshot.

And that’s it.

 

Further Thoughts

This solution goes quite a way, but here are a few other ideas:

  • Don’t just do browser type detection, detect and switch on subdomain, so any visitors hitting http://m.mysite.com get a different view.
  • Allow the user to opt-out of the reduced view with a session cookie.
  • Switch views to a low-fi version to victimise IE6 users!
  • Target tablet PCs based on resolution to build a “touch UI”

It’s all pretty simple.  The really nice thing about this solution is that your designers can just add these mobile views as and when they see fit, as the same action methods that execute for the “full fat” website are run, and the same strongly typed view models (which you’re using, right? get out of here with your ViewData..) are delivered.  Designers can implement portable websites, piece by piece, just with a little view engine change.

As with all internet code, your mileage may vary, but this technique works for me.

You can download a working VS2008 solution (so long as you have ASP.NET MVC1 installed on your system) containing all the code used above from: http://github.com/davidwhitney/MultipleViewMvcExample

Automatic Html Encoding in ASP.NET 4.0

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

I spent today at Microsofts Techdays Visual Studio 2010 launch event in London.  Lots of interesting stuff, covered in depth all over the internet (just Google, or bing, if you’re a sadist “changes from .NET 3.5 to .NET 4.0″).  A tiny thing that caught my attention for it’s pure utility to the masses is a new operator in ASP.NET 4.0 that deals with Html Encoding of data implicity.

You’ll likely be familiar (especially if you’re working with ASP.NET MVC) with the <%= notation for referencing properties in the context of the ASP page.  In ASP.NET 4.0 this has been joined by <%: This addition automagically HtmlEncodes any content between the opening and closing tags to prevent repetitive tag soup of <%=HttpUtility.HtmlEncode(myProperty)%> all over your views, and removes the temptation to push HtmlEncoding into your Controller or Model, two places where encoding really shouldn’t be a concern.

Just struck me as a nice little change that’ll make everyday life that little bit easier for a majority of web developers. Sure it’s not quite the new Xaml designer (which is a work of beauty) or Intellitrace (which looked like a total game changer for retrospective debugging), but you know, it’s the little things that count.

C# Access Modifiers Are Type Specific, NOT Instance Specific

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Here’s an interesting example from a brief discussion I was having on twitter yesterday with @DotNetWill.

Did you realize that access modifiers in .NET are type specific rather than instance specific. It’s not a weird edge case, it is exactly how the language spec lays it out, but it’s not how most people think access modifiers work. This is because it’s not very often that any given type will have a reference to ANOTHER instance of that type, it just tends to not come up.

Either way, could make for some hilariously difficult debugging if you weren’t aware of it and something was “playing with your privates” by reference.

You might have seen this kind of usage in a singlet*on, constructor or builder class (or as @jagregory pointed out, cloning methods), but generally it’s just not a very common usage example. However, it WILL both compile and execute.

// Example of access modifiers being specific to a type not an instance
public class MyType
{
     private MyType _innerMyType;

     public MyType()
     {
     }

     public void MakeInnerMyType()
     {
          _innerMyType = new MyType();
          _innerMyType._innerMyType = new MyType();
     }
}

Nothing ground breaking, but a fun and interesting little example illustrating a common misconception.

ASP.NET MVC View Engine That Supports View Path Inheritance

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

I was working on a small MVC project where we were dealing with Inherited controllers (SomeController was inherited by SomeMoreSpecificController) and we decided that it’d be nice to have a similar hierarchy of sharing and inheritance at the View level.

Unfortunately, out of the box, ASP.net MVC looks in two default locations for your views and partials by convention.  The first is /Views/ControllerName/ViewName.aspx, the second is /Views/Shared/ViewName.aspx.  We wanted to allow SomeController to have it’s own set of more generic views, that could later be overridden in special cases by the views provided by SomeMoreSpecificController.

In order to do this in ASP.net MVC, you need to override the default view engine to change the location that the runtime looks for your views.

“Here’s one I made earlier”.

Using this ViewEngine, if you call an action method on SomeMoreSpecificController it’ll first check /Views/SomeMoreSpecificController/…, then /Views/SomeController/… (the base class), then finally /Views/Shared, allowing you a little more control over the organisation of your views.

using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Web.Mvc;
using System;
using System.Globalization;
using System.Linq;

namespace MyMvc.Mvc
{

    public class InheranceViewEngine : WebFormViewEngine
    {
        private const string CacheKeyFormat = ":ViewCacheEntry:{0}:{1}:{2}:{3}:";
        private const string CacheKeyPrefixMaster = "Master";
        private const string CacheKeyPrefixView = "View";
        private static readonly List<string> EmptyLocations= new List<string>();

        public InheranceViewEngine()
        {
            ViewLocationFormats = new[]
                                  {
                                      "~/Views/{1}/{0}.aspx", "~/Views/{1}/{0}.ascx", "~/Views/Shared/{0}.aspx",
                                      "~/Views/Shared/{0}.ascx"
                                  };
        }

        public override ViewEngineResult FindView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string viewName, string masterName, bool useCache)
        {
            if (controllerContext == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext");
            }
            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewName))
            {
                throw new ArgumentException("viewName");
            }

            List<string> viewLocationsSearched;
            List<string> masterLocationsSearched;

            string controllerName = controllerContext.RouteData.GetRequiredString("controller");
            string viewPath = GetPath(controllerContext, ViewLocationFormats, viewName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixView, useCache, out viewLocationsSearched);
            string masterPath = GetPath(controllerContext, MasterLocationFormats, masterName, controllerName, CacheKeyPrefixMaster, useCache, out masterLocationsSearched);

            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(viewPath) || (String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterPath) && !String.IsNullOrEmpty(masterName)))
            {
                return new ViewEngineResult(viewLocationsSearched.Union(masterLocationsSearched));
            }

            return new ViewEngineResult(CreateView(controllerContext, viewPath, masterPath), this);
        }

        public override ViewEngineResult FindPartialView(ControllerContext controllerContext, string partialViewName, bool useCache)
        {
            List<string> strArray;
            if (controllerContext == null) { throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext"); }
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(partialViewName)) { throw new ArgumentException("Partial View Name is null or empty.", "partialViewName"); }
            string requiredString = controllerContext.RouteData.GetRequiredString("controller");
            string str2 = GetPath(controllerContext, PartialViewLocationFormats, partialViewName, requiredString, "Partial", useCache, out strArray);
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(str2))
            {
                return new ViewEngineResult(strArray);
            }

            return new ViewEngineResult(CreatePartialView(controllerContext, str2), this);
        }

        private string GetPath(ControllerContext controllerContext, string[] locations, string name, string controllerName, string cacheKeyPrefix, bool useCache, out List<string> searchedLocations)
        {

            searchedLocations = EmptyLocations;

            if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(name))
            {
                return String.Empty;
            }

            if (locations == null || locations.Length == 0)
            {
                throw new InvalidOperationException();
            }

            bool nameRepresentsPath = IsSpecificPath(name);
            string cacheKey = CreateCacheKey(cacheKeyPrefix, name, (nameRepresentsPath) ? String.Empty : controllerName);

            if (useCache)
            {
                string result = ViewLocationCache.GetViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey);

                if (result != null)
                {
                    return result;
                }
            }

            if (nameRepresentsPath)
            {
                return GetPathFromSpecificName(controllerContext, name, cacheKey, ref searchedLocations);
            }
            return GetPathFromGeneralName(controllerContext, locations, name, controllerName, cacheKey, ref searchedLocations);
        }

        private string GetPathFromGeneralName(ControllerContext controllerContext, string[] locations, string name, string controllerName, string cacheKey, ref List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            string result = String.Empty;
            searchedLocations = new List<string>();

            for (int i = 0; i < locations.Length; i++)
            {
                string virtualPath = String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, locations[i], name, controllerName);
                if (FileExists(controllerContext, virtualPath))
                {
                    searchedLocations = EmptyLocations;
                    result = virtualPath;
                    ViewLocationCache.InsertViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey, result);
                    return result;
                }
                searchedLocations.Add(virtualPath);
            }

            return GetPathFromGeneralNameOfBaseTypes(controllerContext.Controller.GetType(), locations, name, controllerContext, cacheKey, result, ref searchedLocations);
        }

        private string GetPathFromGeneralNameOfBaseTypes(Type descendantType, string[] locations, string name, ControllerContext controllerContext, string cacheKey, string result, ref List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            Type baseControllerType = descendantType;
            if (baseControllerType == null
                || !baseControllerType.Name.Contains("Controller")
                || baseControllerType.Name == "Controller")
            {
                return result;
            }

            for (int i = 0;i < locations.Length;i++)
            {
                string baseControllerName = baseControllerType.Name.Replace("Controller", "");
                string virtualPath = String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, locations[i], name, baseControllerName);

                if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(virtualPath) &&
                    FileExists(controllerContext, virtualPath))
                {
                    searchedLocations = EmptyLocations;
                    result = virtualPath;
                    ViewLocationCache.InsertViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey, result);
                    return result;
                }

                searchedLocations.Add(virtualPath);
            }

            return GetPathFromGeneralNameOfBaseTypes(baseControllerType.BaseType, locations, name, controllerContext,
                                                     cacheKey, result, ref searchedLocations);
        }

        private string CreateCacheKey(string prefix, string name, string controllerName)
        {
            return String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, CacheKeyFormat,
                                 GetType().AssemblyQualifiedName, prefix, name, controllerName);
        }

        private string GetPathFromSpecificName(ControllerContext controllerContext, string name, string cacheKey, ref List<string> searchedLocations)
        {
            string result = name;

            if (!FileExists(controllerContext, name))
            {
                result = String.Empty;
                searchedLocations = new List<string>{ name };
            }

            ViewLocationCache.InsertViewLocation(controllerContext.HttpContext, cacheKey, result);
            return result;
        }

        private static bool IsSpecificPath(string name)
        {
            char c = name[0];
            return (c == ‘~’ || c == ‘/’);
        }

    }
}

Writing Presentable Code Pt.1 – Properties and Variables

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

At work we’re currently discussing coding standards, specifically to synchronise development in two countries and keep the style consistent across the teams.  You know, the usual stuff. 

When people start discussing coding standards, it quickly devolves into a religious debate and honestly, I think a lot of it comes down to personal preference.  Because of that, I’m going to spend a post or two telling your why you’re wrong and why I wouldn’t take your code to dinner however much it offered to put out.  Because clearly my way is the only right way!

Joking aside, I want to go into some detail on how I present and write my code, and hopefully explain why.  It’s all going to be slanted towards (who do I think I’m kidding, it’s going to be in) C# so as ever, your mileage may vary with any advice you extrapolate.  I’m going to start out by showing you some bad examples, attempt to explain why I think they’re bad, and offer my alternative.

Properties and Variables

The way you declare your properties and variables is seemingly insignificant, but if you get it wrong it trashes the readability of your code.  Take this code sample for example:

image

All I’ve done in the above screenshot is declare a few properties, a few instance variables and a constructor.  And it looks awful and un-maintainable despite the lack of any significant code smell, all due to the manner in which I’ve declared the variables.  It’s a laundry list of mistakes.

  1. Using field backed properties when an auto-property will suffice.
  2. Defining auto-properties split across multiple lines for no explicable reason.
  3. Adding utterly redundant code comments (the code-criticism comments aside).
  4. Terrible and ambiguous variable naming.
  5. Variable names that contain hints at data types.

The above code sample is practically unreadable, even without the comments, it’s long winded and obtuse:

image

Now, I come from the school of thinking that is pretty much convinced that typing things is bad, repeating yourself is bad, hell, writing code is bad.  So don’t.  Less really is more, pick your favourite buzz phrase.  Cleaning up your code should involve making it as simple and as clear as is humanly possible.

Thankfully, if you take advantage of the language features of C#3, you can quickly make something like that look like this:

image

Just by tidying up the way you declare and use your variables, you can make your code eminently more readable.  If you compare the two examples, you’ll see that all I’ve done is

Use single line declarations for auto-properties.

  • Why waste 3-5 lines on an auto-property that can easily fit one one without any loss in readability.

Removed data backed properties in exchange for auto-properties with access modifiers on the setter.

  • Functionally equivalent and far neater

Renamed badly named properties (in the first example “FLineOfAddress”) to be more meaningful.

  • Remove abbreviations where possible, they damage readability
  • Assume the maintainer of your code has no business knowledge, make things easy
  • Meaning is always better in variable names than in comments / meta-data
  • Don’t fear long variable names, modern IDEs have auto-complete, you don’t have to type that stuff by hand.  Embrace your tooling!
  • If you can’t tell what’s in your property or variable from it’s name, you’ve failed, go back and try again.
    • This honestly includes stuff like foreach(var item in MyCollection) and StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();  Both bad and wrong, don’t do it.

Only retained comments where the comment data is truly meaningful. 

  • The above example isn’t particularly good (everyone knows what a URL is), but only keep comments in your code where they add something that you couldn’t attain with careful renaming and code restructuring / refactoring.  The meaning of your code should be obvious to the reader without metadata.

Stick to a solid naming convention for public / private / protected variables and properties.

  • The well trodden convention I’m following above is lowerCamelCase plus…
    • A leading underscore for private instance variables (determining scope)
    • Regular lowerCamelCase for local variables
    • UpperCamelCase for property names, constants and statics.
    • No data types in your variable names.  This is not 1980. The IDE gives you all that lovely meta-data, don’t give yourself RSI duplicating it in your variable names.

Cleaning up usage

  • Removing this., you get the same scoping from using _ by convention in your variable names, save those fingers from RSI…
  • Using instance and local variables instantly becomes clearer by sticking to convention.

Using var to reduce duplication in code.

This is often controversial but I feel that using var, for the most part, reduces the amount of typing required without any loss of clarity.  Take the following examples:

image
It’s clear to me that no clarity is lost by not typing "StringBuilder” twice.  It’s still right there in front of you and allows you to keep your variable declarations more uniform.  Despite popular misconception this doesn’t affect the type safety of C#, the language and your variable are still strongly typed, the compiler just infers that when you said var you meant StringBuilder at compile time.   If it isn’t really obvious what an object is when you instantiate it, you’re probably doing something really wrong elsewhere.

People occasionally like to argue that while for declarations var is all well and good, when you’re using it for return values it causes a loss of clarity.  It’s an interesting point but always feels slightly off the mark to me.  Whenever people attempt to give me an example of this lack of clarity, it’s always that th
eir variables or properties are ambiguously or inappropriately named, and the code clarity can be regained and even improved by naming the variables involved in a more descriptive way.  Take the following snippet for example:

image
In the first case, I’d agree that using a var called “l” to store the return value of that method would lead to a loss in clarity.  But if you had string l = RetrieveTextLabel(); and then, say, 20 lines down attempted to use a variable called “l” you’d probably deserve a swift kicking for naming something so poorly.  By contrast, var textLabel is exceptionally descriptive.  People also occasionally say that using var in foreach loops causes this ambiguity, but again, if you name your collection appropriately and your yeilded value correctly, it really is never an issue.

Even more importantly, if you get your naming right, var actually helps you quickly refactor your code.  As long as you understand the “meaning” of your variables, the IDE can fill in the blanks with regard to data types, because for the most part, it really doesn’t matter what type of data is actually in that variable when you’re reading the code as long as it’s meaning is a known quantity.  I actually feel that the dynamic language crowd learnt this lesson long ago, and people that work predominantly in strongly typed languages actually tend to rely on the type system like a crutch to excuse terrible naming conventions.  Time to learn from PHP…

    In conclusion…

    To make your code readable you should stick to conventions for naming, always strive to add meaning in variable names and be as brief as possible.  Don’t litter your code with crap and you’ll be thankful for it later.

    Obviously, this is all my opinion, but I swear by it.

    I’ll be following up this post in the next few days with some continued patterns for readable code.

    Reusable Editable Fields for ASP.net MVC Using jQuery

    Thursday, October 8th, 2009

    A friend recently asked me about editing items inline using ASP.net MVC, the kind of thing that was auto magically wired up with post backs in “old fashioned” asp.net so I’ve whipped up a small example showing how you can use jQuery to declaratively set up interactive field editing with a sprinkling of Ajax and JSON.

    I’m basing this example on the default ASP.net MVC starter project for brevity (download attached) but here’s an overview:

    First you need to set up an Action method (or multiple action methods) on your controller to accept the modification of data.  In my example I’ve added an unimaginative method called “SetField” to the HomeController that looks like this:

    public ActionResult SetField(string fieldName, string fieldValue)
    {
        var response = Json(fieldValue);
        return response;
    }

    As you can see, it doesn’t do very much (useful implementation left to the reader) but it accepts the parameters of a field name, and a field value.  You’ll need to roll your own validation and sanity checking here.  It then returns the fieldValue using the MVC Json helper object, as a Json object.  In a real world example, you’d want to call and update in this method.

    Now, in the view, jQuery does most of the hard work.

    First I added a few CSS classes to the header on the master page (for the sake of example):

    <style type="text/css">
        .editableItem { display: block; }
        .fieldViewer { display: block; }
        .fieldEditor { display: none; }
        .editableItemCancel { display: block; }
        .editableItemBox { display: block; }
    </style>

    I then added an example to the view that looked like this:

    <div class="editableItem" id="editable_FieldName">
        <div class="fieldViewer">Click me to edit me!</div>
        <div class="fieldEditor"><input class="editableItemBox" type="text"/><span class="editableItemCancel">cancel</span></div>
    </div>

    With this HTML I set up some conventions that I’ll rely on when using jQuery.  Firstly, every editable item should use the class “editableItem” and have the id “editable_FieldName”.  I use the class in a jQuery selector and the Id to establish which field is being edited.  Inside the editableItem should be a fieldViewer, containing the current data, and a fieldEditor, which is hidden by default, and contains some kind of editable controller and a cancel button.  You could insert these elements at runtime if you wished, but in order to keep the example simple I’ve declared them in the HTML.

    Next I added some jQuery… The jQuery defines some Javascript behaviour associated with the classes used in the HTML, this way, the mark-up can be reused to edit multiple fields rather than being keyed to the Id of a specific field.

    <script src="/Scripts/jquery-1.3.2.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
        jQuery(document).ready(function() {

            $(".editableItem .fieldViewer").click(function() {
                var parentId = $(this).parent().attr("id");
                $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldEditor .editableItemBox").val($(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldViewer").text());
                $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldViewer").toggle();
                $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldEditor").toggle();
            });

            $(".editableItem .fieldEditor .editableItemCancel").click(function() {
                var parentId = $(this).parent().parent().attr("id");
                $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldViewer").toggle();
                $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldEditor").toggle();
            });

            $(‘.editableItem .editableItemBox’).keypress(function(e) {
                if (e.which == 13) {
                    var parentId = $(this).parent().parent().attr("id");
                    var fieldName = parentId.replace(/editable_/, "");

                    $.post(‘/Home/SetField’,
                    {
                        fieldName: fieldName, fieldValue: $(‘#’ + parentId + " .editableItemBox").val()
                    },
                        function(data) {
                            $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldViewer").text(eval(‘(‘ + data + ‘)’));
                            $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldViewer").toggle();
                            $(‘#’ + parentId + " .fieldEditor").toggle();
                        })
                }
            });

        });
    </script>

    Quite simply, if you click the editable field, it toggles into a textbox.  If you hit enter on the textbox, the value is posted to the previously defined Action on the Controller.  If you hit cancel, the display is toggled back.

    I’d not recommend copy and pasting this exact example into a production system, but hopefully it’ll guide you through a simple scenario.  You can use a similar technique to add all sorts of little Ajax tricks (auto-suggest, lookups, dynamic menus) to your ASP.net MVC site using jQuery and Json (both of which are included in the core asp.net MVC framework).

    Download the example solution here

    Creating a WCF Proxy to talk to Magento

    Monday, October 5th, 2009

    I got a message from a friend who was struggling to do an integration piece with the Magento eCommerce Platform using the SOAP endpoint available at http://yourserver.co.uk/api/v2_soap?wsdl.

    He brought an interesting problem to me, namely that the WCF svcutil executable (and built in Visual Studio 2008) was failing to generate any proxy code when supplied with a seemingly valid wsdl.

    I did a quick test and managed to instantly reproduce the error.

    Weirder still, when using the “old” .Net 2.0 add web reference method rather than the .Net 3.0+ “Add Service Reference”, the framework managed to create a non-WCF reference just fine.

    Dropping down to the command line I saw some unusual messages being displayed by svcutil.exe:

    c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\Bin>SvcUtil.exe http://yourserver.co.uk/api/v2_soap?wsdl
    Attempting to download metadata from ‘http://yourserver.co.uk/api/v2_soap?wsdl’ using WS-Metadata Exchange or DISCO.

    (Lots of error messages here…)

    Error: Cannot import wsdl:portType
    Detail: An exception was thrown while running a WSDL import extension: System.Se
    rviceModel.Description.XmlSerializerMessageContractImporter
    Error: The ‘ ‘ character, hexadecimal value 0×20, cannot be included in a name.
    Parameter name: name
    XPath to Error Source: //wsdl:definitions[@targetNamespace='urn:Magento']/wsdl:p
    ortType[@name='Mage_Api_Model_Server_V2_HandlerPortType']

    Error: Cannot import wsdl:binding
    Detail: There was an error importing a wsdl:portType that the wsdl:binding is de
    pendent on.
    XPath to wsdl:portType: //wsdl:definitions[@targetNamespace='urn:Magento']/wsdl:
    portType[@name='Mage_Api_Model_Server_V2_HandlerPortType']
    XPath to Error Source: //wsdl:definitions[@targetNamespace='urn:Magento']/wsdl:b
    inding[@name='Mage_Api_Model_Server_V2_HandlerBinding']

    Error: Cannot import wsdl:port
    Detail: There was an error importing a wsdl:binding that the wsdl:port is depend
    ent on.
    XPath to wsdl:binding: //wsdl:definitions[@targetNamespace='urn:Magento']/wsdl:b
    inding[@name='Mage_Api_Model_Server_V2_HandlerBinding']
    XPath to Error Source: //wsdl:definitions[@targetNamespace='urn:Magento']/wsdl:s
    ervice[@name='MagentoService']/wsdl:port[@name='Mage_Api_Model_Server_V2_Handler
    Port']

    Generating files…
    Warning: No code was generated.
    If you were trying to generate a client, this could be because the metadata docu
    ments did not contain any valid contracts or services
    or because all contracts/services were discovered to exist in /reference assembl
    ies. Verify that you passed all the metadata documents to the tool.

    Warning: If you would like to generate data contracts from schemas make sure to
    use the /dataContractOnly option.

    c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\Bin>

    So I did a little digging through the WSDL and found an undocumented bug in Magneto’s schema.

    First I saved a local copy of the WSDL and used visual studio to reformat the document into some sort of readable state, then I had to make a few corrections to the WSDL to allow SvcUtil to correctly parse the malformed document.

    Change 1:  Replace a badly encoded apostrophe – I removed the “’s” from the following operation definition…

    <operation name="customerGroupList">
    <documentation>Retrieve customer’s groups</documentation>
    <input message="typens:customerGroupListRequest"/>
    <output message="typens:customerGroupListResponse"/>
    </operation>

    Change 2: Replace a trailing space in an operation name

    <message name="catalogProductGetSpecialPriceRequest">
      <part name="sessionId" type="xsd:string"></part>
      <part name="product" type="xsd:string"></part>
      <part name="storeView " type="xsd:string"></part>
    </message>

    If you look carefully at the above message definition, you’ll notice that name=”storeView “ contains a space, making the wsdl invalid.  Remove the space so it reads “storeView”.

    With these two errors corrected, SvcUtil had no problem generating an appropriate WCF proxy from the corrected wsdl file.

    Magneto will hopefully fix this error in the WSDL, but until this time, it’s probably quite safe to follow these steps to generate your own proxy.

    To reproduce:

    • Go to http://yourserver.co.uk/api/v2_soap?wsdl and save the contents of your file to the local disk (c:\test\main.wsdl)
    • Open the file in visual studio, and reformat the document for readability (CTRL+K, CTRL+D).
    • Remove the apostrophe from the documentation tag for the customerGroupList operation.
    • Remove the space after the name=”storeView “ in the catalogProductGetSpecialPriceRequest message definition.
    • Open a command prompt and enter
    • c:\test>c:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\Bin\svcutil.exe main.wsdl
    • SvcUtil will produce two files, Magento.cs (your WCF proxy) and output.config, your endpoint configuration.