@Zirak let's say I have objects which I filter on some value and them map to span elements, I want to now attach them all to some other container element, what would you do?
@BenjaminGruenbaum And now you're being a nitty-gritty jackass again. Yes, you can use forEach and it's more semantic; however, it is already encapsulated by other array methods.
I'm working with twitter bootstrap. I have used the bootstrap stylesheet "docs.css" that is not part of bootstrap, but is just for presenting the documentation. is very serious? xD
and I can understand why forEach technically performs better than a for-loop, but the second you start using multiple levels of looping I would think that using a forEach would start to suck with all the function creations unless you already needed functions for some other reason and just get lucky when needing to iterate
The J programming language, developed in the early 1990s by Kenneth E. Iverson and Roger Hui, is a synthesis of APL (also by Iverson) and the FP and FL function-level languages created by John Backus.
To avoid repeating the APL special-character problem, J requires only the basic ASCII character set, resorting to the use of the dot and colon as "inflections" to form short words similar to digraphs. Most such "primary" (or "primitive") J words serve as mathematical symbols, with the dot or colon extending the meaning of the basic characters available. Additionally, many characters which...
appending .bind to .call and using the semantics of the .bind function so that the map argument goes to the first argument in call instead of thisArg is just really ingenius
@redline In CoffeeScript it's different though, that's why I was saying in case you know that. In CoffeeScript -> is C#'s => and => binds the value of this to the current context.
I think it's a pretty complete answer. However, like I said, the only real use case for hiding is covariance in return type, and that's not an issue in JS.
and using the single generic for the model, but specifying two classes, one with a generic and one without as razor does, made it very difficult to get things organized
and explicit interfaces as the only way to solve the problem
but i never really find the code confusing, i like C# and can ready through it very quickly, but that's probably due to the hard-typing and how much better the editor is
The fact you're above so many layers of abstraction and have to abide to conventions is really useful at times and makes for short, readable unambiguous code at times but it can also be a real PITA
I find JS to read right away cause there are so many things someone could do, it's so dynamic, so it's harder to quickly look at someone else's code and know what is going on IMO
@FlorianMargaine Last thing,
func needFloat(x float64) float64 {
return x * 0.1
}
the float64 { part was not explained, why is the argument declared, followed by another declaration, is it to specify the return type ?
- It makes VS *even slower* - It *changes* almost every shortcut I'm used to - It constantly interrupts me while I'm typing to go and delete the parentheses it's put in the wrong place - it replaces most dialogs with cluttered, slow, badly rendered WPF ones that have everything in a different place for no reason
- It's your fault for having a bad computer - You can configure it to keep the same shortcuts, you configure it the first time. You probably pressed the wrong button there. - That's a setting
It detects unreachable code, extracts methods, classes, etc very well. It suggests shorter ways to do things and enforces conventions you can export to make sure you're not sloppy.